Ask the Scholar
Document scope · 1 page
Scholar
Ask about this object, its catalog metadata, its source description, or the page inventory.
For page-specific OCR and visual context, open one of the page chats.
Scholar Source Context
Document identity
localId
1252286
label
4/18/75 - Old North Church, Boston, Massachusetts
core
doc
dtoType
document
citationUrl
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
1252286
sourceUrl
contentType
document
title
4/18/75 - Old North Church, Boston, Massachusetts
citationUrl
collections
President's Speeches and Statements Reading Copies (Ford Administration)
Reading Copies of Presidential Speeches and Statements
subjects
Speeches, addresses, etc.
American Revolution Bicentennial, 1776-1976
thumbnailUrl
largeImageUrl
imageCount
1
hasImages
yes
source
import
hasTranscription
no
Source extras
naId
1252286
coverageEndDate
day
18
logicalDate
1975-04-18
month
4
year
1975
coverageStartDate
day
18
logicalDate
1975-04-18
month
4
year
1975
levelOfDescription
fileUnit
recordType
description
ocrSource
nara-archive
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
document
mediaId
8bca25a07aae1f79
ocrText
The original documents are located in Box 7, folder "4/18/75 - Old North Church, Boston,
Massachusetts" of the President's Speeches and Statements: Reading Copies at the
Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library.
Copyright Notice
The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of
photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Gerald Ford donated to the United
States of America his copyrights in all of his unpublished writings in National Archives collections.
Works prepared by U.S. Government employees as part of their official duties are in the public
domain. The copyrights to materials written by other individuals or organizations are presumed to
remain with them. If you think any of the information displayed in the PDF is subject to a valid
copyright claim, please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library.
Digitized from Box 7 of President's Speeches and Statements: Reading Copies at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library
THE PRESIDENT HAS SEEN of
ADDRESS AT THE OLD NORTH CHURCH
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS
FRIDAY, APRIL 18, 1975
- 1 -
TWO HUNDRED YEARS AGO TONIGHT, TWO LANTERNS HUNG IN
THE BELFRY OF THIS OLD NORTH CHURCH.
THOSE LANTERNS SIGNALED
PATRIOTS ON THE OTHER SIDE OF THE CHARLES RIVER.
BRITISH
TROOPS WERE MOVING OUT OF BOSTON BY WATER.
AS LONGFELLOW
SAID IN HIS POEM: "ONE IF BY LAND, AND TWO IF BY SEA."
- 2 -
PAUL REVERE,
WILLIAM DAWES,
AND SAMUEL PRESCOTT RODE INTO
THE NIGHT ALERTING THE COLONISTS.
THE BRITISH WERE COMING.
WHEN DAY BROKE, ACCORDING TO DIARIES OF THE TIME,
THE SKY WAS CLEAR AND BLUE.
- 3 -
BRITISH TROOPS HAD CROSSED THE CHARLES RIVER.
THEY MARCHED ALL NIGHT AND -- AFTER A SKIRMISH AT LEXINGTON --
THE REDCOATS ARRIVED AT CONCORD.
THERE, A VOLLEY WAS FIRED BY OUR MINUTEMEN -- WHAT
EMERSON CALLED THE SHOT HEARD 'ROUND THE WORLD.
11
THE AMERICAN WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE HAD BEGUN.
- 4 -
TONIGHT,
WE STAND IN TRIBUTE TO THOSE WHO STOOD
FOR LIBERTY AND FOR US TWO CENTURIES AGO.
TONIGHT,
WE BOW
OUR HEADS IN MEMORY OF THOSE WHO GAVE THEIR LIVES,
LIMBS AND
PROPERTY FOR US DURING THAT HISTORIC STRUGGLE.
BECAUSE
TONIGHT, WE BEGIN
AS A NATION AND A PEOPLE
THE
CELEBRATION OF OUR BICENTENNIAL.
- 5 -
ALEXIS DE TOCQUEVILLE, THE FRENCH HISTORIAN, WROTE
OF OUR BEGINNINGS:
"IN THAT LAND, THE GREAT EXPERIMENT WAS TO BE MADE,
BY CIVILIZED MEN, OF THE ATTEMPT TO CONSTRUCT SOCIETY
ON A NEW BASIS."
- 6 -
OVER THE DECADES, THERE WERE CHALLENGES TO THAT
EXPERIMENT:
COULD A NATION HALF SLAVE AND HALF FREE SURVIVE?
COULD A SOCIETY WITH SUCH A MIXTURE OF PEOPLES AND RACES AND
RELIGIONS SUCCEED?
