“If
fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped up in the American flag and
heralded as a plea for liberty and preservation of the constitution.” – James
Waterman Wise, Jr.
One of the
most glaring examples of consequences being 180° opposite of what the initiator
of action intended have to be that of Francis Bellamy and his Pledge of
Allegiance.
His
pledge, and its prescribed method of recitation, were first published in the
weekly The Youth’s Companion, the premier youth-oriented family
magazine during the century of its publication, from 1827 to 1929. Such
was this magazine’s reputation that it drew in contributions from such stellar
and diverse authors as Mark Twain, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Jack London, Booker
T. Washington, Emily Dickinson, Winston Churchill, Theodore Roosevelt, Grover
Cleveland, Thomas Huxley, and others.
The Nationalist Clubs
Few
Americans today are aware or would believe that the third best-selling American
novel in the 19th century, behind Uncle Tom’s Cabin and Ben
Hur, was a science fiction novel about a future socialist utopian
commonwealth in the United States. Among other things, the novel promoted
free public education, an eight hour workday, equality of the sexes,
nationalization of industries, public management of the economy, public
ownership of utilities, equal income for everyone, and retirement at age
45. It even predicted such features of current life as plastic
credit/debit cards.
Published
in 1887, Looking Backward: 2000-1887, was written by Francis’
cousin Edward Bellamy. It almost immediately spawned a popular political
movement. At the inaugural meeting of its first group in Boston in 1888,
the name Nationalist Club was chosen by those dedicated to promoting and
realizing the vision in Edward’s book. Edward had suggested the name
himself, saying it represented the idea of Nation, meaning its citizens,
especially its working citizens, against Capital. He also rejected the
idea of class in America, and therefore of a struggle between set classes,
leaning more toward Ferdinand Lassalle than to Karl Marx on the relations of
class to the state.
(A very
good synopsis of the novel can be found at: http://rebirthofreason.com/Articles/Younkins/Taking_a_Look_at_Edward_Bellamys_Looking_Backward.shtml .
It’s a good synopsis overall, even if it is on a pro-capitalist libertarian
website, and is not too biased in its judgments.)
In a short
time, this first Nationalist Club had grown into 167 clubs, including another
in Boston. The next year, 1889, Edward’s cousin Francis, a Baptist
minister, and Episcopal priest William Dwight Porter Bliss formed the Society
of Christian Socialists as an auxiliary organization to the greater Nationalist
Movement.
Admittedly,
there would have been, and still would be, problems with transforming Edward’s
vision of the future into concrete reality. The idea of an industrial
army in which citizens work at different jobs for the same pay and when not
working lands a person in solitary confinement with only bread and water, with
a prohibition against obtaining goods and services from sources other than
those provided by the government, is more than a little authoritarian.
However,
to attack the society in the novel, whether in the present day or at the time
of its publication as some did, as if it were a plan of action is rather
foolish because it is, after all, just a novel. A work of FICTION.
It’s the equivalent of attacking George Lucas over the authoritarianism of the
pre-Empire Jedi Order.
Edward’s
true ideas lie in The Programme of the Nationalists (1884),
and in the sequel to Looking Backward that he wrote and
published in 1897, Equality. The latter, highly anticipated at
the time of its debut due to the popularity of its predecessor, was not so much
of a novel as an exposition of Bellamy’s real ideas. For starters, that
he was a true democrat, not an authoritarian. Karl Marx had much the same
problem with opponents mischaracterizing his ideas and concepts to their own
rhetorical or political advantage.
The Gilded Age
America’s
modern industrial economy was born during the Gilded Age that began before
Reconstruction of the former Confederate states ended and last until the Panic
of 1893 that began a depression that lasted three years.
