pomp, parademarkes d earlier anniversaries...
TRANSCRIPT
PXJBI \C USHf^ l sTReeT v 1445C
I The icers
regular Cqunty Committee of
lcrican Legion / lixilic ry, iursday, July 8 in! ;ne Fo rty • Eight Clpb, Urtiversfty
penile, Rochester.. !The / induda Mrt.
Bowdisn, County C and member of Ira j Jadob ifnit« 474; Mrs Dari el LyoHs, first ViceCnairnj in I tnd membership chairm in; an i a niemberof Greece Unit #4 S8; Mrs. Frank Imburgi i, riecc nd Viee-C hairmaii anl, Americanist i Chairman and member of Brant in ( Unit #1229 of Penfiiad, * Irs. S i m Virusc i, third Vjice- (J hairn £ n ah|d Community Ser-vipe Chairman and a msmbei
L_ttrekll Warnjer Un it #94:! bf febster; Mrs. Oharl ss Smi t I,
sfciry, member it fBur.cn ller Unit #238, Mr J. My: t n £ffitt, Treasurer! akid a
ibsr of Brpoksj SHepard it, Fairport, Mrj- Rolert
it den, irehal lilitat on lirman and a ri^mjbei
jkn Shepard Unit ojf Fiir rt and Mrs. 1 Howi rd sline, chairman o 'thee lil
and youth prop rani s nd lehn ber Ira Jjaconi ion ,Ui i t Irs. Bowden *ill,.J,al
gent the!1 County ttaal delegate to theliN jrk State Convention in
lcuse during tho mid die oi July. A caucu s of d< ilcf
gates to the C^nvenjtion \|r|ll be at 1 p.m. Thiirsday, Jul i 8 p rijir t o the County tjrganipi t onal meeting.'
Your License
• have yet their Junfc applicatac Departmc mailing jof
of
strong jtiiried ijhe company in 1975.
, A natjv; of Fairport, N.Y., Armstrong is married to the former fher-y Kufcser of Gates, j
Check Driver
Albany - - D le to anierror in the computer preparation of driver license r^new^l appli-
,! tjhe'j Depiartnient of Motor Vehic es • today !an-nounced that some motorists
jto ieceive by mail oj: erator renewal
is. According to ital offidais, the | lice use renewalap-
plications is r ot a legal obli-is d arie as a service
o f ihe Qriroi" in the na applications,
lent .urges lall mo-license se per-
gation butj to motoric
Becaue June reniE theDeps torists tjo chfc:Vtneur!l expiration da \c. TIKS sons whose lie en sea expire at> the end pfijur e should apply in person for 111 eir licer ises: by' going to tHe neprestissuing office. I;
The Department's 1 issuing offices are. lb sated throughout the State i n about 100 locations. Thesi locations include thi! Stab 'a major dties, , thefivebojroughsofNewYbrk City, and all county seats;
l istances by j £ tipped this | n ountcd on^je ic i s for chjecV
is optical t e s t r a n g e in B >c heater, i ier('.« control s tandard in t e s t i n g l e sharpnee; - * prints taken from var ious instant c a m e r a s b e i n g retai lers . The cameras e that m o v e s on train- l ike d i s tances from the wal l . P Einford of 9 "Walnut Run
Cancer Group Special
lijjes U
Wl| hit O!
w< ekend
A "Wipe Out Cancer Weekend," schedule for July 23 t trough' Jijly 25, will cora-t ine [volunteer jefforts throughout Monroe County to r ise funds, jfo "the laical unit of the; Ajntrican Cancer Sixriety. 1 .
All local commercial radio at id television stations are c: operating; in the "tyeekend VI ipeout", j)rc moting public c ntributioOB to enable the / merican jCt ncer Sodety, W onroe Count; i Unit (o main-tiin and expand its! educa-tji in programs and services to
X xr | panei ts and their iliesl I j*"
j Community wjll be'featund on the sta tidns. explaining thdr com-ni tment to'the Sodety and ae king [for; si pport. 1 Phone
m
v
m :alled in :luding ^ady RecjpeJlSfci i JeterMa34p lented toj < '
['
graphs in a qual i ty clarity o f
Kodak to ; U.S^. uipment v a r y i n g
is Paul D .
