How July 4 became Independence Day
However, Americans now recognize July 4 as Independence Day because it was the day those same delegates approved the final wording of Jefferson’s Declaration of Independence and approved its publication. The document was sent to a printer, John Dunlap, who made 200 copies that were distributed around the colonies.
In the days and weeks following July 4, the document would be read aloud on the steps of state houses, in town squares and in military camps. Gen. George Washington read it to his troops as they prepared for an impending attack by the British. In that way, the date of July 4 became synonymous with independence in the minds of commoners.
Most delegates signed the final, official parchment version on Aug. 2, 1776.
“This is of course not a 24-hour news era, so it takes time to get it drawn up and then also to make the proclamation,” Hart said. “And then it takes time for the information to circulate. So it’s because it becomes public knowledge on July the Fourth, and it’s proclaimed on that day, that this ends up being Independence Day. It’s not just a few men in a room making a decision. It’s the actual proclamation to the people at large.”
Adams got his “Pomp and Parade” on the first anniversary of the event in Philadelphia which “celebrated here with a festivity and ceremony becoming the occasion,” he wrote in a letter to his daughter.
However, it was years before the newly formed nation saw enough peace to exercise its new freedoms. King George III was not ready to release the New World, which provided staple raw materials like tobacco, lumber and iron, served as a captive market for British manufactured goods and generated significant tax revenues. The American Revolution lasted another seven years and cost an estimated 50,000 lives between the two sides.
The war officially ended on Sept. 3, 1783, when the United States and Great Britain signed the Treaty of Paris, recognizing America’s sovereign independence. In 1787, Philadelphia hosted the Constitutional Convention, where delegates from 12 of the former colonies — now states — drafted the U.S. Constitution, which went into effect on March 4, 1789.
It’s in the succeeding years that July Fourth became popularly known as an anniversary.
From anniversary to national holiday
“It really takes a while to take off,” Hart said. “People do things like have fireworks and put candles in their windows to show their support quite early on, but to become the official day of the birth of America, that takes time for everyone to get behind it.”
The holiday took on even greater meaning after July 4, 1826, when Thomas Jefferson and John Adams died, on the same day — the day they helped place into history.
“Jefferson comes to claim writing the declaration as his greatest achievement, and his supporters start to celebrate July the Fourth with parades and with orations as a really meaningful moment,” Hart said. “And then, of course, that baton is taken up across all of the 19th century after his death.”
Another 50 years later, the centennial coincided with the World’s Fair, which was also held in Philadelphia, leading to another “huge celebration” and further solidifying it as a day to commemorate, Shankman said.
Shankman added that, while Americans debate whether the nation has lived up to the ideals it was founded on, it’s a debate that has raged since the beginning.
“People have been arguing almost since the start about what exactly the American experiment is and what kind of nation that came into being, at least on paper on July 4, 1776 — what it was meant to be and what it should be,” he said.