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An unusable past: urban elites, New York City's evacuation day, and the transformations of memory culture.


Introduction

The social and cultural history of tradition and memory has become a lively area of inquiry for American historians. Much current work uses festivals and holidays as a lens to understand political culture, with, for example, David Waldstreicher, Simon P. Newman, and Len Travers viewing nationalistic fetes in the early republic as arenas where factions struggled to define national identity and set the limits of citizenship. Social historians such as Stephen Nissenbaum and Leigh Eric Schmidt have traced changes in customs and conventions by studying the contested development of particular holidays. Another vein of investigation involves racial and ethnic consciousness. Kirk Savage and David W. Blight David W. Blight is Class of 1954 Professor of American History at Yale University. Blight was the Class of 1959 Professor of History at Amherst College, where he taught for 13 years. Blight grew up in Flint, Michigan, where he taught in a public high school for seven years.  use the memorialization of the Civil War to explore late nineteenth-century race relations race relations
Noun, pl

the relations between members of two or more races within a single community

race relations nplrelaciones fpl raciales

, while Robert Anthony Robert Brown Anthony QC is in practice at the Scottish Bar, principally in the High Court of Justiciary. On March 26, 2007 he was appointed a member of the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission (SCCRC), which was reviewing the case of Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed Al Megrahi who was  Orsi analyzes community formation among Italian immigrants by probing a Catholic church's festa. (1)

Despite this extensive literature, one aspect of this subject, the dissolution of tradition, has not been examined, even though an analysis of a lapsed tradition can improve our knowledge about historical memory. Rather than concentrate on memory itself, historians generally employ it to illuminate larger developments in social or cultural history, such as popular participation in republican politics or changing understandings of race. This scholarship is invaluable, but using memory as a tracer rather than foregrounding it exaggerates its stability and permanence and minimizes the difficulties of acquiring reliable knowledge about this elusive subject. By contrast, studying a lapsed tradition keeps historical memory in the forefront. The problem addressed here--how a tradition embraced by tens of thousands of people for two generations could disintegrate within half a century--is so puzzling that it prompts a consideration of general questions, including how an event becomes part of memory culture, how traditions are transmitted from generation to generation, how different traditions are related to one other and what the boundaries are between local and national traditions, to what extent social groups compete to define traditions, and why some traditions can be adapted to changing conditions and persist while others prove intractable and disappear. (2)

This essay will examine Evacuation Day the anniversary of the day on which the British army evacuated the city of New York, November 25, 1783.

See also: Evacuation
, a New York City New York City: see New York, city.
New York City

City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S.
 holiday that was celebrated every November 25th for over a century, honoring the day in 1783 when the British military ended its seven-year long occupation of the city. (3) Beginning in the late eighteenth century, thousands of people observed Evacuation Day. The 100th anniversary, in 1883, ranked as "one of the great civic events of the nineteenth century in New York City." (4) By 1900, however, only a few elite New Yorkers still commemorated it, and by 1920 no social group valued it.

The memorialization of November 25th was initiated by New York City merchants who prized the evacuation for exemplifying their ideals of elite rule, social harmony, national independence, and local boosterism boost·er·ism  
n.
The highly supportive attitudes and activities of boosters: "the civic pride and heady boosterism that often accompany rising property values" New York. 
. Their private commemorations acquired a more public dimension in 1787, when Federalists used representations of the evacuation in their campaign to ratify the Constitution, creating rituals that broadened the anniversary's appeal. These annual observances, though intensely nationalistic, remained confined to the New York City area and were never celebrated nationally. However, in a peculiar illustration of how traditions often shape other traditions, the one permanent legacy of this Federalist fed·er·al·ist  
n.
1. An advocate of federalism.

2. Federalist A member or supporter of the Federalist Party.

adj.
1. Of or relating to federalism or its advocates.

2.
 memorialization is the American custom of marking Thanksgiving on the last Thursday in November.

Evacuation Day was associated with elites throughout its history. During the period covered by this essay--from the late eighteenth to the early twentieth century--New York City went from being the second largest city in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  to become the second largest city in the world, a metamorphosis that transformed the size and structure of its elites, the sources of their wealth and prestige, their means of exercising power, and their understandings of themselves and other social groups. Yet, throughout this period, elites--which are conceptualized here as status groups that consisted of friendship, marriage, and business networks and that enjoyed distinctive ways of life--continued to command a disproportionate share of power, wealth, and prestige and to provide leadership in the economic, political, and social spheres. As communities that were delimited de·lim·it   also de·lim·i·tate
tr.v. de·lim·it·ed also de·lim·i·tat·ed, de·lim·it·ing also de·lim·i·tat·ing, de·lim·its also de·lim·i·tates
To establish the limits or boundaries of; demarcate.
 by class and heritage, elites frequently turned to historical memory to proclaim their identities, mark their boundaries, or communicate their visions of social order. For elites, memory culture was primarily an arena for pursuing social and cultural concerns rather than simply a means of remembering and forgetting or an array of traditions. At times, elite leaders or retainers became 'memory keepers' who organized Evacuation Day rituals and defined their meaning, often altering popular interpretations of the holiday. (5)

Although the anniversary experienced a crisis of transmission in the 1820s and 1830s as the generation of New Yorkers who remembered the revolution at first-hand died off and as the day's emphasis changed from recalling a lived incident to honoring the unexperienced past, Evacuation Day survived by acquiring new meanings, stakeholders Stakeholders

All parties that have an interest, financial or otherwise, in a firm-stockholders, creditors, bondholders, employees, customers, management, the community, and the government.
, and purposes. The holiday became a memorial of the Revolutionary War and the War of 1812. Beginning in the 1830s and 1840s, upper-class men employed it to assert their claims to social exclusivity and civic leadership, marching in Marching In is a science fiction short story by Isaac Asimov. The story was written at the request of the US publication 'High Fidelity', with the stipulation that it be 2,500 words long, set twenty-five years in the future and deal with an aspect of sound recording.  aristocratic volunteer regiments that refashioned the annual military parades into competitions of masculine prowess and class privilege.

The Civil War severely damaged Evacuation Day. Although attendance at its rites soared in the 1860s when New Yorkers used the holiday to celebrate Union victories, Evacuation Day was actually in trouble, for the Civil War did not so much expand the anniversary's role as diminish its meaning. By exerting its special hold on American ideas of remembrance and warfare, the Civil War reduced Evacuation Day's audience and undermined its purpose. Still, although adherence to November 25th had weakened by the early 1870s, Evacuation Day lingered for several more decades. It was revived in the early 1880s by the Society of '83 (later renamed the Sons of the Revolution), a patriotic hereditary organization that subscribed to the Victorian ideal of cultural dichotomies and that sought to erect barriers around genteel society. Viewing colonial history as an elite preserve that reinforced their identity as members of the upper-class and prizing Evacuation Day for confirming their superiority to the masses, the Sons of the Revolution replaced popular spectacles (the parades) with didactic events (the dedication of statues and tablets) and private affairs (banquets and lectures). This privatization privatization: see nationalization.
privatization

Transfer of government services or assets to the private sector. State-owned assets may be sold to private owners, or statutory restrictions on competition between privately and publicly owned
 expanded the imaginative distance that separated modern New Yorkers from the colonial city, completing Evacuation Day's journey In premodern literature, including the Bible, ancient geographers and ethnographers such as Herodotus, is a measurement of distance.

Not precisely defined in the Bible, the distance has been estimated from 32 to 40 kilometers (20-25 miles).
 into the unusable past.

The Evacuation

The British army The British Army is the land armed forces branch of the British Armed Forces. It came into being with unification of the governments and armed forces of England and Scotland into the United Kingdom of Great Britain in 1707.  seized New York City in September 1776 and continued to occupy it when Cornwallis surrendered at Yorktown five years later. In the spring of 1783, after preliminary articles of peace had been drafted, American and British commissioners started negotiating arrangements for transferring control of New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
. Aware that the unstable political and military situations would make evacuation dangerous and concerned that American and British troops might accidentally exchange fire during the transfer or that loyalists might resist it, the commissioners devised a protocol that was intended to accomplish three somewhat contradictory goals: keeping the two armies apart so that the British forces could embark without incident, enabling American forces to gain immediate control of the city and quell any resistance, and allowing General George Washington and New York State Governor George Clinton George Clinton may refer to:
  • George Clinton (royal governor) (c. 1686–1761), British colonial governor of New York
  • George Clinton (vice president) (1739–1812), US Vice President and Governor of New York
 to make a ceremonial entrance that would proclaim the United States' wartime victory and sovereignty. (6)

Once word arrived in early November 1783 that the peace treaty had been signed, this plan could be implemented. Early on the morning of November 25, 1783, 800 American soldiers under the command of General Henry Knox fell into formation at a camp in northern Manhattan and began marching toward New York City. This small force consisted of a troop of dragoons in front, an advance guard of light infantry infantry soldiers selected and trained for rapid evolutions.