The Second
Industrial Revolution began during the Civil War (at least for Union states)
and lasted until the Great Depression. Of its abuses at the present time
and the future, Pres. Abraham Lincoln, in a letter to Col. William F. Elkins dated 21
November 1864, warned: “I see in the near future a crisis approaching that
unnerves me and causes me to tremble for the safety of my country. Corporations
have been enthroned and an era of corruption in high places will follow, and
the money power of the country will endeavour to prolong its reign by working
upon the prejudices of the people until all wealth is aggregated in a few hands
and the Republic is destroyed.”
I first
read that quote in Jack London’s own socialist novel, The Iron Heel (1908),
and have since learned that it is indeed authentic.
In a much
earlier speech to the Illinois legislature (January 1837), Lincoln remarked,
“These capitalists generally act harmoniously and in concert to fleece the
people, and now that they have got into a quarrel with themselves, we are
called upon to appropriate the people's money to settle the quarrel.”
Lincoln’s
first annual address to Congress (3 December 1861) included the following in
his closing remarks: “Labor is prior to, and independent of, Capital.
Capital is the only fruit of Labor, and could never have existed if Labor
had not first existed. Labor is the superior of Capital, and deserves the
much higher consideration.”
No wonder
that in his imaginative fictional alternate history of the United States in
which the South won the War Between the States, author Harry Turtledove made
Lincoln head of the Socialist Party of America.
During the
Reconstruction period in the aftermath of the Civil War, the North’s economy
mushroomed and expanded westward while that of the South, well,
reconstructed. Part of that Reconstruction in the South came at the hands
of northern industrialists who stayed or returned South after the War.
To
Chattanooga, Tennessee, for example. Chattanooga had previously served as
base headquarters for the Union’s Army of the Cumberland, in particular its
Quartermaster Corps, after the Battle of Missionary Ridge and the retreat of
the Confederacy’s Army of Tennessee south to Dalton, Georgia, in late 1863.
Chattanooga
was prime for industrial and commercial development, on the Tennessee River and
as the hub of several rail lines. The Union veterans who came and built
Chattanooga are more the city fathers than those who came in on the heels of
the ethnically-cleansed Cherokee in 1838. Although they were all members
of the Grand Army of the Republic, as the Union’s veteran’s organization was
called, more important to them was their Society of the Army of the Cumberland.
While Hamilton County had five chapters of the GAR, the SAC
veterans, mostly urban based, organized themselves into two chapters, the Moccasin Point Camp and
the Lookout Mountain Camp, which merged in the 1890’s into a single group named
the Mountain City Club, according to a notice in the Chattanooga News.
The Mountain City Club remains the predominant social club as well as the most
prestigious dinner club in the city. However, these days one does not
need to be a descendant of the founders, though many are, but do have to pony
up a hefty buy-in fee.
The United
Confederate Veterans had a single chapter, Nathan Bedford Forrest Camp No. 4, while its later offshoot the Sons of Confederate Veterans was called the Joseph Backman Camp. The United Daughters of the Confederacy chapter in Chattanooga is named the
A.P. Stewart Camp.
A statue of the former Lt. Gen. Stewart, the last general commanding of the Confederate Army of Tennessee, dominates the Hamilton County
courthouse front lawn.
Nearly all
Chattanooga’s former leaders fled permanently as the war came to the region, so
the incoming former Union soldiers merely occupied vacant spaces. Until
1870, the county seat was upriver at Harrison. By that time, the
newcomers had built Chattanooga into the
county’s biggest and most important municipality. A
large part of what enabled them to do this was the putting aside of old
animosities between former antagonists in the name of pursuing profit, exchanging
blue and grey for green if you will.
Though the
newcomers dominated, they intermarried with local families and partnered with
antebellum residents. Other assets were recruited from the North, such as
John T. Lupton, a carpetbagger in the literal sense of the term. A
lawyer, Lupton arrived in Chattanooga at the Union Station (where the public
library is now) with a carpetbag in hand. Later he founded a corporation
called the Coca-Cola Company. You may have heard of it. He also
built the thirty-room Lyndhurst mansion in the town of Riverview (now in
Chattanooga), naming it after that of industrialist Jay Gould in New York.
