Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The REAL Independence Day
Episode Date: July 4, 2020Every year on July 4th Americans celebrate their independence. The fireworks, parades, and cookouts have been a tradition for over 200 years. But why do we celebrate it on July 4th and did America rea...lly even become independent on July 4th, 1776? Have we been celebrating on the wrong date this entire time? Learn more about the real date of American independence on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Every year on July 4th, Americans celebrate their independence.
The fireworks parades and cookouts have been a tradition for over 200 years.
But why do we celebrate it on July 4th?
And did America really even become independent on July 4th, 1776?
Have we been celebrating the wrong date this entire time?
Learn more about the real date of American independence on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
What if your perceptions about the past were wrong?
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that's right for you, click on the link in the show notes. For a nation to achieve independence,
is no small thing. In the 20th century, many former colonies achieve their independence through
mostly peaceful means with a definitive negotiated day where the handoff occurred and where the country
officially became independent. For example, on August 15, 1947, India became independent. The process was
arranged in advance. On August 14, 1947, at 11.59 p.m., the British flag was lowered, and at 12.01 a.m.,
on August 15th, the Indian flag was raised, and just like that, India became a.m.
independent. By the way, I realize that is a gross simplification of the process of Indian
Independence and the partition of India and Pakistan, but I will leave that for another episode.
When the United States became independent, colonies breaking away from their mother country
wasn't yet a thing. It was an extremely messy, drawn-out process that took years. There was no
flag ceremony, and in fact, there wasn't even a single governable colony involved. There were 13.
Because the process took so long, pinpointing a date for American independence isn't as cut
and dries it might be for other countries. Also, declaring independence isn't the same thing
as actually being independent. And if you doubt me, try declaring independence for your house from the
country you live in and tell me how that goes. So here are some possible dates for when we could
and should be celebrating American independence. April 19th. April 19th, 1775 was the date when the whole
process of independence started. This was the date of the Sharford around the world.
On April 19th, British soldiers set out to confiscate weapons in Concord, Massachusetts,
and the Americans fought back in the first battles of the Revolutionary War,
the battles of Lexington and Concord.
To be honest, they were more like skirmishes, but we'll stick with the battle nomenclature for now.
This was the line in the sand, from which there was no turning back.
There had been protests like the Boston Tea Party before this point,
but this is where the rubber hit the road, and things got violent and blood was spilled.
The starting point of the whole process is as good a point of any,
if you wanted to pick a day to celebrate American independence.
In fact, this is a holiday in several states called Patriots Day.
Massachusetts, Maine, Wisconsin, Connecticut, and North Dakota all have Patriots Day as an official holiday.
July 2nd.
Up until July 2, 1776, the colonies were really just in rebellion.
They wanted the British out, but they hadn't explicitly stated a goal of becoming an independent country.
The formal vote for independence, also known as the resolution of,
independence took place on July 2, 1776. And this was the date which most people at the time
thought would be celebrated as the date of American independence. In fact, John Adams wrote in his diary,
The second day of 1776 will be the most memorable epoch in American history. I am apt to
believe that it will be celebrated by succeeding generations as the great anniversary festival.
It ought to be commemorated as the day of deliverance by solemn acts of devotion to God Almighty.
ought to be solemnized with pomp and parade, with shows, games, sports, guns, bells,
bombfires, and illuminations from one end of this continent to the other, from this time forward
forevermore. The funny thing is, he pretty much got it right, except for the date. The Pennsylvania
Evening Post reported in their July 2, 1776 edition, this day the Continental Congress
declared the United Colonies Free and Independent States. So the date the United States really declared
independence was July 2nd. July 4th. So what happened on July 4th which caused Americans to end up
celebrating this day? To understand why you have to know the difference between the resolution of
independence and the declaration of independence. On July 2nd, the Continental Congress voted to break
ties with Britain and to become independent. That was the formal vote called the Resolution of Independence.
However, they wanted something to explain to everyone why they did this. What they needed was a press
release to lay out the arguments in favor of independence to the colonies and the rest of the world.
They convened a committee of five people to put together the document, with most of the writing done by
Thomas Jefferson, and the final wording for the document was approved by the Continental Congress
on July 4th. The reason why this date became a very time.
the date we celebrate is because when the copies of the Declaration of Independence were sent out
from the printers around the colonies, July 4th was the date which was on the document, and that
date was nothing more than the date that the language of the document was approved. The document was sent
out to all the colonies where it was reprinted many more times and read out loud in public squares
and republished in almost every newspaper. The date that was attached to this document by which
everyone got word of American independence had July 4th on it. In a very recent, a very recent,
sense. July 4th really just commemorates the date of the approval of the language of America's
first national press release. July 4 celebrations began the very next year in 1777 and July 2nd
never really took off as a holiday. August 2nd. Upon approval of the Declaration of Independence
by the Continental Congress on July 4th, it was official. It wasn't necessary for any of the
delegates to sign their name to it any more than it's necessary for members of Congress to physically
scribble their signature on every law they sign. Signing the document was more like signing a public
petition. The physical copy of the Declaration of Independence, which most Americans are familiar with,
sits in the National Archives in Washington, D.C., and has the signatures of 56 people on it.