See also: Light
, a few artillery batteries, and several infantry regiments in the rear. Most, though not all, were Continentals. The detachment halted for several hours at Bowery Lane, above the city's northern boundary, until a cannon fired at one o'clock, signaling that the last British troops were boarding their transports and that Knox's unit could enter the city. It met no resistance. The only noteworthy incident was that some British soldiers had greased Fort George's flagpole and cut its halyards. Several Americans tried to mount the pole, only to slide ignominiously ig·no·min·i·ous  
adj.
1. Marked by shame or disgrace: "It was an ignominious end ... as a desperate mutiny by a handful of soldiers blossomed into full-scale revolt" Angus Deming.
 back down to the bottom, to the delight of British troops rowing away from the island. A sailor named John Van Arsdale
  • Harry Van Arsdale, Jr.
  • Lesley Van Arsdall
  • Tom Van Arsdale
  • Dick Van Arsdale
  • Paul Van Arsdale

This page or section lists people with the surname Van Arsdale.
 finally put on a pair of cleats, climbed to the top, and raised the American flag over the city for the first time. With that, American artillerymen fired a thirteen-gun salute. Meanwhile, General Washington and Governor Clinton, who had been waiting north of the city, began their triumphal parade. Escorted by dragoons and accompanied by military aides and prominent citizens, Washington and Clinton marched down Queen Street (now Pearl Street) and Broadway to Cape's Tavern, where dignitaries had gathered to toast the military victory and national independence. (7)

The celebrations lasted another week. At many events--a dinner that Governor Clinton held for General Washington and his generals on the 25th, for instance, and the balls that merchants threw in taverns and coffee houses--attendance was restricted to social and military elites and genteel standards of decorum DECORUM. Proper behaviour; good order.
     2. Decorum is requisite in public places, in order to permit all persons to enjoy their rights; for example, decorum is indispensable in church, to enable those assembled, to worship.
 prevailed. More raucous merrymaking mer·ry·mak·ing  
n.
1. Participation in festive activities.

2.
a. A festivity; a revelry.

b. Festive activities.



mer
 took place in public spaces as artisans and farmers raised liberty poles and enlisted men fired thirteen-gun salutes. The festivities fes·tiv·i·ty  
n. pl. fes·tiv·i·ties
1. A joyous feast, holiday, or celebration; a festival.

2. The pleasure, joy, and gaiety of a festival or celebration.

3.
 climaxed on December 2nd, when the Continental Army staged a fireworks fireworks: see pyrotechnics.
fireworks

Explosives or combustibles used for display. Of ancient Chinese origin, fireworks evidently developed out of military rockets and explosive missiles and accompanied the spread of military explosives westward to
 display said to be the grandest ever held in North America North America, third largest continent (1990 est. pop. 365,000,000), c.9,400,000 sq mi (24,346,000 sq km), the northern of the two continents of the Western Hemisphere. . (8)

As newspaper editors weighed evacuation's significance, most returned again and again to its orderliness. The Independent Journal praised American troops for entering New York with "an inviolable regard to order and discipline, as Tyranny could have never enforced." (9) The New York Packet contrasted the civil disturbances that had plagued the occupied city with its current tranquility: "no mobs--no riots--no disorders ... everything is quietness and safety." The Packet quoted a British officer as marveling: "These Americans ... are a curious original people, they know how to govern themselves, but nobody else can govern them." (10) This understanding of evacuation as an emblem of social order and national independence would shape early efforts at memorialization. As with the celebrations of November and December 1783, these commemorations would reflect the country's social divisions even as they proclaimed its unity.

The Formation of Tradition

Although eighteenth-century Britons and Americans routinely used the term evacuation to describe a military or civilian exodus from a city, New Yorkers did not automatically apply this name to November 25th. New York City had experienced two evacuations during the Revolutionary War, the withdrawal of the Continental Army in 1776 and the departure of the British in 1783. Already accustomed to referring to the 1776 retreat as the evacuation, New Yorkers were slow to call the events of 1783 by that or any other name. Yet their initial failure to label November 25th also reflected their trauma about the war itself.

Insight into the naming of the anniversary is provided by petitions that property owners submitted to the municipal government in the hope of reducing their ground rents, owed to the Corporation of the City of New York and overdue since 1776. Needing to show that they had neither assisted nor benefitted from the British occupation, petitioners took pains to disclose their whereabouts during the conflict, and especially during the two evacuations. Yet the earliest petitioners chose to write much more about the war's beginning than its end. Nearly all the petitions submitted from February 1784 through the early fall of 1784 reserved the word evacuation for the Americans' 1776 retreat, as when Robert Thomas Robert Thomas could refer to:
  • Rob Thomas (musician), singer-songwriter
  • Robert Thomas (counterfeiter), 18th-century British counterfeiter
  • Robert Thomas (director) (1927-1989), French writer, actor and director
 claimed to have paid his rent "till the Evacuation of City by the Continental Troops" and to have lost his horse and cart while assisting "Evacuation all in his power." (11) They were more mindful of the war itself than its conclusion and more conscious of British power than British defeat. Indeed, many petitioners either did not mention that the conflict had ended or else used phrases such as the "the late War" that bespoke be·spoke  
v.
Past tense and a past participle of bespeak.

adj.
1. Custom-made. Said especially of clothes.

2. Making or selling custom-made clothes: a bespoke tailor.
 their continuing preoccupation with it. (12) There was little notion of a distinct post-war era or of peace itself as something other than the absence of fighting. This word usage began to change in the fall of 1784, as petitioners focused on the war's conclusion and its aftermath. In petitions written from roughly September 1784 on, and increasingly in 1785, evacuation almost always meant November 1783--"the Evacuation of this City by the British Troops," in common parlance--rather than August and September 1776. (13) The evidence suggests that November 25th acquired its name--and that memories of the evacuation of 1776 faded--only when ordinary people felt the war was over, in the sense that their suffering belonged to a past that was irretrievably ir·re·triev·a·ble  
adj.
Difficult or impossible to retrieve or recover: Once the ring fell down the drain, it was irretrievable.



ir
 completed rather than a continuing present.

The memorialization of the evacuation preceded fitfully fit·ful  
adj.
Occurring in or characterized by intermittent bursts, as of activity; irregular. See Synonyms at periodic.



fit
, too. On November 25, 1784, and again in succeeding years, upper-class New Yorkers held the first annual observances of the evacuation by giving dinners in taverns and coffee houses for "a select group of ladies and gentlemen" who ate a lavish meal, drank patriotic toasts, and danced. (14) These anniversary gatherings were in keeping with polite society's finest formal entertainments, and echoed the dinners that had been held at Cape's Tavern, Fraunces' Tavern, and other venues in November and December 1783. (15)

These dinners were ostensibly os·ten·si·ble  
adj.
Represented or appearing as such; ostensive: His ostensible purpose was charity, but his real goal was popularity.
 private social gatherings with no political meaning, but upper-class New Yorkers' willingness to honor evacuation and national independence privately and then use the press to communicate it to the rest of the population spoke volumes about their understanding of citizenship's limits. When in 1786 a diner offered a toast calling for a strong central government, it was clear that he expected people like his companions to share such sentiments and others to accede to accede to
verb 1. agree to, accept, grant, endorse, consent to, give in to, surrender to, yield to, concede to, acquiesce in, assent to, comply with, concur to

2.
 them. (16) Leaders of the city's lesser merchants and artisans denied that such Tory balls had legitimacy. In 1784, the New-York Journal and State Gazette claimed that the first anniversary of evacuation had gone "totally unnoticed and unregarded." While a dinner had been held at Cape's Tavern, the Journal insisted that it was a wholly social affair that had no larger meaning because so many New Yorkers had been barred from it. Such exclusivity, the Journal argued, exemplified "the old British conviviality con·viv·i·al  
adj.
1. Fond of feasting, drinking, and good company; sociable. See Synonyms at social.

2. Merry; festive: a convivial atmosphere at the reunion.
" that had no place in republican America. (17)

The mode of celebration changed in 1787, when Federalists used representations of the evacuation in their campaign to ratify the Constitution. No longer satisfied with private celebrations, the Federalists turned the anniversary into a public festival designed to win support for the Constitution and, later, the new national government. According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Simon P. Newman and David Waldstreicher, fetes such as Evacuation Day were nationalistic rites employed by competing political groups to advance their causes and convey an aura of social cohesion and unanimity. (18) Evacuation Day may have had a special appeal to New York City's Federalist elite, which was oriented locally and nationally and which asserted its concerns and leadership claims in both arenas, since its rituals operated simultaneously on the two levels.

Although the dinners continued to take place every November 25th and their invitation lists remained exclusive, changes in newspaper coverage gave them larger audiences. Instead of the brief and erratic notices that had appeared earlier, the Federalist press regularly printed detailed accounts of the dinners, particularly of the toasts proclaiming that the national government carried on the spirit of national unity and wartime sacrifice that had characterized evacuation. (19) Federalists also appealed to a broader constituency by organizing rites that built on key events of November and December 1783--such as Washington's triumphal procession and the Continental Army's fireworks--and that took place in public space and had the rhythm of popular festivals. In 1787, the army brigade that garrisoned New York City moved its annual full-dress review to November 25th. Late in the morning, the troops marched up Broadway from Fort George Fort George, river, c.480 mi (770 km) long, rising in Lake Nichicun, E Que., Canada. It flows W into James Bay at Fort George, a Hudson's Bay Company trading post.  to the parade grounds (now City Hall Park), where they passed in review before national leaders and a crowd of ordinary citizens. In later years, the Years, The

the seven decades of Eleanor Pargiter’s life. [Br. Lit.: Benét, 1109]

See : Time
 review culminated in the feu feu
Noun

Scots Law a right to the use of land in return for a fixed annual payment ([feu duty]) [Old French]
 de joi, a complicated infantry maneuver whereby muskets were fired continuously, reaching a crescendo. The feu de joie--literally, "the firing of joy"--began with companies discharging their muskets one soldier at a time, going from right to left and back to front. Regiments then fired in the same order, one company at a time. Finally, the brigade engaged in 'running fire,' with soldiers shooting as quickly as possible to create a cacophony of sound. After the review, artillery batteries at Fort George made a thirteen-gun 'national' or 'federal' salute. Despite late November's sometimes harsh weather, thousands of people regularly turned out for these spectacles. (20)

Organized by the Corporation of the City of New York, these observances promoted the Federalist vision of a hierarchical society with a strong central government and a commercial economy. Making evacuation the occasion of public celebration portrayed the liberation of a major seaport as the culmination of the Revolutionary War. It also confirmed elites' claims to governance and demonstrated the importance of the social order. That the Continental Army's regulars, not the state militias, had marched into New York, and that General Washington had led the triumphal procession, signified that elite institutions had won the Revolutionary War. (21)

Capitalizing on the Continental Army's liberation of the city, Federalists assigned the regular army a prominent place in the celebratory rites. The military reviews advertised a European-style professional army as among the chief blessings of a strong national government. The reviews embodied a Federalist social ideal, with "his Excellency HIS EXCELLENCY. A title given by the constitution of Massachusetts to the governor of that commonwealth. Const. part 2, c. 2, s. 1, art. 1. This title is customarily given to the governors of the other states, whether it be the official designation in their constitutions and laws or not. , the Commander in Chief, and several other personages of rank and distinction" inspecting the brigade, with a professional officer corps giving orders, and with a soldiery faithfully obeying them amounting to an exhibit of proper order and discipline. (22) The review's highpoint, the imposing feu de joi, demonstrated great military skill and discipline. But although Federalists organized the anniversaries to showcase the regular army, and although Federalist editors applauded the troops for their "martial appearance and the exactness of their maneuver" and "the skill and care of officers, and the emulation and pride of the soldier," this military professionalism was fictive fic·tive  
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or able to engage in imaginative invention.