Unquestionably,
the foremost leader of these men was John T. Wilder, the former brigadier
general who before the war had already built his own foundry in Indiana.
Although he died in Jacksonville, Florida, in 1917 after having left
Chattanooga in 1882, he was buried in Chattanooga at Forest Hills Cemetery in
accordance with his will.
The
rapprochement that took place in Chattanooga in the late 1860’s didn’t come to
the rest of the country until 1877, with the National Compromise of that put
Rutherford B. Hayes in office, secured a Republican majority for decades, and
left the South in general to the Bourbon Democrats. The South turned from
Reconstruction to “Redemption” and the country as a whole entered the Gilded
Age.
The year
of the “corrupt bargain”, as newspapers called the backroom political deal,
also brought the Great Upheaval of 1877. It began as a strike by railroad
workers that turned into a general strike that spread to areas all across the
country. Federal troops and state and local militias put down the strike
with considerable force that presaged future actions against labor.
The First International
One of the
chief moving forces behind the Great Upheaval was the Marxist-oriented
Workingmen’s Party of America.
Karl Marx
and Friedrich Engels founded the First International, formally named the
International Workers Association (IWA), in 1864 in the aftermath of the
January Uprising (1863) of workers in Poland. Its initial membership was
made up of Marxists, Blanquists, Philadephes, trade unionists, Lassalleans,
Proudhon’s mutualist anarchists, other socialists, and social democrats.
The first American section was organized in 1867. In 1868, the anarchists
in Europe led by Mikhail Bakunin joined.
Near the
end of the Franco-Prussian War in 1871, the workers in Paris rose up to
overthrow the government and establish the Paris Commune. Though
retaining power for little more than two months, the Commune has often been
cited as the model workers republic by socialists such as Marx, Engels,
Bakunin, Vladimir Lenin, Leon Trotsky, and Mao Zedong. At the time,
disagreements over some of its action led to dissension within the IWA over
some of its actions, or rather, lack of actions.
The Paris
Commune also had consequences for the American people by virtue of scaring the
hell out of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Stephen Field and his court reporter,
John Bancroft, both of whom were in the pay and pockets of the railroads.
More later on the resulting consequences for American citizens,
which reach even to the present time.
In 1872,
after the acutely contentious Hague Congress in which the anarchists split from
the socialists, Marx and Engels moved the offices of the International from
Europe to New York City. The United States already had 30 local
“sections” in its North American Federation (NAF) of the IWA. After the
IWA dissolved in 1876, the NAF and other socialist groups reorganized as the
Workingmen’s Party of America, which ultimately became the Socialist Labor
Party of America (SLPA).
In 1882,
the SLPA helped organize the Central Labor Union (CLU) of New York, the
country’s first racially-integrated labor union. Two years later, the CLU
declared that the world’s first Labor Day on the first Monday in
September. The same year, 1884, saw the publication of Laurence
Gronlund’s Co-operative Commonwealth, an interpretation of Marx’s
ideas for Americans since Marx’s magnum opus, Capital, had not yet
been translated into English.
That
translation came in 1886. The same year saw the foundation of the
American Federation of Labor, international workers launching International
Workers Day on 1 May in support of the Eight-Hour Movement in the United
States, and the so-called “Haymarket Riots” in Chicago. The Statue of
Liberty, the gift of France to America, was dedicated on 28 October 1886.
This was
the tumultuous atmosphere into which Edward Bellamy’s Looking Backward was
published in 1887.
It came
out at the apex of the Gilded Age. This was the era of the original
“robber barons”, such industrialists, financiers, and monopoly capitalists as
Jay Gould, J.P. Morgan, Andrew Carnegie, Cornelius Vanderbilt, Jacob Astor, Andrew
Mellon, Leland Stanford, Charles M. Schwab, and John D. Rockefeller.
