Community Corner
Fun Facts About the Fourth
Head to your local fireworks display or parade with some new knowledge about Independence Day.
July 4, 1776 is universally acknowledged as the day the fledgling United States of America declared its independence from Great Britain, but did you know the declaration of independence had been made two days earlier?
The Continental Congress actually voted to declare independence on July 2, 1776, and John AdamsΒ wrote to his wifeΒ Abigail on July 3,Β predicting that the second of July would be, βsolemnized with pomp and parade, with shows, games, sports, guns, bells, bonfires, and illuminations, from one end of this continent to the other, from this time forward forever more.β
However, it took another two days for Thomas Jefferson and the other authors of the Declaration of Independence to complete a document that was acceptable to the Continental Congress. Because the Declaration of Independence was the document that most colonists associated with the actual break with Great Britain, July 4 became Independence Day.
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Of the 56 men who originally signed the document, three were Georgians. Their names may be partially familiar to you - Button Gwinnett, George Walton, and Lyman Hall. Nine Pennsylvanians, including Benjamin Franklin, signed the document, the largest contingent from any of the Thirteen Colonies. The smallest group came from Rhode Island, with two signees. Two future presidents, Thomas Jefferson and John Adams, added their signatures to the document.
You might think that the Declaration of Independence was signed on July 4, but historians now believe it was actually signed a month later, on Aug. 2, 1776. In 1884, a historian looking at the minutes of the Continental Congress discovered a notation for a signing ceremony held on that date. This means that theΒ famous paintingΒ by John Trumbull depicting the signing of the Declaration of Independence is most likely not rooted in fact.
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The first public reading of the Declaration of Independence was held in Philadelphia on July 8. George Washington's men first heard the declaration on July 9. The British press first published the news of independence in August.
A year later, the first Independence Day celebration was held, which included 13-gun salutes, music, parades, prayers, and an official dinner for the Continental Congress, among other festivities. In 1778, George Washington gave his men aΒ double ration of rumΒ to celebrate July 4. However, it took Congress until 1938 to make Independence Day a paid federal holiday.
On a strange and somewhat spooky note, July 4 is notable for the deaths of two Founding Fathers. On July 4, 1826, 50 years after the Declaration of Independence was approved, former president and signer of the declaration John Adams lay dying in Boston. His last words were, βThomas Jefferson survives.β Except that Thomas Jefferson had diedΒ the same dayΒ in Virginia.
Looking for some local events to celebrate Independence Day in 2014? Look no further!- TheΒ Coca-Cola July 4th FestΒ takes overΒ Six FlagsΒ from July 4-6. Patrons who bring a can of Coke to the park will be admitted an hour earlier than normal.
- W Atlanta in Buckhead is hosting July 4 LIVE, featuring music from Civil Twilight + Parvenu. The doors open at 6 p.m., with the music beginning at 7:30. Party goers will be able to watch the Lenox Square Fireworks starting at 9:30 p.m.
- Centennial Olympic Park's Fourth of July celebrations will begin at 6 p.m. and feature musical performances by JFly and Friends and Taylor Hicks. Visitors will be treated to a spectacular fireworks display to end the evening.
- The Fourth of July in Atlanta wouldn't be complete without the Peachtree Road Race. It's a little too late to enter the race now, but you can still head down to the race course and cheer on the participants. Runners will set off from Lenox Square, head down Peachtree, and finish at Piedmont Park in Midtown.
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