2. Of, relating to, or being fiction; fictional.

3. Not genuine; sham.
. (23) Because Congress had reduced the size of the military after the end of the war, the U.S. Army was too small to fulfill the Federalist representations that regulars comprised the military units that paraded every November 25th, and most of the soldiers who marched in the celebrations were actually militiamen. Approximately 2,000 troops took part in the 1789 review, for instance, at a time when the entire regular army contained only 672 men. Some anti-Federalist organs, noting the delicious irony that the marchers consisted largely of militiamen whom the Federalists imagined As professionals, argued that the fetes should have a Republican and democratic spirit rather than the Federalist and elitist e·lit·ism or é·lit·ism  
n.
1. The belief that certain persons or members of certain classes or groups deserve favored treatment by virtue of their perceived superiority, as in intellect, social status, or financial resources.
 tone that they were acquiring. (24)

This Federalist memorialization of evacuation is responsible for Thanksgiving's place on the American calendar. On October 3,1789, President George Washington issued a proclamation calling for a national day of thanksgiving on Thursday, November 26, 1789. There had been earlier national thanksgivings, but this would be the first since the ratification of the Constitution and it was intended to legitimate the new federal government. This idea had surfaced in the House of Representatives, where, on September 25th, Elias Boudinot
For other people with the same name, see Elias Boudinot (disambiguation).


Elias Boudinot Jr. (1740–1821) was an early American lawyer and statesman from Elizabeth, New Jersey who was a delegate to the Continental Congress and a U.S.
, a Federalist from Elizabethtown, New Jersey and an ally of Alexander Hamilton, introduced a resolution asking the president to declare "a day of public thanksgiving and prayer" that would allow Americans to acknowledge "the many signal favors of Almighty God," especially the establishment of "a Constitution of government for their safety and happiness." (25) Boudinot's resolution became entangled en·tan·gle  
tr.v. en·tan·gled, en·tan·gling, en·tan·gles
1. To twist together or entwine into a confusing mass; snarl.

2. To complicate; confuse.

3. To involve in or as if in a tangle.
 with the issue that dominated debate in the House that month, the location of a permanent seat of government, and provoked a sharp discussion. Though none of the thanksgiving resolution's supporters wanted New York to become the national capital--Boudinot favored Trenton while Roger Sherman spoke up for Philadelphia--they did agree that the capital should be located in a northern commercial city. By contrast, the resolution was opposed by southern Republicans such as Thomas Tudor Tucker Thomas Tudor Tucker (June 25, 1745– May 2, 1828) was an American physician and politician from Charleston, South Carolina. He represented South Carolina in both the Continental Congress and the U.S. House. He later served as Treasurer of the United States.  and Aedanus Burke Aedanus Burke (16 June 1743 - 30 March 1802) was a soldier, judge, and United States Representative from South Carolina. Born in Galway, Ireland, he attended the theological college at St.  of South Carolina South Carolina, state of the SE United States. It is bordered by North Carolina (N), the Atlantic Ocean (SE), and Georgia (SW). Facts and Figures


Area, 31,055 sq mi (80,432 sq km). Pop. (2000) 4,012,012, a 15.
, whose advocacy of a southern, agrarian capital reflected their antagonism to the Constitution and their suspicion of Federalists' concentration of power. The resolution passed the House and the Senate and went to the president. Washington's proclamation made various appeals--to religious belief and festival tradition, to memories of wartime sacrifice and pride in national independence--to marshal support for the Constitution and the new government. A similar calculation probably lay behind the designation of November 26th for this thanksgiving. Neither Washington nor his aides referred explicitly to the evacuation of New York, but their thinking seems clear since Washington's proclamation and the Federalist representations of the evacuation emphasized the same themes of wartime sacrifice, national independence, and social unity. This connection between evacuation and the federal government was reinforced because New York City was still the national capital, giving November 26th a special significance for the new nation. Because the evacuation on November 25th, 1783 had removed British forces from the last scrap of American soil (except for some frontier posts) that had remained under their control and from the city that became the capital, November 26th could be considered the anniversary of the first day of full American independence. (That November 26th, 1789 fell on a Thursday was inconsequential to Washington and his contemporaries; it was the date that mattered, not the day of the week.) (26) By happenstance hap·pen·stance  
n.
A chance circumstance: "Marriage loomed only as an outgrowth of happenstance; you met a person" Bruce Weber.
 and accident, this 1789 thanksgiving ultimately led to the establishment of Thanks-giving as a national legal holiday on the fourth Thursday of November. (27)

At first, the Federalists' opponents ignored the anniversaries. Then, around 1791, as disputes between the Federalists and Republicans intensified, members of the Society of St. Tammany started organizing counter-celebrations--with their own banquets and receptions--to contest evacuation's meaning. Since the Federalist representation was dominant, Republicans had difficulty formulating their responses. Some mocked the evacuation itself, as with one writer who ridiculed it as a "sudden and chop-fallen retreat" that paled next to more "glorious feats of war." (28) Because that appraisal could be construed as a denunciation DENUNCIATION, crim. law. This term is used by the civilians to signify the act by which au individual informs a public officer, whose duty it is to prosecute offenders, that a crime has been committed. It differs from a complaint. (q.v.) Vide 1 Bro. C. L. 447; 2 Id. 389; Ayl. Parer.  of the Revolution, shrewder Republicans tried to recast evacuation to fit their own ideals by interpreting it as a blow against standing armies, monarchy, and oppression. Disregarding the Continental Army's regulars who had entered New York in 1783, the Republican press praised the militia and independent companies that participated in the annual parades--"a formidably martial body of republican veterans," according to the New-York Journal--for protecting liberty against the threats of a standing army and a despotic government. (29) Speakers at the Tammany Society banquets linked November 25th with opposition to monarchy by offering such toasts as, "May the friends of Tyranny and oppression in every Country experience the fate of the British in New York on the 25th November 1783" and "The People--the only source of legitimate power--may [Secretary of State] T[imothy] Pickering and every other Federal officer remember it." (30)

Although the Republicans moderated the Federalist-elitist meaning of the celebration, they could not alter evacuation's primary associations with social privilege, the nation-state, and the military. That evacuation had acquired enough stability and continuity of meaning to resist redefinition indicates that it was becoming established as a tradition. By the mid-1790s, Evacuation Day was accepted as part of the usual way of doing things in and around New York City. With the holiday providing opportunities for socializing, celebrants transcended partisan politics and enjoyed the festivities on their own terms. A common pattern was for circles of friends and family members to watch the parade together in small, intimate groups and then to separate, with some going to a museum or a coffee house. Many people attended church services as well. The friendship and family circles often re-formed later in private houses for tea, dinner, or music. Around 1801, the anniversary became an occasion of popular entertainments, as theaters and museums started offering pageants and plays keyed to the evacuation. During the weeks prior to November 25th, the American Museum, the Panorama Theater, and others advertised their shows by displaying on their front walls huge illuminated transparencies that depicted scenes from the evacuation, paintings of General Washington, or renditions of famous battles. The performances featured melodramas on subjects such as Columbus' discovery of America and the Revolutionary War; lectures about American history; and band music, popular songs, and dances. By providing a physical space where strangers mixed in close proximity, albeit with the sanction of nationalism, these commercial entertainments allowed residents to experience situations that were neither wholly public nor private and that constituted a social sphere, where the privileges of class and rank were blurred or attenuated Attenuated
Alive but weakened; an attenuated microorganism can no longer produce disease.

