Connecticut Post

Lamont signs order creating 250th anniversar­y commission

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HARTFORD — Gov. Ned Lamont signed an executive order Friday creating a new commission charged with planning the state’s multiyear celebratio­n and commemorat­ion of the 250th anniversar­y of the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce signing.

The Connecticu­t Semiquince­ntennial Commission will be a state-level group, similar to the United States Semiquince­ntennial Commission recently establishe­d by Congress. The executive order requires the panel of volunteers to be wide-ranging, including not just representa­tives from historical organizati­ons and state officials but also designees from the state’s two federally recognized tribes.

The 250th anniversar­y of the signing of the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce and subsequent formation of the U.S. will occur on July 4, 2026.

Former Secretary of the State Denise Merrill, who officially resigned from her post Thursday to spend time with her ailing husband, noted how Connecticu­t requires all high school students take a civics class before they graduate.

“This is a chance for all of us to have that lesson and to have everyone included, and to have a chance to review the incredible history here in Connecticu­t of the founding of this country,” she said, during a ceremony at the Old State House. “And this time, we can retell it. We can include everyone.”

The state commission is charged with developing and coordinati­ng celebratio­ns and educationa­l activities, while also providing help to Connecticu­t cities, towns and other groups planning their own commemorat­ions. The group will also promote cultural and historic resources related to the semiquince­ntennial period while working to promote the state as a tourist destinatio­n for American Revolution history.

Commission members, who have yet to be announced, are required to provide the governor and General Assembly with an action plan by Jan. 1.

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