Texarkana Gazette

Statue of Liberty reopens

Statue reopens while U.S. salutes Independen­ce Day

- By Colleen Long

“Give me your tired, your poor, Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, The wretched refuse of your teeming shore. Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed, to me: I lift my lamp beside the golden door.”

NEW YORK—The Statue of Liberty reopened on the Fourth of July, eight months after Superstorm Sandy shuttered the national symbol of freedom, as Americans around the country celebrated with fireworks and parades and President Obama urged citizens to live up to the words of the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce.

Hundreds lined up Thursday to be among the first to board boats destined for Lady Liberty, including New Yorker Heather Leykam and her family.

“This, to us, Liberty Island, is really about a rebirth,” said Leykam, whose mother’s home was destroyed during the storm. “It is a sense of renewal for the city and the country. We wouldn’t have missed it for the world.”

Nationwide, Boston prepared to host its first large gathering since the marathon bombing that killed three and injured hundreds, and Philadelph­ia, Washington and New Orleans geared up for large holiday concerts. A Civil War reenactmen­t commemorat­ing the 150th anniversar­y of the Battle of Gettysburg drew as many as 40,000 people to Pennsylvan­ia. In Arizona, sober tributes were planned for 19 firefighte­rs who died this week battling a blaze near Yarnell.

Interior Secretary Sally Jewell, speaking at the reopening of the Statue of Liberty, choked up as she told the crowd she was wearing a purple ribbon in memory of the fallen firefighte­rs.

“Nineteen firefighte­rs lost their lives in the line of duty, and we as a nation stand together,” she said through tears.

The island was decorated with star-spangled bunting, but portions remain blocked off with large constructi­on equipment, and the main ferry dock was boarded up. Repairs to brick walkways and docks were ongoing. But much of the work has been completed since Sandy swamped the 12-acre island in New York Harbor, and visitors were impressed.

“It’s stunning, it’s beautiful,” said Elizabeth Bertero, 46, of California’s Sonoma County. “They did a great job rebuilding. You don’t really notice that anything happened.”

The statue itself was unharmed, but the land took a beating. Railings broke, docks and paving stones were torn up and buildings were flooded. The storm destroyed electrical systems, sewage pumps and boilers. Hundreds of National Park Service workers from as far away as California and Alaska spent weeks cleaning mud and debris.

“It is one of the most enduring icons of America, and we pulled it off—it’s open today,” National Park Service Director Jonathan Jarvis said. “Welcome.”

The statue was open for a single day last year—Oct. 28, the day before Sandy struck. It had been closed the previous year for security upgrades. Neighborin­g Ellis Island remains closed and there has been no reopening date set.

Elsewhere in New York, throngs of revelers packed Brooklyn’s Coney Island to see competitiv­e eating champ Joey Chestnut scarf down 69 hot dogs to break a world record and win the title for a seventh year at the 98th annual Nathan’s Famous Fourth of July Internatio­nal Hot Dog Eating Contest. Sonya Thomas defended her title with nearly 37 dogs.

In his weekly radio address from Washington, Obama urged Americans to work to secure liberty and opportunit­y for their own children and future generation­s. The first family was to host U.S. servicemen and women at the White House for a cookout. Atlanta and Alaska planned holiday runs—thousands were racing up a 3,022-foot peak in Seward. In New Orleans, the Essence Festival celebratin­g black culture and music kicked off along the riverfront.

The celebrator­y mood turned somber in Oklahoma and Maine with fatal accidents during parades. In Edmond, Okla., a boy died after being run over by a float near the end of the town’s Liberty Fest parade. In Bangor, Maine, the driver of a tractor in the parade was killed after the vehicle was struck by an old fire truck.

In Boston, attendance for the city’s celebratio­n appeared down, with crowds on the Charles River Esplanade seeming smaller than in recent years while a robust law enforcemen­t presence greeted revelers gathering for a performanc­e by the Boston Pops and a fireworks display.

Among those at Boston’s festivitie­s was Carlos Arredondo, the cowboy hat-wearing marathon attendee who became part of one of the indelible images of the bombings’ aftermath: helping rush a badly wounded man from the scene in a wheelchair, his legs torn to pieces.

Arredondo said the July 4 celebratio­n—an event authoritie­s believe the bombing suspects initially planned to target—is an important milestone in the healing process, not just for him but also those who were stopping to tell him their own stories of that day.

“I think there’s no better place to be,” said Arredondo, wearing his cowboy hat and a “Boston Strong” shirt in the marathon’s blue and yellow colors.

Kathy Concileo had staked out a nice spot for the evening’s concert, near center stage. The Norwell, Mass. woman said she was surprised at the turnout.

“As much as they say we’ve healed and moved on, I think this shows that people are still afraid to come out in a crowd,” she said.

But Christophe­r Dixon, 48, of Nashua, N.H., who brought his daughters and grandson for the first time, said he had no worries about security.

“It’s safer today than in your own backyard, I think,” he said.

 ??  ?? United States Park Police SWAT team members stand guard Thursday at the Statue of Liberty in New York. The Statue of Liberty finally reopened on the Fourth of July months after Superstorm Sandy swamped its little island in New York Harbor as Americans...
United States Park Police SWAT team members stand guard Thursday at the Statue of Liberty in New York. The Statue of Liberty finally reopened on the Fourth of July months after Superstorm Sandy swamped its little island in New York Harbor as Americans...
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