Mentioned in: Tuberculin Skin Test


attenuated

having undergone a process of attenuation.
. (31)

The anniversaries also helped New Yorkers come to terms with the Revolutionary War. By defining evacuation as a military event that involved the replacement of one nation's army by another's, New Yorkers commemorated the city's liberation and national independence while glossing over the war's social divisions. Many loyalists and loyalist sympathizers who had lived in occupied New York stayed on after 1783, to the great discomfort of other residents. As the New York Journal and State Gazette remarked, the city's "virtuous Whigs and Exiles" had proven themselves "remarkable for forgiving and forgetting past crimes and offenses." (32) The anniversaries of the evacuation became a ritual of unity that at once celebrated the patriotic victory and concealed wartime discord, permitting New Yorkers to imagine a harmony that had not actually existed. (33)

By the mid-1790s, the anniversary had become a public event with a regular place on the yearly calendar and well-known rituals, so ingrained that newspapers simply reported that the latest anniversary had been observed "as usual" or "with the usual military honor." (34) This routinization is also revealed in diary entries. Alexander Anderson There are multiple Alexander Andersons:
  • For the British army general, see Alexander Anderson (British general) (1807-1877).
  • For the Canadian explorer and fur trader, see Alexander Caulfield Anderson (1814-84).
, a medical student, wrote of his activities on November 25, 1794: "Attended Dr. Mitchill's lecture. Afterwards walk'd with Dr. Davidson to see the troops whch. we found drawn up in Broadway--this being the anniversary of the Evacuation of the city by the British." (35) A year later, his brother John, a lawyer, wrote:
    Anniversary of the Evacuation of the British troops. Went out with
    Mr. Adams, & saw the uniformed companies parade. About noon they
    made a sham retreat, through Broadway--Wall Street, Maiden Lane, &
    went up the Bowery Lane. They then return'd to town, in the same
    order the American troops enter'd at the peace. On the Battery 15
    guns were fired, and a feu de joye. In the afternoon went to the
    Museum with Mr. Adams--he, with Mr. Baxter, afterwards, drank tea at
    our house. (36)


Some years neither young man wrote anything about the anniversary. Other years one or both registered the holiday's occurrence but dwelled on personal matters that counted for more in their daily lives--gifts purchased, medical lectures heard, dinners attended. (37)

A notable feature of these two diarist di·a·rist  
n.
A person who keeps a diary.


diarist
Noun

a person who writes a diary that is subsequently published

Noun 1.
 brothers is that neither took note of the spectators who watched the anniversary rituals. Both men recounted the military parades and the artillery salutes that they had seen and heard, at times in detail, and both recorded their interactions with friends and family members. Of the masses of strangers that were present in the streets, however, there is no mention. A similar pattern is evident from the newspapers, which chronicled public events such as the parade and semi-private events such as the banquets but almost completely ignored the crowds. Although this evidence should not be pushed too far, it is clear that these diarists This is a list of diarists.

This literature-related list is incomplete; you can help by [ expanding it].
A - F
  • John Adams, 2nd President of the United States, statesman, diplomat
 and newspaper editors were not manifesting the fear of the crowd that was so commonplace after the French Revolution, for they expressed no sense of menace or danger. Rather, these affluent New Yorkers appear to have been discomfited by the uncontrolled social mixing with strangers that occurred in public space. They studiously stu·di·ous  
adj.
1.
a. Given to diligent study: a quiet, studious child.

b. Conducive to study.

2.
 ignored the crowds, neither mentioning nor describing particular strangers or the mass of people. There was, for instance, nothing like the references to the collective 'mood of the crowd' that became prevalent in the nineteenth century. Instead, these elite observers concentrated on their friends and relatives and acted as if they were watching the parades among their intimate circles with nobody else present. It was the existence of a social sphere, neither wholly public nor private and a deviation from genteel conventions, that made them uneasy and to which they responded by rendering themselves oblivious to the people surrounding them. (38)

Despite its use of national symbols, the anniversary remained a local phenomenon whose observances were confined to New York City and neighboring Brooklyn, Jersey City, and Hoboken. Almanacs and diaries sold in New York City usually referred to the evacuation, while those marketed elsewhere ignored it. The holiday failed to catch on nationally because it was a local rather than a national event and because it honored an anti-climatic incident that did not change the Revolutionary War's outcome or meaning and that did not affect the daily lives of ordinary people outside of New York. Except for some Massachusetts infantrymen who were part of Knox's force, the evacuation had not required the kind of external assistance that might have invested other Americans in it. A good comparison is with the British raid on Baltimore during the War of 1812, when people from around the country rushed to Baltimore's defense by volunteering to fight and by donating money and supplies to the relief effort, an outpouring of support that contributed to the acceptance of Francis Scott Key's "The Star-Spangled Banner" as the national anthem. (39)

Evacuation Day's organizers disliked its provincialism pro·vin·cial·ism  
n.
1. A regional word, phrase, pronunciation, or usage.

2. The condition of being provincial; lack of sophistication or perspective. Also called provinciality.

3.
 and insisted on proclaiming its national significance. Holidays and other customs do not have to be national to thrive, however, and the anniversary had become well-ensconced as a tradition. (40)

The Transmission of Tradition

Edward Shils Edward Shils (1911-1995) was a Distinguished Service Professor in the Committee on Social Thought and in Sociology at the University of Chicago and one of the world's most influential sociologists.  says that traditions often undergo crises during their transmission from the first to the second generation that determine whether they will survive or lapse. (41) Evacuation Day underwent such a crisis during the 1820s and 1830s. As the New Yorkers who could claim to have lived through the occupation and evacuation were dying, more and more people lacked direct knowledge of the Revolution. November 25th would remain a major day on the city calendar, but the process of passing this tradition to a new generation altered memory culture.

The problem of conveying historical memory across generations can be examined by comparing two New Yorkers' relationships to evacuation. John Pintard John Pintard (May 18, 1759 - June 21, 1844) was an American merchant and philanthropist.

He was a descendant of Antoine Pintard, a Huguenot from La Rochelle, France.
 and George Templeton Strong were both lifelong city residents who belonged to the mercantile elite, were active in civic affairs, and esteemed the past. Yet because Pintard was sixty-one years older than Strong, the two men understood the British evacuation and its anniversary much differently. Born in 1759, John Pintard fled New York during the British occupation, returning in time to witness the evacuation. He later wrote:
   Well do I recall an event so auspicious to the long exiled families
   of this city, who after the privations of 7 long years returned home
   to their habitations wh[ich] they left in the enjoyment of ease &
   comfort to [return in] almost poverty, many of them to weep over the
   ruins of their dwellings & all to lament the loss of many & dear

   friends & relatives. (42)


For Pintard, anniversaries of the evacuation evoked powerful personal memories--his father-in-law's death in exile, his loss of a fortune in depreciated Depreciated may refer to:
  • Depreciation, in finance, a reference to the fact that assets with finite lives lose value over time
  • Depreciated is often confused or used as a stand-in for "deprecated"; see deprecation for the use of depreciation in computer software
 Continental currency, the burning of neighbors' homes. Pintard attached such significance to the evacuation that he made its anniversary a central part of his inner life, reserving November 25th as an occasion to repair his family tomb and reflect on recent accomplishments. Yet Pintard could also use his memories to transcend personal circumstances and evoke the larger cause of American independence. "Never can I forget," he wrote in 1825, "the joyful event wh[ich] Consummated our Independence." (43) Just as the traumas of war and revolution had forged his age cohort into a unique generation, the personal and public dimensions had become intermingled and self-reinforcing in his conception of evacuation.

Pintard was alert to the difficulties of transmitting meaning across generational lines: his memories of the evacuation are recorded in letters he wrote to his daughter. These letters are didactic and strained, evidence of Pintard's struggle to relate his searing sear 1  
v. seared, sear·ing, sears

v.tr.
1. To char, scorch, or burn the surface of with or as if with a hot instrument. See Synonyms at burn1.

2.
 experiences to a young woman who had not endured them. Like Pintard's daughter, George Templeton Strong grew up hearing his elders talk about the evacuation. As a student at Columbia College Columbia College: see Columbia University.  in the 1830s, however, Strong was concerned about whether classes would be canceled on November 25th, once lampooning "the glorious Evacuation Day, glorious in one point, at least, and that is that it allows us to kick up our heels all day at our leisure." (44) When Columbia scheduled classes for Evacuation Day in 1836, Strong protested this "[d]iabolical outrage!" and, vowing that "[w]e shall have to take it," exploited the college's oversight to justify playing hooky with his friends. (45) He later chortled that the campus was abuzz with "great excitement about the affair of the 25th." (46) Yet his rationalization of their prank was less cynical than naive, for although his understanding of the anniversary was less complex and solemn than Pintard's, Strong never disputed its importance. And, as he aged, Strong employed his memories of Evacuation Day to express nostalgia for his boyhood, lamenting when the parade was disappointing one year that "the glory of Evacuation Day has departed." (47) Although both men used the anniversary to summon "the remote period" of their youths, there was this profound difference: while Pintard was remembering the evacuation itself, Strong was remembering a holiday. (48)

This generational shift was accompanied by the spread of a new naming practice. Before the 1820s, people carefully distinguished between the evacuation and its celebration. They spoke of "the anniversary of the evacuation" or "the anniversary of the evacuation of this city by British troops," or they noted how much time had passed since evacuation by referring--in 1792, for example--to "the 9th anniversary of the evacuation of this city and country by the British troops and their mercenary allies." (49) This usage was replaced by a new term that appeared in the 1820s and 1830s, Evacuation Day. Popularized by the newspaper advertisements that theaters ran to publicize their November 25th pageants, the new name became standard by the 1840s. An act of historical simplification and emotional distancing that signaled that November 25th was becoming a holiday, a day reserved for the special purpose of memorializing the Revolutionary War, the adoption of this label indicated that career of Evacuation Day was becoming independent of the evacuation itself and even of the anniversaries of the evacuation, and that acts of remembrance now seemed more authentic than what was supposedly being remembered. (50)

Another element of this generational change Generational change is radical change that occurs in an organisation or a population as a result of its members being replaced over time by other individuals with different values or other characteristics.  were increasing complaints that the anniversary was no longer being observed as faithfully as it had been in the past. Typical was this 1828 lament: "Today is the forty-fifth return of this anniversary. It has now somewhat fallen off from that ceremony and festivity with which it was formerly observed." (51) And this explanation of 1839's disappointing parade:
    The inclemency of the weather accounted in a measure for the
    diminution of the military display, although we fear that decreasing
    reverence for antiquity and ancient principles has something to do
    in causing this indifference, to what used to be a holiday of great
    celebrity. (52)


And this comment from 1848:
    The day had been so far forgotten, that many enquired the object of
    the parade. Old things have passed away, and their interest seems
    lost, however important the object commemorated. (53)


This grumbling first became routine in the 1820s. Its intensity escalated in years when snowstorms or cold rains spoiled the parades, but complaints were made when Brooklyn and Jersey City scheduled their own celebrations, when the grand march included 5,000 troops and lasted for hours, and when the crowds were so large that pickpockets flourished. Similar laments are made about holidays today such as the Fourth of July Fourth of July, Independence Day, or July Fourth, U.S. holiday, commemorating the adoption of the Declaration of Independence. Celebration of it began during the American Revolution.  and Memorial Day and are usually taken at face value as proof of declension declension: see inflection. . That reading is simplistic sim·plism  
n.
The tendency to oversimplify an issue or a problem by ignoring complexities or complications.