WOULD THE NEW NATION BE SWALLOWED UP
IN THE MATERIALISM OF ITS OWN WELL-BEING?
- 7 -
THE ANSWERS ARE FOUND IN THE HISTORY OF OUR LAND
AND OUR PEOPLE.
- 8 -
IT IS SAID THAT A NATIONAL CHARACTER IS SHAPED BY
THE INTERPLAY OF INHERITANCE,
ENVIRONMENT AND HISTORICAL
EXPERIENCE.
OUR INHERITANCE IS BASICALLY THAT OF WESTERN
EUROPE.
FROM THE ENGLISH, WE RECEIVED TRADITIONS OF
LIBERTY,
LAWS,
LANGUAGE AND CUSTOMS.
- 9 -
THE AMERICAN INHERITANCE HAS BEEN CONSTANTLY
ENRICHED BY PEOPLE FROM WESTERN AND EASTERN EUROPE.
FROM ASIA
AND AFRICA AS WELL AS LATIN AMERICA AND OTHER PARTS OF THE
WORLD.
OVER THESE TWO HUNDRED YEARS, SOME FIFTY MILLION
IMMIGRANTS HAVE BEEN ABSORBED INTO OUR SOCIETY.
- 10 -
THOUGH OUR NATIONAL ORIGINS ARE NOT FORGOTTEN, ALL OF US ARE
PROUD TO BE SIMPLY CALLED AMERICANS.
OUR ENVIRONMENT INCLUDES EVERY VARIETY OF CLIMATE,
SOIL AND RESOURCES.
THE AMERICAN HISTORICAL EXPERIENCE
HAS BEEN BRIEF COMPARED TO MANY OTHER NATIONS.
WE ARE
THE NEW WORLD,
BUT WE ARE THE WORLD'S OLDEST REPUBLIC.
- 11 -
THE MOST DISTINGUISHED CHARACTERISTIC OF THE
AMERICAN WAY IS OUR INDIVIDUALISM.
IT IS REFLECTED IN OUR
FRONTIER SPIRIT,
OUR PRIVATE ENTERPRISE,
AND OUR ABILITY
TO ORGANIZE AND PRODUCE.
OUR ABILITY TO ADOPT NEW IDEAS
is
AND ADAPT THEM TO PRACTICAL PURPOSES ARE ALSO STRIKINGLY
AMERICAN.
- - 12 -
BUT NOW WE ASK OURSELVES:
HOW DID WE COME TO BE
WHERE WE ARE TONIGHT?
THE ANSWER IS FOUND IN THE HISTORY
OF THE AMERICAN EXPERIENCE.
- 13 -
IT TEACHES US THAT THE AMERICAN EXPERIENCE HAS BEEN
MORE OF REASON THAN REVOLUTION
MORE OF PRINCIPLES THAN
PASSIONS
AND MORE OF HOPE THAN HOSTILITY OR DESPAIR.
BUT OUR HISTORY IS ALSO ONE OF PARADOX.
- 14 - -
IT HAS SHOWN US THAT REASON IS NOT WITHOUT
ITS MOMENTS OF REBELLION
THAT PRINCIPLES ARE NOT WITHOUT
PASSION
AND HOPE IS NOT WITHOUT ITS HOURS OF
DISCOURAGEMENT AND DISMAY.
- 15 - -
IT IS WELL TO RECALL THIS EVENING THAT AMERICA
WAS BORN OF BOTH PROMISE AND PROTEST.
THE PROMISE
OF RELIGIOUS AND CIVIL LIBERTIES AND PROTEST FOR REPRESENTATION
T
AND AGAINST REPRESSION.
П
- - 16 -
SOME OF OUR DREAMS HAVE AT TIMES TURNED TO
DISAPPOINTMENT AND DISILLUSIONMENT.
BUT ADVERSITY HAS
ALSO DRIVEN AMERICANS TO GREATER HEIGHTS.
GEORGE WASHINGTON
MARCHED FROM THE ANGUISH OF VALLEY FORGE TO THE ACCLAIM OF FINAL
VICTORY.
- 17 - -
REASON AND HOPE WERE THE TWIN LANTERNS OF WASHINGTON'S
LIFE.
THEY ENABLED HIM TO PREVAIL OVER THE DAY-TO-DAY DOUBTS
AND DEFEATS.
THEY HAVE BEEN THE LAMPS THAT HAVE LIGHTED
THE ROAD OF AMERICA TOWARD ITS ULTIMATE GOALS -- DIGNITY AND
SELF-FULFILLMENT -- AND, YES, PRIDE IN COUNTRY.
