Sunday, June 28, 2026

Party like it's the 150th

Screengrab of 1926 newspaper item showing text of declaration known as The American's Creed
I'd never heard of The American's Creed
until reading it in a 1926 issue of the South
Florida Developer newspaper.
(Credit: oldnews.com)


Independence Day celebrations had strong patriotic flair in 1926. The United States was observing the Sesquicentennial of the country's independence. Our nation's 150th anniversary was honored across the states and even in other countries. 

Floridians toasted independence at local gatherings, and the state's newspapers alerted readers about festivities taking place elsewhere. 

On June 10, 1926, the Key West Citizen had an article about the country's big Sesquicentennial International Exposition. It was staged in Philadelphia from May through November to celebrate the 150th anniversary of American independence and the 50th anniversary of the 1876 Centennial Exposition. The Central Florida Times (Ocala) reported there was a "heated controversary" about whether the Exposition should be open on Sundays. Its first Sunday opening was, appropriately, July 4, 1926, and 25,000 people attended that day.

On July 5, 1926, the Central Florida Times boasted that the 150th was honored in Paris, Buenos Aires, Prague, Warsaw and even London. In most of those places, locals joined the party on July 4 to support American ex-pats and diplomats. Polish newspapers ran editorials about the American Constitution, declaring that "although the shortest, it was the greatest in the world."

Reading that almost makes me sad, when I think how polarized our country is as we herald our 250th anniversary. How other countries probably won't note it with laudatory praise. How some of our own citizens will protest our country's very existence. 

Then I learned people were grumbling around the time of the 150th, too. On July 2, 1926, the South Florida Developer newspaper (Stuart) reported that some local residents declared that a Law Observance Rally needed to take place. The Declaration of Independence would be read, patriotic songs sung, speeches given, a picnic enjoyed by all, games and sports played. A parade would close the (long) day. 

No word on whether that took place. But something close did. Everyone was invited to the patriotic Independence Day celebration being organized by the American Legion in Stuart. A band was to play patriotic music from 3:30 to 4 p.m. Afterward, a special program would be read and veterans of the Civil War, Spanish-American War and World War I would be recognized. 

The program would end with everyone in attendance reciting what the newspaper article called America's creed. I've included a photo that shows the text.

I was unfamiliar with the creed, so I asked AI. It told me the text is The American's Creed and it was written in 1917 by William Tyler Page and adopted by the U.S. House of Representatives in 1918. Since AI is known to hallucinate, I double checked the link it gave me to the Congressional Record. AI was correct. The URL is really long but I've put the link at the bottom of this blog post. 

Interestingly, the same day's newspaper issue reported that bishops of the M.E. Church had asked pastors to observe Independence Day as Loyalty Day. The bishops' specific appeal made me take notice:

"Pastors are to hold special services in efforts to rally young people in open demonstration against attacks that are being made upon the constitution of the United States." 

Maybe the attacks had something to do with Prohibition? The newspaper noted a similar movement had already taken place in Atlanta, where thousands of people ages 14 to 35 participated in a Dry Parade. Many carried signs proclaiming, "Hold Fast America." City notables made "dry" speeches. (Prohibition was the focus of the 18th amendment to the Constitution. It was ratified in 1919 and in effect until repealed in 1933.) 

Back in Florida, in Homosassa, "all Citrus County" joined in celebrating the Sesquicentennial on July 4, reported the Central Florida Times on July 8, 1926. The county chamber of commerce staged a "monster picnic and get-together."

"The entire day was given to the patriotic celebration and to the various sports." Activities included community singing and a reading of the Declaration of Independence. Judges gave speeches about sacrifices made by those who fought for the country's freedom. Festivities concluded with a baseball game between two local teams. 

Not sure any community singings are on 2026 Independence Day agendas. Ditto for long speeches. And if you hear any readings of The American's Creed, let me know. I'm not sure the Declaration of Independence is even publicly read these days. The last time I heard it publicly read was during a visit to Fort Ticonderoga many years ago. And it wasn't July 4. 

There will, however, be plenty of fireworks. AI tells me that because of minimal fireworks safety regulations in 1926, people celebrated with pyrotechnics that are heavily regulated today. 

However you celebrate, may you enjoy your July 4th and our country's 250th. And remember we're still evolving. Our democratic republic is a never-ending experiment worth continuing, improving and honoring.

Learn more about The American's Creed here: https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/SERIALSET-08579_00_00-152-0416-0000/pdf/SERIALSET-08579_00_00-152-0416-0000.pdf

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