[French simplisme, from simple, simple, from Old French; see simple
: such protests often indicate that a tradition is experiencing a transmission crisis that it will probably survive, albeit in altered form. (54) (Significantly, few objections were voiced after the Civil War when Evacuation Day was really decaying.) The complaints about Evacuation Day were made with the expectation of being obeyed: they were voiced with authority and in public settings, they appealed to shared values, and they were intended to rouse the faithful. It was not that New Yorkers were apathetic ap·a·thet·ic
adj.
Lacking interest or concern; indifferent.



apa·thet
; no matter how implausible a tradition Evacuation Day may seem to us today, the contemporary claims that it should be "a holiday of great celebrity" and that "the object commemorated" was important went unchallenged. (55) Rather, it was that the events of November 25, 1783 lacked the immediacy for George Templeton Strong's generation that they had had for John Pintard's generation. Evacuation Day truly was different from the anniversary of the evacuation. (56)

To survive, Evacuation Day needed to acquire new constituencies and new purposes that could invigorate in·vig·or·ate  
tr.v. in·vig·or·at·ed, in·vig·or·at·ing, in·vig·or·ates
To impart vigor, strength, or vitality to; animate: "A few whiffs of the raw, strong scent of phlox invigorated her" 
 it. Its organizers sought to tie Evacuation Day to comparable events such as the South American revolutions of the 1820s and the French Revolution of 1830, but these foreign rebellions did not strike a chord with New Yorkers. (57) A better solution lay in making November 25th a vehicle for commemorating the War of 1812, a connection that began during the conflict itself, when theaters and museums used the anniversary to stage pageants about victories like the Battle of Lake Champlain. After the war, the similarities between the First and Second Wars of American Independence made Evacuation Day a forum for celebrating U.S. military success and American nationalism. Veterans of the War of 1812 continued to play central roles in the Evacuation Day observances as late as 1888, instantly recognizable in their old uniforms and with their battle flags and banners as they marched or rode in the parades, and great crowd favorites. As they aged and their numbers dwindled, the veterans were given ritualistic rit·u·al·is·tic  
adj.
1. Relating to ritual or ritualism.

2. Advocating or practicing ritual.



rit
 duties like flag-raising that were less taxing but that kept them in the public eye. As sociologist W. Lloyd Warner William Lloyd Warner (b. October 26 1898, Redlands, California; d. May 23 1970, Chicago, Illinois) was a pioneering anthropologist noted for applying the techniques of his discipline to contemporary American culture. Career at Harvard
Warner received his B.A.
 wrote of the Memorial Day commemorations in Yankee City following World War II, such rites constituted "a modern cult of the dead" that related living members of the community to "a system of sacred beliefs and dramatic rituals" embodied in the dead soldiery and expressed ceremoniously cer·e·mo·ni·ous  
adj.
1. Strictly observant of or devoted to ceremony, ritual, or etiquette; punctilious: "borne on silvery trays by ceremonious world-weary waiters" Financial Times.
. (58) The War of 1812 veterans were living relics who bound contemporaries to the Revolution and American nationalism. Nobody was more important in this regard than David Van Arsdale, a veteran of the War of 1812 and the son of John Van Arsdale, the sailor who had climbed the greased flagpole above Fort George on November 25, 1783 and hoisted the first American First American may refer to:
  • First American (comics), A superhero from America's Best Comics
  • First American, a division of the now-defunction Bank of Credit and Commerce International.
 flag to fly over New York City. For many years, David Van Arsdale was entrusted with raising the colors on the Battery at sunrise on Evacuation Day. After his death, his grandson, Christopher R. Forbes, performed this rite. (59)

Another solution was that of upper-class New Yorkers, who employed Evacuation Day as a response to the city's rapid population and economic growth and as an affirmation of their own leadership and social standing. The new uses that emerged in the 1830s and 1840s conferred a higher degree of social refinement onto the Evacuation Day rites, especially the annual parade. Although fire brigades and political societies still took part, by mid-century workingmen's trade societies--harbor pilots, printers, and butchers, for instance--appeared in the parades much less frequently than in earlier decades, and the parades and their representations in the press had become more socially exclusive. (60) The composition of the military units changed significantly, too. Although there had never been enough regulars to fill the ranks, the expanded size of the parade created a need for more soldiers, which was met by elite volunteer units such as the Washington Grays, the Scottish Guard The Scottish Guard (Garde Écossaise) is a military body of elite created by Charles VII in 1422, and who constituted the personal guard of Kings of France, until the end of the Bourbon Restoration in 1830. , the Jefferson Guard, Lafayette Horse Guards Horse´ Guards`

1. (Mil.) A body of cavalry so called; esp., a British regiment, called the Royal Horse Guards, which furnishes guards of state for the sovereign.
, and the Montgomery Light Guard. The aristocratic young men who belonged to these regiments competed fiercely over the precision of their marching and the elegance of their uniforms in a rivalry that employed masculine display, national symbols, and wealth to legitimate the city's changing upper-class and define its boundaries. This rivalry did not involve military prowess so much as its image, at the service of social prestige. Significantly, the feu de joie--which posed a real test of military skill--was dropped around this time. (61)

In the decades before the Civil War, the Evacuation Day parades were extravaganzas that lasted several hours and drew thousands of onlookers, with regimental bands playing martial music and with smartly-dressed infantrymen and cavalry troopers stepping out. Among the parade's highlights were the volunteer units. (62) This antebellum elite's joy in flaunting its status in public settings represents a drastic change from the late eighteenth century elite that felt an aversion to public space and to mingling with members of other social groups in uncontrolled settings. An explanation for the exuberant public performances of the antebellum elite is provided by anthropologist Alessandro Falassi, who observes that festival competitions can create hierarchy out of equality by validating a contest's form and rules, the selection of its participants, and the designation of its winners and losers. (63) In effect, the young aristocrats sought to transform parade spectators into an audience and implicate im·pli·cate  
tr.v. im·pli·cat·ed, im·pli·cat·ing, im·pli·cates
1. To involve or connect intimately or incriminatingly: evidence that implicates others in the plot.

2.
 them in a rite of competition that would affirm their own power. That members of the volunteer regiments withdrew to exclusive gatherings that were held in private space--banquets and dinners--after taking part in the parade only underscored their assertion of elite authority and identity. (64) The mid-nineteenth century was a volatile period for New York's elites, for whom explosive urban growth meant not only new sources of wealth and power but also the blurring of upper-class boundaries and social credentials, the widening of divisions with other urban groups, and the arrival of hundreds of thousands of German and Irish immigrants. In these turbulent times, the upper class had a powerful need to affirm itself as a community of feeling and heritage. Conspicuous participation in the Evacuation Day parade--with its associations with nationalism, elite rule, and social harmony--offered one solution to this problem. As most elites did not care about the poor and were oblivious of the actual terms of their existence, the regimental displays provided the reassuring illusion of seeming to contour a society that was becoming dangerously boundless. As the New York Times exulted in 1859, the splendor and discipline of the volunteer units demonstrated that their blue blood members came from better "raw material" than the "demoralized de·mor·al·ize  
tr.v. de·mor·al·ized, de·mor·al·iz·ing, de·mor·al·iz·es
1. To undermine the confidence or morale of; dishearten: an inconsistent policy that demoralized the staff.
 mob." (65) It was the elites themselves, then, who were the ultimate audience for these performances.

Although the popularity of the antebellum parades indicated that Evacuation Day had weathered its transmission crisis, a greater threat lay ahead.

The Dissolution of Tradition

After marching with his National Guard regiment in the 1865 Evacuation Day parade, Major John Ward, Jr. recorded his impressions in his diary. Although most diarists wrote just a sentence or two about a ritual that had come to seem ordinary, Ward devoted an entire page to the 1865 procession, in the longest and most detailed journal entry that has surfaced about Evacuation Day. (66) That year's parade not only marked the first time that the newly promoted Ward commanded his own company, but it was also an electrifying e·lec·tri·fy  
tr.v. e·lec·tri·fied, e·lec·tri·fy·ing, e·lec·tri·fies
1. To produce electric charge on or in (a conductor).

2.
a.
 event that featured 8,000 soldiers of the First National Guard Division and twenty regimental bands and that was watched by a crowd of tens of thousands of people that blocked the sidewalks and filled the rooftops and windows. With the holiday's nationalistic and militaristic mil·i·ta·rism  
n.
1. Glorification of the ideals of a professional military class.

2. Predominance of the armed forces in the administration or policy of the state.

3.
 ethos encouraging New Yorkers to transform it into a celebration of the Union victory, it was the largest Evacuation Day parade that had been mounted.