- 18 - -
ABRAHAM LINCOLN WAS A MAN OF REASON AND HOPE.
HE ACKNOWLEDGE THE GRAVE FLAW OF OUR FIRST EIGHTY-SEVEN YEARS
-- SLAVERY.
- - 19 -
ONE HUNDRED AND TEN YEARS AGO, THE AMERICAN CIVIL
WAR ENDED WITH OUR REPUBLIC BATTERED AND DIVIDED.
MANY
PEOPLE TALKED MORE OF SURVIVAL THAN OF UNION.
ONE-HALF OF
THE NATION WAS ON ITS KNEES IN RUIN.
NEARLY TWO MILLION
HAD BEEN KILLED AND WOUNDED.
THE WAR HAD UPROOTED THE
LIVES AND FORTUNES OF MILLIONS MORE.
- 20 -
ITS END WAS MARKED BY MORE TEARS THAN CHEERS.
BUT IT WAS ALSO THE BIRTH OF A NEW NATION -- FREEING ITSELF
FROM HUMAN SLAVERY.
JUST BEFORE THE WAR ENDED, ON
MARCH 4, 1865, PRESIDENT ABRAHAM LINCOLN STOOD ON THE EAST
PORTICO OF THE CAPITOL IN WASHINGTON AND DELIVERED HIS
SECOND INAUGURAL ADDRESS.
- 21 -
HE EXTENDED THE HAND OF FRIENDSHIP AND UNITY WHEN HE SAID:
"WITH MALICE TOWARD NONE; WITH CHARITY FOR ALL;
WITH FIRMNESS IN THE RIGHT, AS GOD GIVES US TO SEE THE RIGHT,
LET US STRIVE ON TO FINISH THE WORK WE ARE IN, TO BIND UP
THE NATION'S WOUNDS
II
- 22 -
PRESIDENT LINCOLN HAD RE-LIT THE LAMPS OF REASON
AND HOPE.
HE HAD REKINDLED PRIDE IN AMERICA.
- 23 - -
ONE HUNDRED YEARS AGO -- AS THE NATION CELEBRATED
ITS CENTENNIAL -- AMERICA LOOKED TO THE FUTURE.
OUR NATION
HAD EMERGED FROM AN AGRICULTURAL,
FRONTIER SOCIETY INTO THE
INDUSTRIAL AGE.
OUR TOWNS WERE BEGINNING TO EVOLVE INTO
1
THE CITIES OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY.
- - 24 -
RAIL TRANSPORTATION AND THE TELEGRAPH WERE TYING THIS VAST
CONTINENT TOGETHER.
WHEN WE CELEBRATED OUR ONE-HUNDREDTH
BIRTHDAY, ONE OF THE THEMES WAS:
"WHILE PROUD OF WHAT WE HAVE DONE, WE REGRET
THAT WE HAVE NOT DONE MORE."
- 25 - -
THERE WAS CERTAINLY MORE TO DO.
AND MORE PEOPLE
TO DO THE JOB.
IMMIGRANTS WERE POURING INTO AMERICA.
THEY WERE WELCOMED BY THESE WORDS INSCRIBED ON THE STATUTE
OF LIBERTY:
"I LIFT MY LAMP BESIDE THE GOLDEN DOOR."
- - 26 -
THE GREAT INCREASE IN THE NUMBER OF AMERICANS MADE
US A FORMIDABLE FORCE IN THE WORLD.
THAT FORCE WAS SOON
NEEDED.
WORLD WAR ONE SAW AMERICAN TROOPS FIGHT AND DIE
IN EUROPE FOR THE FIRST TIME.
MANY AMERICANS WERE
DISAPPOINTED AND DISILLUSIONED BY THE AFTERMATH OF THE WAR.
-27-
THEY FOUND THE CAUSES FOR WHICH THEY FOUGHT UNACHIEVED.
THE AMERICAN PEOPLE REJECTED FOREIGN ENTANGLEMENTS AND
WITHDREW INTO A SEPARATE EXISTENCE.
THEY WANTED TO BE
LEFT ALONE.
- 28 - -
IN 1941, THE UNITED STATES WAS ATTACKED.
AND ONCE
MORE WE WENT TO WAR -- THIS TIME ACROSS THE PACIFIC AS WELL AS
THE ATLANTIC.
WE WERE PROUD OF THIS COUNTRY AND WHAT IT WAS
ACHIEVING FOR LIBERTY AROUND THE WORLD.
