Fourth of July 
-
SOURCE: The New Yorker
7/3/2020
To the World, We’re Now America the Racist and Pitiful
The United States, long the bedrock of the Western alliance, is less inspirational today—and perhaps will be even less so tomorrow.
-
SOURCE: The Washington Post
July 5
Trump’s Fourth of July history speech: Turns out there weren’t airports back then
How accurate was Trump's "Salute to America" speech?
-
SOURCE: Washington Post
7/2/2019
What could go wrong for Trump on the Fourth of July? In 1970, protests and tear gas marred the day.
And Nixon didn’t even speak in person.
-
SOURCE: Newsweek
7-5-18
Declaration of Independence Flagged as Hate Speech by Facebook
Facebook was forced to apologize to a local publisher in Texas this week for removing a post containing text from the Declaration of Independence after classifying it as “hate speech.”
-
7-4-18
Did Jefferson Really Write the Declaration of Independence?
by M. Andrew Holowchak
The public widely gives Jefferson credit. Scholars, in dissent, have often said multiple hands were involved. Who’s right?
-
6/29/18
How We Got the Statue of Liberty
by Suzy Evans
It started with a small dinner party in Paris.
-
SOURCE: The Washington Post
7-3-17
Partisans often try to claim July 4 as their own. It usually backfires.
by Kevin M. Kruse
Independence Day has always been a political battlefield.
-
SOURCE: National Review
7-1-17
The Scars of Our Nation’s Violent Birth
by George Will
The new Museum of the American Revolution in Philadelphia preserves our bloody road to independence.
-
7-2-17
We celebrate Independence Day on the wrong date for the right reasons
by Joseph J. Ellis
John Adams’s choice, July 2, makes more sense. That was the day independence was officially decided. But we are right to celebrate the fourth since that's the date Americans always have.
-
SOURCE: NYT
7-1-17
That Diss Song Known as ‘Yankee Doodle’
The patriotic tune started off as an insult — until Americans appropriated it.
-
SOURCE: SF Chronicle
6-29-17
On July Fourth, pursue happiness together, like founders wanted
by Jonathan Zimmerman
On the Fourth of July, Americans will drink beer, eat hot dogs and celebrate 241 years of “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.” That means you get to do whatever you want, provided that you don’t interfere with anyone else. Right? Wrong.
-
6-12-17
Review of David McCullough’s “The American Spirit: Who We Are and What We Stand For”
by Kathryn Smith
David McCullough is an American treasure.
-
7-2-17
Why We Remember Nathan Hale (And Nobody’s Heard of Moses Dunbar)
by Virginia DeJohn Anderson
What, you don’t know who Moses Dunbar was? There’s a reason for that.
-
SOURCE: The Root
7-4-16
Story of the Week: The Hidden Racist History of the National Anthem
by Jason Johnson
In the third, forgotten stanza, Francis Scott Key refers darkly to the members of the Colonial Marines, a battalion of runaway slaves who joined with the British Royal Army in exchange for their freedom.
-
7-27-14
Historian who calls bull&%$@ on July 4th parade causes controversy
by HNN Staff
"We need to stop these displays of nonsense history."
-
FROM OUR ARCHIVES Ten Myths for the Fourth of July
by Ray Raphael
#1 - On July 4, 1776, the United States declared itself an independent nation.
-
7-3-13
Why Doesn't D.C. Have a Military Parade on the Fourth of July?
by David Austin Walsh
On Bastille Day in Paris, the trees lining the Champs-Élysées are covered in the French tricolor. Battalion after battalion of French troops march down the avenue, gleaming bayonets attached to their Space Age rifles. Tanks, armored cars, and nuclear missiles roll past a viewing stand where the French president and his generals look on as martial music plays.It's one of the largest military parades in the world, and it's been going on nearly every year since 1880 (except from 1940-1944, for obvious reasons). Here's what it looks like:Here's what the Fourth of July parade down Constitution Ave. in Washington, D.C. looks like:
-
6/26/18
HNN Hot Topics: July 4th
What are we celebrating on the 4th? And every other question you've ever had about the holiday!
-
7-8-03
Top 5 Myths About the Fourth of July!
by Rick Shenkman
Credit: Wiki Commons.#1 Independence Was Declared on the Fourth of July.America's independence was actually declared by the Continental Congress on July 2, 1776. The night of the second the Pennsylvania Evening Post published the statement:"This day the Continental Congress declared the United Colonies Free and Independent States."So what happened on the Glorious Fourth? The document justifying the act of Congress-you know it as Thomas Jefferson's Declaration of Independence-was adopted on the fourth, as is indicated on the document itself, which is, one supposes, the cause for all the confusion. As one scholar has observed, what has happened is that the document announcing the event has overshadowed the event itself.When did Americans first celebrate independence? Congress waited until July 8, when Philadelphia threw a big party, including a parade and the firing of guns. The army under George Washington, then camped near New York City, heard the new July 9 and celebrated then. Georgia got the word August 10. And when did the British in London finally get wind of the declaration? August 30.
-
6-30-03
Why Can't We See the Declaration of Independence?
by Timothy Walch
On this Fourth of July, the Declaration of Independence is nowhere to be seen. Yet it's not missing and it hasn't been stolen. Since July 2001, the precious, much-loved document has been in seclusion for much needed repairs.
News
- Josh Hawley Earns F in Early American History
- Does Germany's Holocaust Education Give Cover to Nativism?
- "Car Brain" Has Long Normalized Carnage on the Roads
- Hawley's Use of Fake Patrick Henry Quote a Revealing Error
- Health Researchers Show Segregation 100 Years Ago Harmed Black Health, and Effects Continue Today
- Nelson Lichtenstein on a Half Century of Labor History
- Can America Handle a 250th Anniversary?
- New Research Shows British Industrialization Drew Ironworking Methods from Colonized and Enslaved Jamaicans
- The American Revolution Remains a Hotly Contested Symbolic Field
- Untangling Fact and Fiction in the Story of a Nazi-Era Brothel