Although Ward described everything from the fit of his new epaulettes and his company's acceptance of his leadership to the route of the parade and the formidable demeanor of the veterans, he neglected to say anything about Evacuation Day itself, the nominal basis of this spectacle. It was the Civil War and his own military exploits that preoccupied Ward, not the anniversary of evacuation. (67) His omission presaged the blow that the Civil War would administer to Evacuation Day in precipitating its dissolution as a tradition.

The Civil War had two main effects on Evacuation Day, one that proved fleeting and inconsequential and a second that was permanent and debilitating de·bil·i·tat·ing
adj.
Causing a loss of strength or energy.


Debilitating
Weakening, or reducing the strength of.

Mentioned in: Stress Reduction
. The first effect was that the Civil War temporarily sustained new constituencies and meanings and disrupted old ones. The best example of this discontinuity involved Irish-Americans. Since celebrating Evacuation Day enabled Irish immigrants to simultaneously adopt an American custom and voice their grievances against Great Britain Great Britain, officially United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, constitutional monarchy (2005 est. pop. 60,441,000), 94,226 sq mi (244,044 sq km), on the British Isles, off W Europe. The country is often referred to simply as Britain. , they laid their own claim to the holiday and tried to redefine its meaning. Even before the Civil War, the lessons that Irish leaders took from evacuation had centered on national liberty and British defeat rather than the mainstream themes of elites and the military. For example, in 1850 the Irish-American applauded "the anniversary of the hour and moment in 1783 when the Britishers evacuated New York and the flag of liberty was hoisted over the Battery" for marking "a moment which rendered the United States of America UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. The name of this country. The United States, now thirty-one in number, are Alabama, Arkansas, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, New Hampshire,  a free and independent nation," while six years later the same paper registered its delight "that the British were kicked from the Battery for the 73rd time." (68) The implication was obvious, but during the antebellum period Irish leaders avoided making overt comparisons between Britain's occupation of revolutionary New York and its domination of Ireland. That preference for the oblique disappeared after the Civil War, when, with a new assertiveness borne of their participation in the fighting and of their growing power Growing Power is an urban agriculture organization headquartered in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. It runs the last functional farm within the Milwaukee city limits and also organizes activities in Chicago.  in urban politics, Irish-Americans expressed their interpretations of evacuation much more directly. In the late 1860s, Irish-American newspapers added Evacuation Day to their lists of historic events that had occurred during the month of November. One year, the Irish World said of November 25th:
    The forces of King George leave New York, bag and baggage, a free
    city in a free land, 1783. [Let us hope we will not have to wait
    till 1883 for the forces of Victoria to leave in the same way, a
    place we know of, where they have no right to be.] (69)


The newspapers also gave their ethnicity credit for evacuation's success by boasting that two Americans of Irish descent, Governor George Clinton and General Henry Knox, had directed the operation. Yet such uses of Evacuation Day remained limited and proved impermanent im·per·ma·nent  
adj.
Not lasting or durable; not permanent.



im·perma·nence, im·per
. For instance, although the Congress of the Fenian Brotherhood The Fenian Brotherhood was an Irish nationalist organization based in the United States in the mid-nineteenth century. It was a precursor to Clan na Gael, a sister organization to the Irish Republican Brotherhood. Members were commonly known as "Fenians".  convened in Philadelphia on November 24, 1868, no speaker saw fit to draw a parallel with evacuation. (70) References to the holiday in the Irish-American press decreased in the late 1870s, and by the early 1880s newspapers either ignored it or confined themselves to brief notices that had no ethno-nationalist content, while newspaper calendars of anniversaries that fell in late November replaced Evacuation Day with the Civil War's Battle of Lookout Mountain Lookout Mountain, actually a plateau, is located at the northwest corner of Georgia, the northeast corner of Alabama, and along the southern border of Tennessee near Chattanooga. It is one of the southernmost ridge mountains of the Ridge-and-valley Appalachians. . (71)

The Irish failed to gain traction because of the tradition's continuing strong identification with the urban upper class. Although the antebellum elite's use of the holiday for public displays ended during the Civil War when the volunteer regiments stopped being featured in the parades, Evacuation Day's relationship with the city's increasingly Anglophilic upper class created more cultural distance than working-class Irish-Americans could readily bridge. Rather than challenge the dominant interpretation, Irish-Americans chose to link their late November military reviews and balls with another holiday that often overlapped with Evacuation Day and that also possessed a nationalist element, Thanksgiving. Because Irish-Americans and members of other social groups could make a place for themselves within its more inclusive set of meanings, Thanksgiving started becoming an alternative to Evacuation Day as early as the 1870s. This movement away from Evacuation Day, of course, only reinforced its social exclusivity. The elitist dimensions of Evacuation Day contrast sharply with those of a corresponding holiday in Boston, the anniversary of the British evacuation from that city in 1776. The success of Boston's Evacuation Day, a legal holiday that is still observed today, is attributable to the coincidence of its falling on March 17th--St. Patrick's Day--and to Irish Bostonians' embracing its anti-British content in determining its meaning. (72)

The second effect of the Civil War lay in altering Americans' historical memory. Although the Civil War originally appeared to revitalize the anniversary much as the War of 1812 had done, it wound up diminishing Evacuation Day through its transformation of American understandings of war and remembrance War and Remembrance is a novel by Herman Wouk, published in 1978, which is the sequel to The Winds of War. It continues the story of the extended Henry family and the Jastrow family starting on 15 December 1941 and ending on 6 August 1945. . Warfare had been important to American memory American Memory is an Internet-based archive for public domain image resources, as well as audio, video, and archived Web content. It is published by the Library of Congress. The archive came into existence on October 13, 1994 after $13,000,000 was raised in donations.  culture before the 1860s, but in a distinctive way. A patchwork of local memory events--such as Evacuation Day itself or Bunker Hill--had coincided with nation-wide memorials, while military successes were celebrated less in their own right than as confirmation of civic virtues deemed appropriate to a republic: suffering and fortitude (as with Valley Forge Valley Forge, on the Schuylkill River, SE Pa., NW of Philadelphia. There, during the American Revolution, the main camp of the Continental Army was established (Dec., 1777–June, 1778) under the command of Gen. George Washington. ), heroic defiance of tyranny (Lexington and Concord Noun 1. Lexington and Concord - the first battle of the American Revolution (April 19, 1775)
Lexington, Concord

American Revolution, American Revolutionary War, American War of Independence, War of American Independence - the revolution of the American
, James Lawrence James Lawrence (October 1, 1781 – June 4, 1813) was an American naval hero. During the War of 1812, he commanded the USS Chesapeake in a single-ship action against the HMS Shannon (commanded by Philip Broke).  of the Chesapeake), and communal unity and national triumph (Bunker Hill Bunker Hill

“Don’t shoot until you see the whites of their eyes”; American Revolutionary battle (1775). [Am. Hist.: Worth, 22]

See : Battle
, the siege of Baltimore). Because fears of standing armies and aristocracy had discouraged the glorification glo·ri·fy  
tr.v. glo·ri·fied, glo·ri·fy·ing, glo·ri·fies
1. To give glory, honor, or high praise to; exalt.

2.
 of the military, and because the U.S. military's primary goal of avoiding defeat had kept it from winning many decisive victories, even triumphs such as the Battle of Saratoga did not become objects of remembrance. This older pattern was not so much replaced by as suffused suf·fuse  
tr.v. suf·fused, suf·fus·ing, suf·fus·es
To spread through or over, as with liquid, color, or light: "The sky above the roof is suffused with deep colors" 
 with a new memory culture following the Civil War. Emphasizing destructive warfare, it combined a conception of military conflict as an emblem of U.S. industrial and technological achievement, a messianic belief in devastation as necessary for redemption, a commitment to aggressive masculinity as expressed in warfare or its analogues, and a reliance on citizen-armies to obtain national ideals. As this new memory culture became accepted as conventional, the problem for Evacuation Day was that its meanings did not jibe with the emerging values of destructive warfare and that its veneration of the British departure did not resonate with people whose expectations of warfare and the military were shaped by Shiloh, Antietam, and the Wilderness. Evacuation Day's local orientation was also out of synch with another post-Civil War development that has been examined by historians Kirk Savage and David W. Blight, the nationalization nationalization, acquisition and operation by a country of business enterprises formerly owned and operated by private individuals or corporations. State or local authorities have traditionally taken private property for such public purposes as the construction of  of war remembrance. (73)

Evacuation Day's close relationship with the Civil War began early in the conflict because its nationalistic and military content led New Yorkers to identify the holiday with the Union cause and to embroil em·broil  
tr.v. em·broiled, em·broil·ing, em·broils
1. To involve in argument, contention, or hostile actions: "Avoid . . .
 it in political disputes over the war. In 1861, Horace Greeley and others turned November 25th into a demonstration of support for the war effort, with Greeley's Tribune declaring that the sight of "the Stars and Stripes Stars and Stripes

nickname for the U.S. flag. [Am. Hist.: Brewer Dictionary, 8567]

See : America
 float[ing] proudly from housetop and dome in every part of the city" revealed the public's sympathies. (74) In 1862 and 1863, Copperheads Copperheads, in the American Civil War, a reproachful term for those Northerners sympathetic to the South, mostly Democrats outspoken in their opposition to the Lincoln administration. They were especially strong in Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio, where Clement L.  in the municipal government thwarted the Unionists by refusing to appropriate funds for Evacuation Day, a strategy that led to the anniversary's being "practically abandoned" as only the Veterans of 1812 marched in the parade and as crowd turnout dropped. (75) This relationship continued in peacetime because the holiday became a vehicle for celebrating the Northern victory. The parades that were held in the late 1860s--including the procession that dazzled John Ward in 1865--were extraordinary for their size and intensity, largely because of the participation of the entire First Division of the New York State National Guard, with its more than 8,000 troops, many of them combat veterans who carried their battle flags in a graphic reminder of the hostilities. Further cementing this association was Governor Reuben E. Fenton's practice of delivering speeches on Civil War themes on the anniversary, praising the accomplishments of the Union forces one year, and demanding a firmer program for reconstructing the Southern states Southern States
U.S.

