4
th
of July Trivia and Facts
Declaration of Independence Trivia:
1. What is the date of the signing of the Declaration of Independence?
Answer: During a session of the Second Continental Congress assembled on
July 2, 1776, delegates from twelve colonies voted in favor of declaring
independence (New York abstained from voting). The process of debating and
revision continued into the late morning of July 4. In the evening of July 4,
1776, the Second Continental Congress “unanimously” (all thirteen colonies)
approved the final wording of the Declaration of Independence. It took
several weeks for the Declaration to be “engrossed” (written on parchment in
a clear hand in preparation for signing). Although the exact date has long
been in dispute, most historians now agree that nearly all the delegates signed
the Declaration of Independence in a special session of the Second
Continental Congress on August 2, with a few that signed later.
2. Who was the first person to sign the Declaration of Independence?
Answer: John Hancock, the President of the Continental Congress, was the
first person to sign the Declaration of Independence. His large and
flamboyant signature cannot be missed: twice larger than most of the other
signatures and three times larger than some. It is in the middle of the
document, with the other fifty-five smaller signatures in six columns
underneath his. There are several versions of what he said immediately after
signing the Declaration. Two of the more popular ones are: “There, I guess
King George will be able to read that!” and “The British ministry can read
that name without spectacles; let them double their reward.” There is no clear
documentation for what he said, but the various stories make for good telling.
3. Why wasn’t George Washington the first person to sign the Declaration of
Independence?
Answer: When the Second Continental Congress convened on May 10, 1775,
George Washington was a voting delegate from Virginia. But on the thirty-sixth
day after convening (June 15, 1775), the Congress elected Washington as
Commander in Chief of the Continental Army. He immediately left the
Congress and spent the next two weeks at home and in New York preparing for
his new assignment. He took command of the Revolutionary forces in
Massachusetts on July 3, 1775. George Washington was with his troops a year
later whenon July 4, 1776the Declaration of Independence was discussed and
passed. He, therefore, did not vote for or sign the Declaration of Independence.
4. Who composed the primary wording of the Declaration of Independence?
Answer: On June 7, 1776, a motion was introduced in the Second Continental
Congress for the thirteen colonies to declare their independence from Britain.
The Congress appointed a committee of five to prepare a sample declaration for
discussion purposes three weeks later on July 1, the date set for a vote. After
discussing the issues, four committee members turned to the fifth member,
Thomas Jefferson, to draft the document to be discussed by the entire Congress.
On July 4, 1776, with a few revisions, Jefferson’s draft proposal was accepted as
the final text of the Declaration of Independence.
5. Why do we celebrate the Fourth of July by shooting fireworks?
Answer: In July of 1776 (exact date unknown) John Adams, an influential
member of the Second Continental Congress and later to become our first
Secretary of State and then the second President of the United States, proclaimed
that passage of the Declaration of Independence should be celebrated each year
from one end of the continent to the other with fireworks “from this time
forward forever more.” The first documented celebration of Independence Day
with fireworks was the next year in Philadelphia on July 4, 1777. An article
describing that celebration appeared in our country’s earliest daily newspaper, the
Pennsylvania Evening Post: “The evening was closed with . . . a grand exhibition
of fireworks (which began and concluded with thirteen rockets) on the
Commons, and the city was beautifully illuminated.”
6. What was done with the original copy of the Declaration of Independence
during World War II?
Answer: On December 23, 1941, barely two weeks after Pearl Harbor was
attacked, the original signed copies of the Declaration of Independence and of
the U.S. Constitution were packed in a specially designed protective container,
latched with padlocks and sealed with lead, weighing about 150 pounds. On
December 26 and 27, 1941, accompanied by Secret Service agents, the
documents traveled by train from Washington, D.C., to Louisville, Kentucky.
The train was met in Louisville by a cavalry troop of the 13th Armored Division.
Escorted by the armored division, the documents were taken to Fort Knox,
Kentucky, where they were secretly stored in the United States Bullion
Depository, a fortified vault-building used to store our country’s gold reserves and
other precious items. After the war they were returned to Washington, D.C.
Valuables from several European countries were also stored there during the
War.
4
th
of July Facts:
1. The Liberty Bell rings 13 times every 4
th
of July to honor the 13 original states.
2. The first public 4
th
of July event at the White House occurred in 1801,
Thomas Jefferson was President.
3. Three presidents died on July 4
th
: John Adams and Thomas Jefferson both
died on July 4, 1826 this was the 50
th
anniversary. James Monroe died July
4, 1831.
4. Inscribed on the tablet held by Lady Liberty is “July IV MDCCLXXVI” (July
4, 1776).
5. Calvin Coolidge was the only president born on July 4
th
(July 4, 1872).
U.S. Flag Facts:
1. The Second Continental Congress passed the Flag Resolution on June 14,
1777, establishing the first congressional standard for official United States
ensigns. 13 stars and 13 stripes.
2. Stars formed a circle so that no one colony would be viewed above another
one.
3. Francis Hopkins designed the American Flag.
4. The 50-star pattern was created by a high school student.
a. When Alaska and Hawaii became states 49 and 50, President
Eisenhower received thousands of ideas for an updated flag. Robert G.
Heft, a 17-year-old student at Landcaster High, Ohio, created the
design for a class project. He got a B- on his project.
5. Federal regulations state that a flag can only be flown from sunrise to sunset,
unless illuminated at night.
6. On the U.S. Flag, the “canton” is the blue behind the stars.
7. The U.S. Flag is folded and tucked into a triangle as a reminder of the
soldiers who served under General George Washington and the sailors and
marines who served under Captain John Paul Jones who were followed by
their comrades and shipmates in that Armed Forces of the Unite States,
preserving for us the rights, privileges, and freedoms we enjoy today.
The Pledge of Allegiance Facts:
1. Written by Francis Bellamy
2. In 1954, President Eisenhower added “under God”.
Star-Spangled Banner Facts:
1. “The Star-Spangled Banner” was made the national anthem by a
congressional resolution on March 3, 1931 and signed by President Herbert
Hoover.
2. Francis Scott Key wrote the lyrics but intended it to be a poem. His brother-in-
law penned it on sheet music in 1814.
3. The first sporting event to hear “The Star-Spangled Banner” was a baseball
game in 1862 in Brooklyn, NY.