Today officially marks the beginning of the Fourth of July
holiday weekend for me, even though it’s still June and the holiday isn’t this
weekend. But I’m a true American patriot and a semi-pro slacker so I’ve decided
to take a vacation day on Monday so I can get paid to celebrate ‘Murica for
four straight days. That’s the kind of sacrifice I’m willing to make for this
great country.
As a true American patriot I know that the it’s appropriate
to celebrate all weekend, not just because you can get “Red White and Blue
deals all weekend on new patio furniture” but because the resolution declaring
our independence from England was actually passed by the continental Congress
on July 2, 1776. That’s a red white and
blue fact!
John Adams wrote to his wife on the evening of July 2, 1776,
“ The second day of July, 1776, will be most memorable epoch in the history of
America. I am apt to believe 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. It ought to be
solemnized by 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.”
To quote Maxwell Smart (and you should always quote Maxwell
Smart), “Missed it by that much.”
It turns out that, even in 1776, nothing happens quickly in
Congress so it took two days for the scribe to write out the 1337 word document
so it was dated on July 4, 1776. That’s like ten Tweets…on a good day the
President can knock that out before breakfast these days, but in 1776 they had
to catch a bird, pluck a feather, it was this whole other process.
That’s a trivia bet you can probably win at your favorite
nerd bar, this weekend. Bet the guy in the Ted Nugent tee-shirt sitting at the
bar that he can’t tell you how many works are in the Declaration of Independence. You’ll drink a free one because if you Google
the number of words in the Declaration of Independence (anyone wearing a
Ted Nugent tee-shirt would have to use Google to answer) it will say 1458
words, and that’s correct if you include the signature at the bottom, but the
actual declaration is 1337 words long.
Once you’ve found someone geeky enough to bet you about how
many words are in the Declaration of Independence, you really should fleece
them for some more free beer with a few more Fourth of July facts. Look at it
as your patriotic duty to school them on the star spangled facts!
First bet them a beer that they can’t tell you the date the
Declaration was signed, then go ahead and order your beer because they’ll get
it wrong…if you’ve got a date in mind right now you’re wrong too and you owe me
a beer. You can’t get it right because there isn’t a right answer. Most people
will say it was signed on the Fourth of July and they can be excused for saying
that…but they should still buy your beer because nobody signed the Declaration
of Independence until August 2, 1776.
Even though 50 of the 56 founding fathers signed the
Declaration of Independence at the official ceremony on August 2, 1776, the
last guy to sign it was Thomas McKean in January of 1777. I freely admit that I
have no idea who Thomas McKean was but I’m guessing he was kind of like “the
most interesting man” in 1776…you just don’t start a revolution without him.
If you’ve been betting this correctly you should have had
three free beers so far…you’re welcome, but it’s the Fourth of July and it’s
hot so you could probably use another beer. This time bet your new friends that
they can’t name the Presidents who died on the Fourth of July, then order
another beer.
I know what you’re thinking; you know this one because you
watched the John Adams mini-series on HBO!! Over two and a half million HBO
viewers know that John Adams and his pen pal Thomas Jefferson both dramatically
died on the Fourth of July in 1826. So they might get that one right…if that
were the complete answer but it’s not! What HBO didn’t tell us was that James
Monroe died five years later on July 4, 1831. Three founding fathers that later
became presidents died on the Fourth of July, early Americans called it
poetically tragic, the British called it karma, I call it another free beer!
This weekend I’m going to spend four days eating watermelon,
grilling some beef and drinking a few free beers. After all I’m a true American
patriot so I’m going to celebrate my life, my liberty and, if all goes well, I
might even pursue a little happiness. Happy Second of July!!
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