This was a
time when, according to Edward, 31,000 men held half the wealth of the nation’s
65,000,000 persons. He quoted figures from the 1890 census that: “9
percent of the population of the United States owns 71 percent of the wealth of
the country, leaving but 29 percent to the remaining 91 percent of the
population; and 4,074 persons or families, being the richest group among the 9
percent mentioned, own one-fifth of the total wealth of the country, or nearly
as much as the aggregate holdings of 91 percent of the people.”
Compare
the figures I cited in my October 2011 essay, “Occupy America, and the world”:
“The 400 richest persons in America (0.000001% of the population) have as much
as the bottom 150,000,000 people (50% of the population). That top 1%
we’ve been hearing so much about control 60% of the wealth of the country,
leaving a mere 40% of the wealth for the bottom 99% upon which they sit. And
most recently, figures from the 2010 census indicate that the poor in our
country number 148 million.”
One cannot
help but note that income/wealth disparity is even greater in the second decade
of the 21st century than in Edward Bellamy’s time in the last
decade of the 19th century.
Laurence
Gronlund was so impressed with Looking Backward, and its widespread
popularity, that he withdrew his own book from publication for nearly a decade
and a half, though its name, Co-operative Commonwealth, remained
for decades the same for American socialists when speaking of the goal toward
which they were working.
The next
year, 1888, Supreme Court Justice Field invented the legal but devoid of logic
and common sense doctrine that a corporation is a person, with all the rights
and privileges of a citizen of the United States. The case was Pembina
Consolidated Silver Mining Company v. State of Pennsylvania, and it was the
precedent to which the current Supreme Court under Chief Justice John Roberts
reached for its 2010 decision in the case of Citizens United v. Federal
Election Commission.
In 1889,
the Socialist (or Second) International was formed in Paris on 14 July,
Bastille Day.
The Pledge of Allegiance
Edward’s
cousin Francis was a leading member of and spokesperson for the Nationalist
Movement. In 1891, Francis Bellamy and W.D.P. Bliss organized the Society
of Christian Socialists as an auxiliary to the movement. Publisher David
Ford, owner of the Perry Mason Company, recruited Francis to work with his
nephew, John Upham, in the premium department of his magazine, The
Youth’s Companion.
The Coal
Creek War in Anderson County, Tennessee, began the same year, when coal
companies began trying to replace workers with convicts leased from the state
government as virtual slave labor. Free coal workers attacked company
facilities and prisons, destroying much property and releasing hundreds.
Dozens from both sides were killed in small arms skirmishes. The armed
uprising lasted over a year before being ruthlessly crushed by company goons and
the Tennessee National Guard, and made headlines world-wide.
The
premium department of The Youth’s Companion did not sell only
annual subscriptions, it ran a thriving mail order business as well. One
of its more popular items was the U.S. flag. Partially to increase sales,
on the part of Ford, and partly due to patriotic sentiment, on the part of
Upham, the magazine launched its school flag movement, a campaign to get every
school in the country to install a flag pole on which to fly their flag, preferably
purchased from The Youth’s Companion, in 1888.
It may
seem incredible nowadays, but at the time very few if any schools had a flag
pole or displayed the flag in any manner.
As part of
their campaign, which was eventually supported by the National Education
Association (NEA), state and local Boards of Education all across the country,
and the United States Government, Ford and Upham also campaigned for laws
making flag poles at school compulsory. The campaign spread to target
private homes, encouraging people to fly the flag on national holidays.
By the
beginning of 1892, premium department had sold over 26,000 flags at $10 per
flag, for a total of $260,000 over the four years. Still, not every
school in the nation was flying the flag every day, and many did not even have
a flag pole upon which to fly a flag purchased from The Youth’s
Companion.
Seeing an opportunity in the 400th anniversary of Columbus’ “discovery” of the Americas, the magazine and the NEA organized a committee promoting the National Celebration of the Public Schools for Columbus Day. Its chairman was none other than Edward Bellamy’s cousin Francis.
Seeing an opportunity in the 400th anniversary of Columbus’ “discovery” of the Americas, the magazine and the NEA organized a committee promoting the National Celebration of the Public Schools for Columbus Day. Its chairman was none other than Edward Bellamy’s cousin Francis.