ipeal gifts, in-
ninial "First books and will be pre-utors who'
>nng thejlr d> ijati&ns into the jffice, Ideal!;, j| |a* 8 Prince
: Street, JMfchgMv| Reasc t» baisespedal week
end* ahp al| ^addording to jxecutijfe dit cwryMrs. John
%tf ilowerod in-" jLbngths for
held last
i s tfaloncw,,. cjome from wl
ves swim Fa
£ned?|n^ personalities I dnly $53,000. t\ ], i%
It was ex-j$lj)5,000, but btt ice storm
"' gs, total o date are
be ,i tanned in the, ice, t iroughput the
The ''community has always been jgtnerous uvits support of the 4m?rica n Cancer Socfety'^jsays .Mrs. Maloney.j " b M | i e need is great an for edui ming an patients asking t
requests program-
ffor cancer )e. We're
cc> muhity to respond to iMsf bpdfal "Week-
id Wifeod/flfc* help ichieve t le 11 want: to impletely in
EHUCATl! c e n t l y p r e s e n udei in tutoring il H o s p i a l Tutor; a m Rlc j a r d H i v e r s , 28:! Mol y Rot d B u c e
lill : Represent ei e s e e H o s p i l li m. Acioei i n t J e IT
Davis; Chai r nan < f the •< 3 u h
itSye from t h e Kiwar i i Club of R x h e s t e r re-kljwit i funds to purcha j j educatiph al mater ia l s
u the hospi * I are E l l en Pierson, In -rille. Mai i ng the preBi mtatipn a r e K i w a n i s Club (s tanding left); and
Serv ices Committee l '
j «
us goal-we
[put cancer rljfetiroe."
Pomp, Parades Marked
Earlier Anniversaries I I n t h e 2 0 0 y e a r s s i n c e t h e l i b e r t y be] 1 s o l e m n l y
p r o c l a i m e d t h e b i r t h o f a n e w n a t i o n , i^mericjMls h a v e c e l e b r a t e d t h e i r n a t i o n a l a n n i v e r jary m u c h a s J o h n A d a m s h a d jpredic ted t h e y w o u l d - - "With
pomp and parade. bells, bonfires, and illuminations!" During the early yrars of the republic the official celebration of Independence Day seems to have been a partisan affair, pre-emptecjjhy the political party in penjujer, though rival groups could and did hold ,thdr own partisan observances. It was apparently not until the dose of the War of 1812, in the afterglow of renewed national pride, that the Fourth of July became a truly national Holiday.
TheiUnited States has celebrated three sperial anniversaries prior to the Bicentennial: the jubilee in 1$26; the centennial in 1876; and
' the sesquicentennial, in 1926. These observances were largely oriented toward the past, but the manner in which the actual cdebrations were carried out reflected current fashions and met the needs of Americans at the particular
, period in which the celebra-1 tion took place. Recognizing • this, Horatio Seymour, for-; mer governor of New York, in
offering advice on the publication of 1877 qonten-nial events in New York, recommended the ind usion of newspaper accou nts and local color.
The, jubilee of American in-""dependence had m a n y
curious and interesting aspects. The year 1826 fojind John' Quincy Adams president., Eleven states had been added to the original thirteen, and from 1790 to 1820 {the population had more t&an doubled over 9 million per sons.
There was no offidal national or< New York celebra-. tion in 1826. President Adams attended the jublice observance in the national capital on July 4, Governor DeWitt Clinton of New York partiripated in the festivities in New York City. Cdebrations were local and the emphasis j was on the Declaration of Independence and Ion honoring those, living and dead, • who had created the , new nation.
To many Americans in 1826 the Revolution was still a living memory. No general officers j of the ( Continental Army were still alive, though some junior officers and other veterans of the conflict survived jo partidpate in! the festivities. Conspicuous among the survivors of the Revolutionary generation in 1826 who livqd to share the fruits of thdr sacrifices w « e three signers of the Declaration: Thorn as Jefferson, 83; John Adams, 90; and Charles Carroll of Carrollton, 88. <
None: attended July 4 cere-monicsiin the House chamber but all: sent memorable letr
Skate Two
tonora in ward town
m upstate N' V-
Jeff Mom! Road, took A ladison, ji53 ! s scond in 'jthef: t>eBoys ( | l » , I ivision.