YET, STILL ANOTHER
TIME -- FOLLOWING VICTORY OVER OUR ENEMIES -- THE AMERICAN
PUBLIC WAS JARRED AND DISILLUSIONED BY THE POST-WAR YEARS.
- 29 - -
THEY DISCOVERED THERE WOULD BE NO REAL PEACE.
EUROPE WAS DIVIDED IN TWO ON V-E DAY.
IN THE WORDS OF
CHURCHILL: "
AN IRON CURTAIN HAS DESCENDED ACROSS THE
CONTINENT."
AMERICA HAD BECOME THE STRONGHOLD OF LIBERTY.
- 30 - -
PRESIDENT TRUMAN INSTITUTED A NEW BIPARTISAN
FOREIGN POLICY OF CONTAINMENT,
COOPERATION AND RECONSTRUCTION.
THE MARSHALL PLAN MOVED TO RECONSTRUCT THE FREE WORLD.
THE UNITED NATIONS WAS BORN BUT THE COLD WAR HAD ALREADY BEGUN.
- 31 -
SOON -- ALL TOO SOON -- AMERICA WAS AGAIN AT WAR UNDER THE
BANNER OF THE UNITED NATIONS IN KOREA.
LITTLE DID WE KNOW
THEN THAT AMERICAN TROOPS WOULD -- ONLY A DECADE LATER --
BE FIGHTING STILL ANOTHER WAR IN ASIA -- CULMINATING IN A
BROKEN PEACE AGREEMENT IN VIETNAM.
- 32 - -
IN THE TWO HUNDRED YEARS OF OUR EXISTENCE, IT IS
NOT WAR AND DISILLUSIONMENT WHICH HAVE TRIUMPHED.
NO.
IT IS THE AMERICAN CONCEPT AND FULFILLMENT OF LIBERTY THAT HAVE
TRULY REVOLUTIONIZED THE WORLD.
AMERICA HAS NOT SOUGHT
THE CONQUEST OF TERRITORY BUT INSTEAD THE MUTUAL SUPPORT
OF ALL MEN AND WOMEN WHO CHERISH FREEDOM.
- 33- -
THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE HAS WON THE MINDS AND HEARTS
OF THIS WORLD BEYOND THE DREAMS OF ANY REVOLUTIONARY WHO HAS
EVER LIVED.
THE TWO LANTERNS OF THE OLD NORTH CHURCH HAVE
FIRED A TORCH OF FREEDOM THAT HAS BEEN CARRIED TO THE ENDS
OF THE EARTH.
- - 34 -
AS WE LAUNCH THIS BICENTENNIAL CELEBRATION, WE
AMERICANS MUST REMIND OURSELVES OF THE ETERNAL TRUTHS BY WHICH
WE LIVE.
WE MUST BE RE-INSPIRED BY THE GREAT IDEALS THAT
CREATED OUR COUNTRY.
WE MUST RENEW OURSELVES AS A PEOPLE
AND REDEDICATE THIS NATION TO THE PRINCIPLES OF TWO CENTURIES
AGO.
- 35 -
WE MUST REVITALIZE THE PRIDE IN AMERICA THAT CARRIED US
FROM SOME OF OUR DARKEST HOURS TO OUR BRIGHTEST DAYS.
36 -
WE MUST ONCE AGAIN BECOME MASTERS OF OUR OWN
DESTINY.
THIS CALLS FOR PATIENCE,
UNDERSTANDING,
\
TOLERANCE AND WORK TOWARD UNITY -- UNITY OF PURPOSE.
A UNITY BASED ON REASON AND HOPE.
- 37 -
THIS CALL IS NOT NEW.
IT IS AS OLD AS THE
CONTINENTAL CONGRESS OF TWO HUNDRED YEARS AGO
:
AS
LEGENDARY AS LINCOLN'S LEGACY OF MORE THAN ONE HUNDRED YEARS
AGO
AND AS RELEVANT AS TODAY'S CALL TO ALL AMERICANS
TO JOIN IN CELEBRATION OF OUR BICENTENNIAL.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
BISHOP,
VICAR, ,
DEAR FRIENDS
- 38 -
PERHAPS,
NATIONAL UNITY IS AN IMPOSSIBLE DREAM.
LIKE PERMANENT PEACE, PERHAPS IT WILL PROVE TO BE A
NEVER-ENDING SEARCH.
BUT TODAY WE CELEBRATE THE MOST
IMPOSSIBLE DREAM OF OUR HISTORY -- THE SURVIVAL OF THE
GOVERNMENT AND THE PERMANENCE OF THE PRINCIPLES OF OUR
FOUND ING FATHERS.
