My Native Land eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 354 pages of information about My Native Land.

My Native Land eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 354 pages of information about My Native Land.

“On the glorious 4th of July (1778), I celebrated in the City Tavern, with my brother delegates of Congress and a number of other gentlemen, amounting, in whole, to about eighty, the anniversary of Independency.  The entertainment was elegant and well conducted.  There were four tables spread; two of them extended the whole length of the room; the other two crossed them at right angles.  At the end of the room, opposite the upper table, was erected an Orchestra.  At the head of the upper table, and at the President’s right hand, stood a large baked pudding, in the center of which was planted a staff, on which was displayed a crimson flag, in the midst of which was this emblematic device:  An eye, denoting Providence; a label, on which was inscribed, ‘An appeal to Heaven;’ a man with a drawn sword in his hand, and in the other the Declaration of Independence, and at his feet a scroll inscribed, ’The declaratory acts.’  As soon as the dinner began, the music, consisting of clarionets, hautboys, French horns, violins and bass-viols, opened and continued, making proper pauses, until it was finished.  Then the toasts, followed by a discharge of field-pieces, were drank, and so the afternoon ended.  On the evening there was a cold collation and a brilliant exhibition of fireworks.  The street was crowded with people during the exhibition.

“What a strange vicissitude in human affairs!  These, but a few years since colonies of Great Britain, are now free, sovereign, and independent States, and now celebrate the anniversary of their independence in the very city where, but a day or two before, General Howe exhibited his ridiculous Champhaitre.”

Independence Hall remains to-day in a marvelous state of preservation.  At the great Centennial Exposition, held to celebrate the hundredth anniversary of the events to which we have alluded in this chapter, tens of thousands of people passed through the room in which the Declaration of Independence was signed, and gazed with mingled feelings upon the historical bell, which, although it had long outlived its usefulness, had in days gone by done such grand proclaiming of noble truth, sentiment and action.  Up to quite a recent date, justice was administered in the old building, but most of the courts have now been moved to the stately structure modern Philadelphia is now erecting at the cost of some $16,000,000.

Independence Hall and Independence Square are lovingly cared for, and visitors from all nations are careful to include them both in their tour of sight-seeing while in this country.  Within the Hall they find old parchments and Eighteenth Century curiosities almost without number, and antiquarians find sufficient to interest and amuse them for several days in succession.  Every lover of his native land, no matter what that land may be, raises his hat in reverence when in this ancient and memory-inspiring building, and he must be thoughtless, indeed, who can pass through it without paying at least a mental tribute of respect to the memories of the men who were present at the birth of the greatest nation the world has ever seen, and who secured for the people of the United States absolute liberty.

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Project Gutenberg
My Native Land from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.