Confederacy

government of 11 Southern states that left the Union in 1860. [Am. Hist.: EB, III: 73]

Dixie

popular name for Southern states in U.S. and for song. [Am. Hist.
 the next year. (76)

Although these scenes persuaded the New York Times "that there is a growing tendency to revive the memory of a day which is so glorious in our national annals," the renaissance ended abruptly when Major General Alexander Shaler, the commander of the First Division, dropped Evacuation Day from the division's parade schedule in 1870. Because his troops had made several extra parades that summer, Shaler wanted to eliminate one of their fall reviews, a decision that led him to target Evacuation Day because it fell the day before Thanksgiving and interfered with his men's holiday plans. Within a few years, the reduction of the National Guard presence from the First Division's 8,000 troops to a single regiment of 750 men deprived the parades of so much excitement that attendance plummeted. More telling than Shaler's decision, however, was the indifference of ordinary residents to it and its consequences. In contrast to the flood of complaints that had been made between the 1820s and the 1860s, when the holiday was robust, that New Yorkers were observing its traditions less faithfully than before, very few people objected to the parade's contraction or the anniversary's subsequent collapse. Their silence suggests that emotional involvement and identification with the anniversary had weakened by the 1870s. (77)

As the Herald observed in 1872, "the real business of actual warfare" had eclipsed Evacuation Day. (78) Although the anniversary had provided a forum for organizing Union rites during and just after the war, that role ended as the Civil War developed its own memory apparatus, including Memorial Day, the Grand Army of the Republic Grand Army of the Republic (GAR), organization established by Civil War veterans of the Union army and navy. Principal figures in the founding of the GAR were John A. Logan and Richard J. Oglesby. The first post was formed (Apr. 6, 1866) at Decatur, Ill. , and statues of soldiers. By the 1870s, Evacuation Day had lost much of its following and begun to dissolve. (79)

Revival and Relapse

Traditions do not die easily. Their age and mere existence confer legitimacy, and sometimes inspire campaigns to revive traditions that are lapsing. Evacuation Day experienced such a resurgence when patriotic hereditary groups took it over in the 1880s. Although this revival failed to save the holiday, it substantially altered its rites and its meaning. (80)

The revival was initiated by John Austin John Austin may refer to a:
  • J. L. Austin (1911–1960), a philosopher of language
  • John Austin (author), British author specializing in WWII propaganda
  • John Austin (legal philosophy), 19th century legal and political theorist who wrote 'An Essay on Sovereignty'
 Stevens, a merchant and patrician historian who organized Evacuation Day's 100th anniversary, in 1883, in his capacity as secretary of the New-York Historical Society New-York Historical Society, New York City. Founded in 1804, the society is a repository of art, artifacts, and literature relating to American, especially New York, history. . Working closely with business and social leaders, Stevens made the centennial one of nineteenth-century New York's greatest extravaganzas. Like a supernova supernova, a massive star in the latter stages of stellar evolution that suddenly contracts and then explodes, increasing its energy output as much as a billionfold.  that exploded in a final brief display of brilliance before being reduced to the nothingness noth·ing·ness  
n.
1. The condition or quality of being nothing; nonexistence.

2. Empty space; a void.

3. Lack of consequence; insignificance.

4. Something inconsequential or insignificant.
 of a black hole, the 1883 parade was both the largest Evacuation Day gala ever staged and the last big one. Over a million people attended, including President Chester A. Arthur, several Cabinet officers, and eight governors. Twenty-five thousand troops marched in the parade, while a marine pageant featured 300 warships, private yachts, and other vessels.

Businessmen controlled the centennial. Stevens entrusted its planning to committees that comprised the presidents of the merchants' exchanges, bankers, railroad executives Following is a list of presidents and chief executive officers of railroad and railway systems worldwide.

: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Y   References 

A
  • Adams, Charles Francis, Jr. (1835-1915), UP 1884-1890.
, corporate lawyers, and administrators of men's clubs, who arranged the events and shared center stage with political and military officials. Although Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper praised the centennial for dramatizing the social progress and civic harmony that New York had attained under business leadership, others denounced it as the triumph of a capitalist aristocracy that betrayed the democratic and nationalistic spirit of the American Revolution. (81) The Irish-American damned the celebration's organizers as "the 'shoddy aristocracy' of New York--the men who stand on their money-bags,--swelled by stock-gambling."
    These degenerate Americans, by their aping of everything English,
    and their fawning on the representatives of English royalty, while
    their slight their own country, show that they regret the abolition
    of class distinctions, and the equalization of all men before the
    law, which the Revolution brought about. (82)


The last straw last straw
n.
The last of a series of annoyances or disappointments that leads one to a final loss of patience, temper, trust, or hope.



[
 for the Irish-American was a report that "Anglo-maniac snobs" from the Produce Exchange had invited the British ambassador to an Evacuation Day banquet and toasted Queen Victoria's health. (83) The New York Sun also took aim at the elite's social pretensions:
    The boast which now most stirs the envy of Newport is not of descent
    from patriots, but from Tories of the Revolution. A trace of Tory
    blood is coveted by the aspiring aristocrat. The Anglomaniacs of
    this day are not driven into exile and despoiled of their
    possessions. They have become the leaders of fashion and the
    exemplars for our most luxurious society. To be mistaken for
    Englishmen is their highest and fondest ambition. (84)


John Swinton's Paper, a radical labor organ, rebuked "our ruling swashbucklers" for using the land and marine parades to brandish bran·dish  
tr.v. bran·dished, bran·dish·ing, bran·dish·es
1. To wave or flourish (a weapon, for example) menacingly.

2. To display ostentatiously. See Synonyms at flourish.

n.
 the raw military power available to the upper classes. Instead of that display of class might, Swinton's Paper imagined an alternative procession that would have comprised battalions of industrial workers marching behind a banner that proclaimed: "Millionaires, None." (85)

A month later, Stevens founded an organization named the Society of '83 (later reconstituted as the Sons of the Revolution) to arrange subsequent Evacuation Day rites and to improve Americans' patriotic spirit and their appreciation of their colonial heritage. An early patriotic hereditary society that was a forerunner of the better-known Daughters of the American Revolution Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR), a Colonial patriotic society in the United States, open to women having one or more ancestors who aided the cause of the Revolution. The society was organized (1890) at Washington, D.C.  and the Colonial Dames of America, the Sons of the Revolution was also established as an ancestral society to preserve the past from the immigrant present. With its membership restricted to 250 descendants of revolutionary New York City families, the society boasted prominent New York City names such as Beekman, Schermerhorn, Hamilton, Morris, and Montgomery. (86)

The revival of Evacuation Day was part of a larger elite project to idealize i·de·al·ize  
v. i·de·al·ized, i·de·al·iz·ing, i·de·al·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To regard as ideal.

2. To make or envision as ideal.

v.intr.
1.
 the historical memory of colonial New York. In the late nineteenth century, patrician historians produced hundreds of books, prints, lectures, classes, and tours about an imagined colonial city known as Old New York. Devoid of immigrants, labor unrest labor unrest n (US) → conflictividad f laboral , and factories, Old New York offered an emotional alternative to the modern city and exerted a strong hold on upper- and middle-class New Yorkers who were disconcerted dis·con·cert  
tr.v. dis·con·cert·ed, dis·con·cert·ing, dis·con·certs
1. To upset the self-possession of; ruffle. See Synonyms at embarrass.

2.
 by rapid urban change. (87)

Evacuation Day occupied a prominent place in these fictive histories. According to James Riker James Riker (Born: New York City, May 11, 1822. Died: 1889) New York historian and genealogist. His father, James Riker (Snr) was a merchant and landowner descended from early Dutch settlers. Riker left school at the age of sixteen to work in his father's business. , the holiday's foremost nineteenth-century historian, Old New Yorkers had resisted the British occupiers with a unity and bravery that made it "the most signal [event] in [city] history." (88) Riker prized the evacuation as "the closing scene in that stupendous stu·pen·dous  
adj.
1. Of astounding force, volume, degree, or excellence; marvelous.

2. Amazingly large or great; huge. See Synonyms at enormous.
 struggle which gave birth to our free and noble Republic" and "brought our city deliverance from a foreign power" and as a reminder to "keep unimpaired Adj. 1. unimpaired - not damaged or diminished in any respect; "his speech remained unimpaired"
undamaged - not harmed or spoiled; sound

uninjured - not injured physically or mentally
 our love of country and kindle A portable e-book device from Amazon.com that provides wireless connectivity to Amazon for e-book downloads as well as Wikipedia and search engines. Using Sprint's EV-DO cellphone network, dubbed WhisperNet, wireless access is free. It also includes a built-in dictionary.  the patriotism of those who come after us." (89)

Turning to history and its aura of cultural authority as a response to the immigration immigration, entrance of a person (an alien) into a new country for the purpose of establishing permanent residence. Motives for immigration, like those for migration generally, are often economic, although religious or political factors may be very important.  of southern and eastern Europeans, elites and their retainers used the revival of Evacuation Day to position themselves as stewards of American history and to confirm their superiority. Because the Battery was the location of both Evacuation Day's sunrise flag-raising ceremony and Castle Garden's immigrant station, collisions between the Sons of the Revolution and immigrants became a staple of representations of the anniversary. One year, an account of cannons that had supposedly been trained on the departing British transports suggested that they be used to drive immigrants away. Another year, a newspaper depicted a Rumanian Jewish family who witnessed the flag-raising ceremony yet proved so incapable of grasping its patriotic meaning that they "walked away with angry looks on their faces." (90)

Evacuation Day also enabled social and economic elites to respond to the transformation of upper-class society. With the emergence of vast new fortunes multiplying the number of newcomers who were clamoring for admission to the inner circles, elites had experienced a blurring of class boundaries and a confusion over social credentials that many found to be disconcerting dis·con·cert  
tr.v. dis·con·cert·ed, dis·con·cert·ing, dis·con·certs
1. To upset the self-possession of; ruffle. See Synonyms at embarrass.

