New
Year's Day is the most widely celebrated holiday in the world
(although not everyone celebrates on the same day!).
Of course, some
babies are born on this auspicious day every year, as well. Today we
celebrate the birthdays of Paul Revere and Betsy Ross, two famous
American “patriots.”
What
the word patriot means is “one who is loyal to one's
country.” Interestingly, Americans tend to use the word for
historical figures who were actively rebelling against their country
– because Britain was the ruling nation of the American colonies.
So early American patriots were people who were loyal to the idea of
a new nation – but were not a bit loyal to their actual country.
Right?
Paul
Revere (born on this day in 1735) was a silversmith. He is most
famous for alerting Colonial militia that the British forces were
approaching Concord. During the Revolutionary War, he acted as a
courier and printed local currency; he also set up a powder mill that
produced tons of gunpowder for George Washington's Continental Army.
He opened a hardware store, served in the Massachusetts militia, and
became a foundryman. (That means he learned to make iron and brass
and other metal castings.) His company, Revere Copper and Brass,
Inc., grew to be quite large.
One
reason that Revere is so famous for one little event in his exciting
and varied life is that his “midnight ride” was dramatized in
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's poem “Paul Revere's Ride.”
Betsy
Ross (born Elizabeth Griscom on this day in 1752) was a seamstress.
She is credited with sewing the first American flag, but there isn't
evidence that this story is true. She was one of several flag makers
in Philadelphia, and she changed the six-pointed stars to easier
five-pointed stars. However, in 1857, twenty years after Ross's
death, her grandson William J. Canby presented a paper claiming that
she had made “with her hands” the first flag of the United
States. The story appealed to Americans who were eager for stories
about the Revolutionary War and thirsty for patriotic role models for
girls, so the story was quickly accepted and widely retold.
And
quite probably false.
The
take-away from both of today's famous birthdays is that history
contains exaggeration and even myth. We can learn and enjoy popular
history, but we can also dig a little deeper to see what evidence
says about our past.
For
more about New Year's Day, see this and this other earlier posts.
No comments:
Post a Comment