To make
the occasion more ceremonial, Francis, a spokesperson for the Nationalist
Movement and vice president of the Society of Christian Socialists, composed a
pledge to the flag and the republic, choosing words through which he hoped to
impart a spirit of comrade citizenship and civic responsibility. Nation
versus Capital, in a subtle way.
The pledge
he initially wrote was this: “I pledge allegiance to my Flag and the Republic
for which it stands, one Nation, indivisible, with Liberty, Equality,
Fraternity, and Justice for all.”
With this
wording, the emphasis on Nation and the Republic was clear. The words
“liberty, equality, fraternity” were borrowed from France, which had so
recently given us the Statue of Liberty, for whom they were the national
slogan, adopted from the Cordeliers Clubs during their own
revolution. The stress on “indivisible” and “one” Nation was twofold: first,
that the country would never again be divided, and two, that the time for
lingering animosities was long past.
F. Bellamy struck out the words
“equality, fraternity” before the Pledge of Allegiance was even
published. It would have been rather embarrassing to call for equality at
the height of Jim Crow, and part of the goal was to sell flags. In
September of that year, along with instruction for its recitation:
‘At a
signal from the Principal the pupils, in ordered ranks, hands to the side, face
the Flag. Another signal is given; every pupil gives the flag the military
salute -- right hand lifted, palm downward, to a line with the forehead and
close to it. Standing thus, all repeat together, slowly, “I pledge allegiance
to my Flag and the Republic for which it stands; one Nation indivisible, with
Liberty and Justice for all.” At the words, “to my Flag,” the right hand is
extended gracefully, palm upward, toward the Flag, and remains in this gesture
till the end of the affirmation; whereupon all hands immediately drop to the
side.’
The
Columbus Day ceremony went off well for The Youth’s Companion.
In the
federal elections (1892) the next month, the Nationalist Clubs endorsed the
Populist Party.
Upham
introduced the pledge to adults at the National Liberty Pole and Flag Raising
Ceremony at Navesink, New Jersey, on 25 April 1893. The ceremony was
instigated by William Osborne McDowell, founder of the Sons of the American
Revolution, who had erected the giant flagpole at the Navesink Light Station.
The occasion was decidedly less egalitarian and more nationalistic in the
traditional sense.
The
magazine continued its support for the Pledge, school flags, and the flag
ceremonies until its demise in 1929.
Tarnished Gilding
The Panic
of 1893 that led to four years of serious economic depression had already begun
a few months before. A year after Upham and Francis had introduced their
pledge to an adult audience, the first populist march on Washington took place,
by “Coxey’s Army” of unemployed and otherwise impoverished men. Eugene
Debs and his American Railway Union conducted the Great Pullman Strike of 1894.
During the
1896 federal elections, the Populist Party previously supported by the
Nationalist Clubs threw its weight behind William Jennings Bryan and the
Democratic Party. That, along with the harder times of a depression worse
than any except the Great Depression, led to the Populist Party’s demise and
the decline of the Nationalist Clubs.
In 1901,
the remaining Nationalists joined with the Debs’ Social Democratic Party,
Morris Hillquit’s dissidents from the SLPA, former Populists, and other
radicals to form the Socialist Party of America.
Four years
later, former and current contributors to The Youth’s Companion joined
with other writers to form the Intercollegiate Socialist Society, which later
became the League for Industrial Democracy (LID). The LID spawned a youth
wing, the Student League for Industrial Democracy, which in 1958 became the
Students for a Democratic Society.
Also that
year, the Socialist Party, Socialist Labor Party, and American Labor Union
joined together to organize the Industrial Workers of the World, or “Wobblies”.
“Americanism”
Meanwhile,
just as the nation was at last beginning to climb out of the depression, a new
administration took office in Washington. President William McKinley and
his Secretary of the Navy, Theodore Roosevelt, brought jingoism (a late 19th century
popular term for the kind of extreme bigoted nationalism otherwise called
chauvinism) to Washington, D.C., and to the country.
