Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

THE HISTORY OF INDEPENDEN­CE DAY OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

- https://www.britannica.com/topic/independen­ce-day-unitedstat­es-holiday

Independen­ce Day, also called Fourth of July or July 4th, in the United States, the annual celebratio­n of nationhood. It commemorat­es the passage of the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce by the Continenta­l Congress on July 4, 1776. Independen­ce Day is celebrated on Sunday, July 4, 2021 in the United States.

The Congress had voted in favour of independen­ce from Great Britain on July 2 but did not actually complete the process of revising the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce, originally drafted by Thomas Jefferson in consultati­on with fellow committee members John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, Roger Sherman, and William Livingston, until two days later. The celebratio­n was initially modeled on that of the king’s birthday, which had been marked annually by bell ringing, bonfires, solemn procession­s, and oratory. Such festivals had long played a significan­t role in the Anglo-american political tradition. Especially in the 17th and 18th centuries, when dynastic and religious controvers­ies racked the British Empire (and much of the rest of Europe), the choice of which anniversar­ies of historic events were celebrated and which were lamented had clear political meanings. The ritual of toasting the king and other patriot-heroes—or of criticizin­g them—became an informal kind of political speech, further formalized in mid-18th century when the toasts given at taverns and banquets began to be reprinted in newspapers.

In the early stages of the revolution­ary movement in the colonies during the 1760s and early ’70s, patriots used such celebratio­ns to proclaim their resistance to Parliament’s legislatio­n while lauding King George III as the real defender of English liberties. However, the marking of the first days of independen­ce during the summer of 1776 actually took the form in many towns of a mock funeral for the king, whose “death” symbolized the end of monarchy and tyranny and the rebirth of liberty.

During the early years of the republic, Independen­ce Day was commemorat­ed with parades, oratory, and toasting in ceremonies that celebrated the existence of the new nation. These rites played an equally important role in the evolving federal political system. With the rise of informal political parties, they provided venues for leaders and constituen­ts to tie local and national contests to independen­ce and the issues facing the national polity. By the mid-1790s the two nascent political parties held separate partisan Independen­ce Day festivals in most larger towns. Perhaps for this reason, Independen­ce Day became the model for a series of (often short-lived) celebratio­ns that sometimes contained more explicit political resonance, such as George Washington’s birthday and the anniversar­y of Jefferson’s inaugurati­on while he served as president (1801–09).

The bombastic torrent of words that characteri­zed Independen­ce Day during the 19th century made it both a serious occasion and one sometimes open to ridicule—like the increasing­ly popular and democratic political process itself in that period. With the growth and diversific­ation of American society, the Fourth of July commemorat­ion became a patriotic tradition which many groups— not just political parties—sought to claim. Abolitioni­sts, women’s rights advocates, the temperance movement, and opponents of immigratio­n (nativists) all seized the day and its observance, in the process often declaring that they could not celebrate with the entire community while an un-american perversion of their rights prevailed.

With the rise of leisure, the Fourth of July emerged as a major midsummer holiday. The prevalence of heavy drinking and the many injuries caused by setting off fireworks prompted reformers of the late 19th and the early 20th century to mount a Safe and Sane Fourth of July movement. During the later 20th century, although it remained a national holiday marked by parades, concerts of patriotic music, and fireworks displays, Independen­ce Day declined in importance as a venue for politics. It remains a potent symbol of national power and of specifical­ly American qualities—even the freedom to stay at home and barbecue.

 ??  ?? Her Excellency Kamala Harris
Vice president of the United States of America
Her Excellency Kamala Harris Vice president of the United States of America
 ??  ?? His Excellency Joe Biden President of the United States of America
His Excellency Joe Biden President of the United States of America

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