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Re: Independence Day!

Mon Jul 02, 2018 7:01 pm

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Re: Independence Day!

Tue Jul 03, 2018 12:45 am

Gawd Damn. ‘Mercia! F Yeah!

Re: Independence Day!

Tue Jul 03, 2018 6:45 am

Big Lake FD does a big 2 barge fireworks show every year on the 3rd. Will be catering a large party on the lake again this year. Got the smoker running already. 35lbs of Pork Butt, 25lb Top Round, 22Lb Turkey, and 9 racks of St Louis Ribs. Will leave for the lake in a few hours, should be a good day! Happy 4th(and 3rd) to everyone.

Re: Independence Day!

Tue Jul 03, 2018 4:15 pm

Happy Independence day to all, may we never have to repeat it but am ready for if it happens.
Keep your powder dry my brothers!!!

Re: Independence Day!

Tue Jul 03, 2018 4:25 pm

:patriot:
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Re: Independence Day!

Tue Jul 03, 2018 4:41 pm

Hanging low this Independence Day as we get up at 3:30 a.m. Thurs morning and catch a 6:30 a.m. flight to Minnesota for my nephew's wedding. Ugh. At least we're flying first class both ways. That makes travel less painless

Re: Independence Day!

Tue Jul 03, 2018 5:10 pm

sportsdad60 wrote:Hanging low this Independence Day as we get up at 3:30 a.m. Thurs morning and catch a 6:30 a.m. flight to Minnesota for my nephew's wedding. Ugh. At least we're flying first class both ways. That makes travel less painless

After driving 2000 miles with a trailer, I have no sympathy for you. :wink05:

Re: Independence Day!

Tue Jul 03, 2018 5:22 pm

read this the other day, pretty cool :thumbsup2:

http://mynorthwest.com/1038566/the-first-and-nearly-forgotten-independence-day-celebration-in-washington-state/

The first and nearly forgotten Independence Day celebration in Washington state

This nearly forgotten celebration happened on a patch of prairie in Pierce County near DuPont, less than a mile from what’s now Interstate Five.

It was 1841. The land that now comprises Oregon, Idaho, Washington and parts of Montana, Wyoming and British Columbia was known as “the Oregon Country.” An agreement had not yet been reached with the British to establish the northern US boundary at the 49th parallel, and the US government’s formal establishment of Oregon Territory was still seven years away. In the interim, an 1818 agreement with the British and subsequent negotiations had created a somewhat informal joint occupation of the region.

Apart from fur trading operations at places such as Vancouver, Colville, and Nisqually; Presbyterian missions near Walla Walla and Spokane; and a Catholic mission near Spokane, non-native settlement in the Oregon Country was sparse.

A few years earlier, the US government launched a wide-ranging expedition to explore much of the west coast of South America and North America. The effort was formally called the “US Exploring Expedition,” but is better known as the Wilkes Expedition, in honor of its commander, Captain Charles Wilkes.

In July 1841, it was members of the Wilkes Expedition who paused for a day of patriotic revelry in the heart of the Oregon Country. The spot they chose was near Fort Nisqually on the shores of Lake Sequalitchew.

According to Wilkes’ journal (published in 1856 in a five-volume “narrative”), the celebration at Lake Sequalitchew would have been recognizable to Fourth of July celebrants in 2013. Wilkes describes a parade, a barbecue (of an ox), the firing of cannons and a “full day’s frolic and pleasure” with games and horse racing. There was even the obligatory injury caused by one of the celebratory cannon blasts when a man named Whitehorn had his arm badly mangled.

It’s amazing to think that the Declaration of Independence was only 65 years old when the Americans of the Wilkes Expedition held what’s considered to be the first Independence Day observance west of the Missouri River — and that the last living signer of the Declaration had been dead less than nine years when this local day of patriotic “frolic and pleasure” took place.

It’s also quaint to realize that the Wilkes’ celebration took place not on July 4 but instead on July 5, 1841. That year, July 4 fell on the Sabbath, and in those days, even the nation’s birthday had to wait an extra day out of respect for the Lord.

More than a hundred years ago, the events of 1841 at Lake Sequalitchew were memorialized with a stately granite monument. A special event to dedicate the monument in July 1906 brought dignitaries from all over, and even a few surviving witnesses to the 1841 festivities, then 65 years in the past.

Re: Independence Day!

Tue Jul 03, 2018 7:08 pm

"
After driving 2000 miles with a trailer, I have no sympathy for you. :wink05: "

Lol, been there many times. Glad u arrived safely.

Re: Independence Day!

Tue Jul 03, 2018 7:49 pm

'Merica

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Re: Independence Day!

Tue Jul 03, 2018 9:06 pm

Two Flags? :thumbsup2: Good man JP.
'Merica. :flag: :flag: :flag:

Re: Independence Day!

Wed Jul 04, 2018 5:19 am

:flag:
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Re: Independence Day!

Wed Jul 04, 2018 5:20 am

:flag:
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Re: Independence Day!

Wed Jul 04, 2018 6:20 am

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Re: Independence Day!

Wed Jul 04, 2018 7:28 am

sportsdad60 wrote:Image


This is the first time I’ve ever wished the ol stars n stripes would get outta the way!
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