Seizing
the reins of the sentiment that had been built around the flag and its
ceremonies in the past decade, the two directed its fervor into a hatred for
the Spain and anger over its actions in nearby Cuba. With emotions thus
raised, it would have been nearly impossible for a rational reaction when a
boiler of the U.S.S. Maine blew up and sank it in Havana Bay.
(Incidentally,
the last remaining intact part of the Maine, the front cover of one
of its gun emplacements, is in the front of the VFW Post 1289 on Lee Highway.)
The
explosion of jingoistic hysteria that was beginning to be called “Americanism”
led, of course, to the Spanish-American War in 1898, and by extension to the
Filipino-American War of 1899-1914. Critics in the Anti-Imperialist
League, with Mark Twain at their forefront, condemned it for what it was.
Ironically, this coincided with the beginning of the Progressive Era in
America.
The
primary basic training camp for the waves of recruits took place at Fort
Oglethorpe in North Georgia, built specifically for that purpose next to the
Chickamauga battlefield section of the new Chickamauga-Chattanooga National
Military Park, which had been dedicated just three years before. The
park, the first such in the United States, had been established at the
instigation and with the funds of the veteran Union officers of the Society of
the Army of the Cumberland who had made Chattanooga their home.
Soldiers
suffered far more casualties from training accidents and disease at Ft.
Oglethorpe than did the entire U.S. military and navy in the Cuban conflict.
After the
“war”, McKinley proved his critics’ charges of imperialism correct by annexing
Puerto Rico, Cuba, Guam, and the Philippine Islands. He called this
“Benevolent Assimilation” and tied it to earlier ideas of Manifest
Destiny. Over a million Filipinos died while being “benevolently
assimilated”, refusing to accept that resistance was futile.
Yes, that
is a reference to the Borg of the various Star Trek series.
The “Progressive” Era
In 1901, a
professor at Princeton University and supporter of the Democratic Party
published The History of the American People. In the section
on Reconstruction, he wrote, “The white men were roused by a mere instinct of
self-preservation, until at last there had sprung into existence a great Ku
Klux Klan, a veritable empire of the South, to protect the Southern
country”. Eleven years later, Dr. Woodrow Wilson was elected President of
the United States.
A few
years later, a Baptist minister from North Carolina named Thomas Dixon
published a book in 1905 called The Clansman that he also
turned into a popular stage play. Attracted to the story, film pioneer
D.W. Griffith made it into the ground-breaking movie in 1915, renamed “The Birth
of a Nation”. It was the first motion picture shown in the White House,
after which Wilson is reported to have remarked that, “It’s like writing
history with lightning. And my only regret is that it is all so terribly true.”
Almost
immediately after assuming office, and only partially at the behest of the
newly Democratic Senate, Wilson instituted segregation of the races across the
board, even in offices and departments which had always been integrated.
Including the Armed Forces, a travesty which wasn’t reversed until Harry Truman
was president.
Proving
that socialists are not the only ones capable of being swayed into action by a
fictional work, William Simmons, a former native of Indiana who migrated to
Georgia, and fifteen other men inaugurated the Knights of the Ku Klux
Klan. Unlike its post-Civil War predecessor (the more simply titled Ku
Klux Klan), the Knights of the KKK were anti-black, anti-immigrant,
anti-Catholic, anti-communist, anti-Jewish, and prohibitionist, their chief
declared principle being “Americanism”.
A signal
feature of their public parades was the ostentatious display of an excessive
number of American flags and accompanying ceremonial deference. During
the school flag campaign of John Upham and the NEA, the effort had gained
little traction in the South because the Stars & Stripes was the flag
of their conqueror. Now, however, that reversed, with Southerners
becoming the most ardent proponents of the cult of the flag.
The flag
cult was given a huge boost in 1916 when white supremacist and racist fiction aficionado
President Woodrow Wilson proclaimed 14 June as Flag Day in the U.S.A.
