『"...With a Firm Reliance...: | Liberty 250』のカバーアート

"...With a Firm Reliance...: | Liberty 250

"...With a Firm Reliance...: | Liberty 250

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For this week's Liberty 250 episode, we meet one of the most fascinating and overlooked men of the American founding. While names like Jefferson, Adams, Franklin, and Washington dominate the story of independence, Francis Hopkinson quietly helped shape the nation in ways that most Americans never realize. He signed the Declaration of Independence, composed America's first known secular song, designed national symbols, wrote influential political satire, served as a federal judge, and may have done more than anyone else to give the young republic its visual identity. Yet today, his name is largely forgotten. On the morning of July 4, 1776, Hopkinson stood among the delegates gathered inside Independence Hall as Congress prepared to approve the Declaration. The vote for independence had already occurred on July 2, but now the delegates faced something even more tangible. The words were finished. The grievances were listed. The break with Great Britain would soon be announced to the world. For Hopkinson and the other delegates, this was not a celebration. It was a leap into uncertainty. British armies remained in the field. The outcome of the war was unknown. The signatures that would eventually appear on the Declaration could easily become evidence in a treason trial. In this episode, we explore the remarkable life of Francis Hopkinson, from his early career as a musician, inventor, and lawyer to his transformation into one of the Revolution's most effective political writers. We follow him into that historic room in Philadelphia, examine the risks he accepted in supporting independence, and discover how his imagination helped create the symbols of a new nation. We also look at the personal cost of the Revolution as war swept through New Jersey and reached his own doorstep. Two hundred and fifty years after independence, Francis Hopkinson reminds us that America's founding was not accomplished solely by generals and statesmen. It was also shaped by artists, writers, dreamers, and creators who could envision a future that did not yet exist, and who were willing to risk everything to bring it into being.
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