- 39 -
AMERICA AND ITS PRINCIPLES HAVE NOT ONLY SURVIVED
BUT FLOURISHED FAR BEYOND ANYONE'S DREAMS.
NO NATION IN
HISTORY HAS UNDERTAKEN THE ENORMOUS ENTERPRISES OF THE AMERICAN
PEOPLE.
NO COUNTRY -- DESPITE OUR IMPERFECTIONS -- HAS
DONE MORE TO BRING ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL JUSTICE TO ITS PEOPLE
AND THE WORLD.
- 40 - -
YET,
WE HAVE SUFFERED GREAT INTERNAL TURMOIL AND TORMENT
IN RECENT YEARS.
NEVERTHELESS,
IN ALL THE EXPLOSIVE CHANGES OF THIS
AND THE PAST GENERATION, THE AMERICAN PEOPLE HAVE DEMONSTRATED
A RICH RESERVE OF REASON AND HOPE.
- 41 -
THERE ARE FEW TIMES IN OUR HISTORY WHEN THE
AMERICAN PEOPLE HAVE SPOKEN WITH MORE ELOQUENT REASON AND
HOPE THAN DURING THE TRIBULATIONS AND TESTS THAT OUR
GOVERNMENT AND ECONOMIC SYSTEMS HAVE ENDURED DURING
THE PAST YEAR.
- 42- -
YET,
THE AMERICAN PEOPLE HAVE STOOD FIRM.
THE NATION HAS NOT BEEN TORN WITH IRRESPONSIBLE REACTION.
RATHER WE ARE BLESSED WITH PATIENCE,
COMMON SENSE AND
A WILLINGNESS TO WORK THINGS OUT.
- 43-
THE AMERICAN DREAM IS NOT DEAD.
IT SIMPLY HAS
YET TO BE FULFILLED.
IN THE ECONOMY AND ENERGY AND THE
ENVIRONMENT
IN HOUSING AND TRANSPORTATION
IN EDUCATION AND COMMUNICATION
IN SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND
SOCIAL PLANNING
AMERICA HAS YET TO REALIZE ITS GREATEST
CONTRIBUTION TO CIVILIZATION.
- 44 -
TO DO THIS, AMERICA NEEDS NEW IDEAS AND NEW
EFFORTS FROM OUR PEOPLE.
EACH OF US -- OF EVERY COLOR
CREED OR PART OF THE COUNTRY -- MUST BE WILLING TO BUILD NOT
ONLY A NEW AND BETTER NATION BUT NEW AND GREATER UNDERSTANDING
AND UNITY AMONG OUR PEOPLE.
- 45 - -
LET US NOT ONLY BE A NATION OF PEACE,
BUT LET US FOSTER PEACE AMONG ALL NATIONS.
LET US NOT ONLY
BELIEVE IN EQUALITY, BUT LIVE IT EACH DAY.
LET US NOT ONLY
FEED AND CLOTHE A HEALTHY AMERICA, BUT LET US LEND A HAND
TO OTHERS STRUGGLING FOR SELF-FULFILLMENT.
- 46 -
LET US SEEK EVEN GREATER KNOWLEDGE
Y
AND OFFER THE ENLIGHTENMENT
OF OUR ENDEAVORS TO THE EDUCATIONAL AND SCIENTIFIC COMMUNITY
OF THE WORLD.
LET US SEEK THE SPIRITUAL ENRICHMENT OF OUR
PEOPLE MORE THAN MATERIAL GAIN.
LET US BE TRUE TO OURSELVES
-- TO OUR HERITAGE AND OUR HOMELAND -- AND WE WILL NEVER
THEN BE FALSE TO ANY PEOPLE OR NATION.
- - 47 -
AND, FINALLY, LET US PRAY HERE IN THE OLD NORTH
-
CHURCH TONIGHT THAT THOSE WHO FOLLOW ONE HUNDRED YEARS --
OR TWO HUNDRED YEARS -- FROM NOW MAY LOOK BACK AT US AND
SAY:
WE WERE A SOCIETY WHICH COMBINED REASON WITH
LIBERTY AND HOPE WITH FREEDOM.
- - 48 -
MAY IT BE SAID ABOVE ALL : WE KEPT THE FAITH !
FREEDOM FLOURISHED !
LIBERTY LIVED !
THESE ARE THE ABIDING PRINCIPLES OF OUR PAST AND
THE GREATEST PROMISE OF OUR FUTURE.
GOOD EVENING AND MAY GOD BLESS US ALL.
END OF TEXT