New income
for the premium department of The Youth’s Companion.
Meanwhile
back in the Old Country, a group of men in Italy and another in Germany in the
days after the end of the Great War had been paying attention and seeking
propaganda tools. Both groups, one led by Benito Mussolini and the other
by Adolf Hitler, adopted several features of the American flag cult, including
excessive attachment to symbols and even its salute to the flag.
In 1924,
the National Flag Conference altered the pledge to read, “I pledge allegiance
to the Flag of the United States of America, and to the Republic for which it
stands, one Nation, indivisible, with Liberty and Justice for all.”
Although the stated reason was so that new immigrants would not be confused
over to which flag they were pledging allegiance (as if the giant Stars
& Stripes before them were not enough of a clue), the change had the
effect of focusing on the Flag and downplaying the “republic for which it
stands”.
The apex
of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan’s power and influence came in 1925, with the
march down the Mall of Washington of over 250,000 members in white robes and
hoods, nearly all of them carrying aloft an American flag.
The final
insult to Francis Bellamy’s vision came in 1954, when the Congress of the
United States inserted the phrase “under God” into the Pledge. A Baptist
minister in addition to his other activities, Francis was a strong believer in
and advocate of complete separation of church and state, as were all Baptists
in the 19th century .
To add
insult to injury, their action was part of the Second Red Scare (the first was
after the Great War), a campaign against communists, socialists, reformers, and
other reprobates, like Francis Bellamy and his cousin Edward.
For an excellent parody of America's flag cult, see The Onion's
For an excellent parody of America's flag cult, see The Onion's
Really interesting history here. Well written. Few people know the whole story behind the "Pledge of Allegiance" but they should.
ReplyDeleteYea, advertising. A sales campaign, not a spontaneous outpouring of patriotic fervor.
ReplyDeleteSir I do support your rights to speak freely of your opinions. I believe however that there are some facts that could not have been known by you. I guess I feel as if I should share at least a couple. First, Mr. Bellamy was but a very young boy when he first penned the "pledge". In fact he entered that short statement into a contest held in a small district in which he lived by a women's patriotic organization. He probably wanted the cash prize, I would surmise...but that is based on the fact most school boys still do attempt to write essays if it potentially nets a prize. The lady in charge of judging the contest liked little Ralph's entry. She recommended his work to her three (might have been four---I'd have to review old hand-written journals I've got from this whole group) ladies of the Committee that were assigned to judge the results. I've no copies of the other essay entries, so I couldn't say whether the other entrants were nearly as poignant. However young Ralph won the contest. Fast forward at least ten years. Ralph was a grown man serving in the Spanish American War. A call from Pres McKinley came out to find a way to get Americans revved up about America. He wanted to have a contest for a pledge. The same gal who recommended Ralph win the contest dug through her files and found the young boy's statements. She submitted it to the contest on his behalf--without Ralph's knowledge. Ralph's essay/theme/writing/pledge once again won the contest. It became the official pledge. Yes, it did get morphed after a few prints of it came out in booklet form. The ladies who first encouraged the essay, and secondly submitted it to the national contest were suffragettes, and they were abolitionists. They were very vocal about Wilson---didn't care for him --they protested and pestered him. This group was fully integrated from its beginning. It was vocal about condemnation of the Klan, of racism, about suffrage...and they paved the way for women to be able to voice opinions, to serve in the military, and to find ways that they could continue trying to bring to this Nation a more perfect Union. They were …. and ARE...the National Woman's Relief Corps.
ReplyDeleteSorry, but bullshit. At the time he wrote the Pledge of Allegiance, Francis Bellamy was 37 years old (born in 1855). At the time FRANCIS was an ex-Baptist minister working for the biggest mail order company in the country. There was a Ralph Bellamy who was an actor in the 20th century, but the guy who wrote the pledge was named Francis, not Ralph. I don't know where you picked up this crap.
ReplyDelete