The torn n« Snow. Co\ a rea in Pi ;te entries f ' miles. SJ radio station: , sponsore thj'1 Country
1
Contest Winners reported he was encouraged enough to make it an annual event.
Morr ison also h ad a third in the frc< style event in the Boys Division.
j youths won
t-st skate-ever held k on June
\ i
2010 Post d Doug,
ark Way, event in
e bracket)
eld in the parking
.ractedl>4 way 8890 itry | and!
•FM co-ey. Snow J »idc' Osur
Jgttlarj •e ;on j
SORRY: Our regular photographers w e r e ' o n v a c a t i o n a n d i h e substitute had a memory lapse| vxA fai led to |get pictures A V f the var ious biccntenr, a l events , ! j a s scheduled^ lousy w e a t h e r notwi thstanding . We plan either a memory course f o r t h e . e r r a n t photographer o r death1 by s trangulat ion.
I
ters. Jeff arson's letter, h i f last testament to the American people, jwas one of his finest efforts, j Printec in riewjs p a p e r s t h r o u g h o u t ithe country;, this stir ring lett rr came one of the fughligiits the jubilee. As a strange f< note tio the events su roundiiig 1826. both JOf-fcrson and Adams died th>U jvery Ju'ly 4 day The n atif'n ; greeted; the niws ai fjn . japocalyptic wonder, a.' pt> | 1 idential sign tpat one eja j
another w m i Li *i >iIB
nabon fit-;
ad ended and nnmg.
By 1876 the dedfromseatosea.T|hirW- 5 ht States pa-tidpated 'm '
e centennial. Ulysses S|S. rant i/aa in the final yearbf is presidency, a nd Samuel J.
.Aden was governor of N^w frork and a candidate for f & Ipresidejncy, in the most cwn^ jtroversial andl closely-con-j tested election ijn the historjn of the nation - - in dectipn'hej i was to lose to Rutherford^B. Hayes.: Vi I
By 1876 Americans were i n r a mood to bin! up the na-j ^ tion's vounds ollowing the- " Civil Var. Ao»rdingly febn | March 3, 1871 Congr&s r^s-j jj sed an a d to pri >vide for cele- i brating the 100th ini [•' niversiirybyho'dinganinter* ' nation il exhibition of arts| manuf icturers, and product?, of the soil and mine, in thb dty of Philaddphia in 1J76| ;
Man/ New Yorkers mid<; I Ithe trip to Phiaddphia for-; the cen tennial cc lebrationpu^ the state as a w i o l e i the cc mmenors tion
Iportan^ Rcvoluti onary events '<which had taken place in f^ew York; tnese indu led thei tion of the first s ate cor tion at [Kingston, the of Oriskany, Bcmis Saratoga and Valley massac iSdal st ate ccrem< I but loc il orgoniz arrangi sments,
ratorical talc
Ithe No
ny was hela tions mnd«
nlisting jthf ts of Jth*
political
I r I ! sesquincen tennial
1926. found the U.S. <d Immigra^
he natianaJ
leading state's igures
The I'ear, lation bf 48 ion has swelled ipulation to almost 106 rnilfi
ion persons in 1920. New fork has a population of ever
10 million. Calvin Cooliage was president arid Alfred Ei Smith was governor of Ifcw York. \
In oin- state thjc tennial celebri launched by a mc Governor Smith urging efery community in the state to observe the week of July 3-.^as Independence We ek. sou^ programs witb historic formation, histo ical I mips, and 50,000 copies of 'TT» Americpn Revolution in Nt i York" :, were iistr>bute< throughout the country} pad educational and ] >romotiont|l feature^ of the 1 J26-27 cor memoriitions. The U.S. al^ issued a com -nemdratn stamp.
The state sesqiicenf; program was an impressive one, adtivdy invdvint sands jof people throti _ the etatc in historical scrvances, either as paitic^-pants pr onlooki irs. A • pr gram of historical njarcc
&hich jean still l e ' seen/ i ng the highway was [
And fair many Nirw Yior who viewed the 1! >26 p ag that had been staged at t l Saratoga Battlcfidd, die will never be a spectade'["« equal it - - 7.000 peoplolh^d partidbated in the event a i i l more than 100,0^ th# niprforrnnn',*'
100,000 wuteh<?d
m §