There's a great deal of debate amongst historians as to when the document was signed.
Thomas Jefferson and some others were adamant that he signed the document on July 4th.
However, several of the signers weren't in Philadelphia on that date, and some had,
had not even been members of the Continental Congress on July 4th. On August 2nd, 1776 is the date
which most members of the Continental Congress signed the document, or at least the last of them did.
Depending on how much weight you put into the signing, August 2nd could be considered the final date
which independence was declared. As I mentioned above, declaring independence is all well and good,
but it doesn't really mean anything if your land is occupied by enemy forces. At the time of the
resolution and declaration of independence, British controlled the largest.
city in the country, New York, and large swaths of the United States. America wasn't really
independent yet. November 16th, if you read up on the subject of what makes a country a country,
and this might be a later episode, one of the themes is always referenced is recognition by other
countries. Using this modern definition of recognition, the very first time a foreign power
recognized an independent United States occurred on November 16th, 1776.
when the ship Andrew Doria, flying under the continental colors of the United States,
received a 13-gun salute from the Dutch island of St. Eustaceous in the Caribbean.
It became known as the first salute, and you can find a commemoration of it on the island today.
In fact, in 1939, Franklin Roosevelt made a brief visit to the island to recognize the event,
and the airport on St. Eustaceous is named after him today.
The ship was there to pick up munitions for the war effort,
and St. Eustaceous provided about half of the munitions and almost all of the European communications with America during the revolution.
The British took this so seriously that it was one of the causes of the fourth Anglo-Dutch War, which started in 1780.
December 20th.
Having a garrison on a tiny island fire some guns is fine and dandy, but it doesn't really formally recognize a country,
not the same way that a formal recognition by a real country would.
That did happen on December 20th, 1777, when Sultan Mohammed III of Morocco placed the United States on a list of countries to whom its ports were open.
This eventually resulted in the Moroccan-American Treaty of Friendship, which was signed in 1786, a treaty which is still in effect today, making it the longest-standing treaty in American history.
October 19th.
Just like declaring independence, international recognition also doesn't mean much if your country is occupied.
The day that Americans really became independent in a military sense was on October 19, 1781,
when the British General Lord Cornwallis surrendered his forces in Yorktown, Virginia.
At that point, the war was basically over.
Lord North had sailed down the coast to meet up with Cornwallis, but by the time he arrived,
Cornwallis had already surrendered.
When told of the news, Lord Norse said, oh God, it's all over.
Yorktown Victory Day is still celebrated on October 19th every year in the city of Yorktown, Virginia.
After the Battle of Yorktown by March 1882, the British Parliament had agreed to cease all hostilities.
September 3rd.
Even though the conflict on the ground was over in 1881 and the British agreed to cease fighting in 1882, there were still loose ends to tie up.
And with communications across the Atlantic taking months, the final bit of American independence took time.
The Treaty of Paris, where the British formally recognized American independence, was signed on September 3, 1783.
The Continental Congress had previously agreed to the terms of the treaty in April.
It was on this date that you could say Americans finally owned the deed to their house.
There were no conflicting claims.
There were no longer at war, and no one disputed their independence.
However, there was still one slight problem.
The British still had thousands of troops in New York City.
November 25th.
The day the British finally left America was on November 25, 1883.
If there was a point in history, which is an analogy to the transition which India experienced in 1947, it would be this day.
At noon on November 25, 18, 1783, in New York City, Sir Guy Carlton, the last British commander of the former 13 British colonies, gave the order to evacuate.
At the sound of the cannon, all the British flags were taken down, and American flags were raised.
When the last British flag was removed, George Washington and his troops entered the town in trouble.
triumph, marching from the northern tip of Manhattan, all the way down to what is today, Battery Park.
Even though it really isn't celebrated anymore, November 25th is still recognized as evacuation
day in New York City every year. Even though the war was won, the treaty was signed, and the British
troops were gone. There was still one more thing needed to formally put a bow on the conflict.
And that happened on January 14th. If there's a definitive date, we can absolutely positive
point to where we can say that the struggle for independence was over. It was January 14th, 1784.
On this date, the Continental Congress assembled in Annapolis, Maryland, ratified the Treaty of Paris,
which once and for all put an end to the American Revolution. This day is still celebrated as
ratification day in Maryland on January 14th every year. So as you can see, nailing down one day for
American independence really isn't that easy. There are several days.
which are still celebrated around the country which relate to American independence.
Patriots Day, Evacuation Day, Yorktown Day, and Ratification Day,
all celebrate different aspects of the same thing, American Independence,
a process which took almost nine years from start to finish.
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