2.
. By affirming elite society as a community of feeling and knowledge whose members were distinguished by their breeding and heritage, Evacuation Day offered one solution to this problem of identity. (91) A case in point involves Anglophilia. With the United States approaching the industrial might of Great Britain and its upper class emulating the English aristocracy, American elites began to feel ambivalence toward the old enemy. Evacuation Day let them see themselves as part of an Anglo-Saxon unity that was rooted in the colonial period Colonial Period may generally refer to any period in a country's history when it was subject to administration by a colonial power.
  • Korea under Japanese rule
  • Colonial America
See also
  • Colonialism
 and that excluded immigrants and other unworthies. It also allowed them to combine expressions of American patriotism with professions of admiration for Great Britain. Speaking at a Society of '83 banquet, Chauncey M. Depew, a vice president of the New York Central Railroad New York Central Railroad

Major U.S. railroad. It was founded in 1853 to consolidate 10 railroads that paralleled the Erie Canal between Albany and Buffalo, the oldest being the Mohawk and Hudson, New York state's first railway (established 1831).
, struck this note in asserting that the American Revolution was responsible for Britain's imperial success:
   We have reached across Great Britain and liberalized her
   institutions. We furnished an impetus to Great Britain, and if she
   stands to-day supreme and grand among the nations of the world in
   all that constitutes magnitude and merit, it is largely to the fact
   of the independence of these colonies and the creation of the
   American Republic. (92)


As the Irish-American and the New York Sun grasped in denouncing the 'Anglomaniacs' who dominated the centennial, Anglophilia revealed the elite's cultural aspirations and self-identity as an aristocracy. Anglophilia also contradicted the original purpose of the holiday and substituted myth for reality and the present for the past.

Because the holiday's recent loss of adherence supported their belief that ordinary Americans devalued de·val·ue   also de·val·u·ate
v. de·val·ued also de·valu·at·ed, de·val·u·ing also de·val·u·at·ing, de·val·ues also de·val·u·ates

v.tr.
1. To lessen or cancel the value of.
 their heritage, Evacuation Day was a good vehicle for Stevens and his fellow Sons of the Revolution. But although Stevens and the others enjoyed pointing to the drop in parade attendance as evidence that elites should become guardians of American history, they disliked the uncontrolled social mixing and frivolity Frivolity
Blondie

the gaffe-prone, frivolous wife of Dagwood Bumstead. [Comics: Horn, 118]

Dobson, Zuleika

charming young lady who unconcernedly dazzles Oxford undergraduates. [Br. Lit.
 of public celebrations. Unlike their counterparts earlier in the century who had used public performances to legitimate hierarchy, members of the late nineteenth century elite wanted to constitute themselves as an aristocracy and sought to avoid the ill-bred and vulgar. Accordingly, they refined the parade by decreasing the number of bands and military units that appeared in it, changes that further diminished its appeal and its audience. By the mid-1890s, the parade was no longer held annually and, when it did occur, usually consisted of little more than a flag escort and several companies of history buffs wearing colonial military uniforms. From being integral to New Yorkers' historical memories, the parade had come to exert little cultural resonance beyond the participants themselves. The Sons of the Revolution, preferring dignified events that took place in controlled settings, introduced a new ritual, the dedication of statues that honored great Americans such as George Washington and Nathan Hale (character) Nathan Hale - An asterisk ("*", see also splat, ASCII). Notionally, from "I regret that I have only one asterisk for my country!" ("life to give" -> "ass to risk" -> "asterisk"), a misquote of the famous remark uttered by Nathan Hale just before he was hanged.  and tablets that commemorated historic sites such as the Battle of Harlem Heights The Battle of Harlem Heights was fought in the New York Campaign of the American Revolutionary War. The action took place in what is now the Morningside Heights and west Harlem neighborhoods of Manhattan in New York City on September 16, 1776. . The dedication ceremonies featured lengthy speeches extolling the importance of colonial history that demonstrated the historical knowledge and cultural authority of the Sons of the Revolution. The patriotic and ancestral societies' favorite milieu, however, were private gatherings. Every November 25th, the Sons of the Revolution, the Colonial Dames of America, the Daughters of the American Revolution, and the Children of the Holland Dames held dinners at exclusive venues such as Delmonico's, the Astor House The Astor House was for a time the finest hotel in New York City.

John Jacob Astor built this luxurious, Greek Revival style, Isaiah Rogers designed hotel across Broadway from New York City Hall Vesey in 1836.
, the Waldorf-Astoria, and Fraunces' Tavern, where their members could socialize so·cial·ize  
v. so·cial·ized, so·cial·iz·ing, so·cial·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To place under government or group ownership or control.

2. To make fit for companionship with others; make sociable.
 and hear historical lectures without rubbing elbows with the hoi polloi. (93)

The Sons of the Revolution's predilection for the intellectual and the didactic accelerated Evacuation Day's dissolution. One sign of the holiday's difficulties was that newspapers began to ridicule it. Concluding that the fundamental problem was that "the peaceful departure of the British" was not "specially heroic," the New York Times argued in 1888 that Evacuation Day would warrant more than its "slight annual commemoration" had General Washington and his troops only done something "more strenuous than that of watching the Redcoats go." (94) Other newspapers exploited the huge imaginative gap that existed between colonial and modern New York City by mocking the history buffs who wore replica Continental Army uniforms on subway and elevated trains. The lowpoint came in 1907, when the City History Club organized an Evacuation Day program of lectures for 600 elementary school elementary school: see school.  children in a Brooklyn park Brooklyn Park, city (1990 pop. 56,381), Hennepin co., SE Minn., a suburb of Minneapolis; chartered as a city 1969. Manufacturing includes machinery, wood and metal products, tools, feeders, and medical and pharmaceutical supplies. . (95) After waiting for over an hour for the program to begin, the children started screaming and running around the park, finally mobbing the speakers, who, the Times dryly observed, "fled a good deal faster than the British ever did." (96)

The dissolution of the holiday led organizations that had scheduled events for Evacuation Day to transfer them to Thanksgiving. New York State's National Guard regiments, which had held military drills and balls on Evacuation Day for decades, started moving them to Thanksgiving about 1905. Several Daughters of the American Revolution chapters shifted their galas to Thanksgiving around the same time. (97) There were a few stubborn holdouts, especially the Sons of the Revolution, which slated Evacuation Day banquets as late as the 1920s. But although its speakers went on proclaiming Old New York's glories and railing against the public's disregard of the past, they came off as cranks. By then, even elites no longer adhered to Evacuation Day. With the emergence of modernist thinking encouraging a more skeptical approach to history, the reverence for the past that had characterized Evacuation Day seemed old fashioned n. 1. A cocktail consisting of whiskey, bitters, and sugar, garnished with with fruit slices and often a cherry.

Noun 1. old fashioned - a cocktail made of whiskey and bitters and sugar with fruit slices
. The upper class' use of history as a social credential faded, replaced by a new emphasis on consumption, sports, higher education higher education

Study beyond the level of secondary education. Institutions of higher education include not only colleges and universities but also professional schools in such fields as law, theology, medicine, business, music, and art.
, and careers. Evacuation Day's localism lo·cal·ism  
n.
1.
a. A local linguistic feature.

b. A local custom or peculiarity.

2. Devotion to local interests and customs.
 also made it vulnerable, because of changes in the elite's outlook. Unlike New York's Federalist elite, which was oriented both nationally and locally, or its mid- to late-nineteenth century elite, which was strongly localist, the early twentieth century economic elite increasingly had a national perspective, as corporations altered business culture. Local history started to seem parochial. (98)

Wealthy New Yorkers' drift away Verb 1. drift away - lose personal contact over time; "The two women, who had been roommates in college, drifted apart after they got married"
drift apart
 from history cost Evacuation Day its last constituency. By the 1920s, the tradition was no longer meaningful for any social group. Except for the Irish-Americans immediately after the Civil War, most immigrants and workers had never contested Evacuation Day directly. Instead, some responded by turning Thanksgiving into an alternative tradition. A variant of Thanksgiving became a haven for working-class New Yorkers repelled by Evacuation Day's nativism nativism, in anthropology, social movement that proclaims the return to power of the natives of a colonized area and the resurgence of native culture, along with the decline of the colonizers.  and elitism e·lit·ism or é·lit·ism  
n.
1. The belief that certain persons or members of certain classes or groups deserve favored treatment by virtue of their perceived superiority, as in intellect, social status, or financial resources.
. Before a uniform Thanksgiving based on New England New England, name applied to the region comprising six states of the NE United States—Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. The region is thought to have been so named by Capt.  precedents and revolving around the family emerged, a range of Thanksgiving practices had existed, including a radical strain, centered in Protestant and Catholic churches, that critiqued American capitalism by reinterpreting its themes of a bountiful harvest and gift exchange as an argument for the redistribution of wealth and power. This radical variant lapsed as Thanksgiving evolved in another direction, but it inoculated its working-class adherents against Evacuation Day. (99)

A few Evacuation Day observances have taken place subsequently, on major anniversaries, like the 200th, in 1983. Yet Evacuation Day survives today as an historical curiosity, known chiefly for its disappearance. And perhaps that is the final irony: a holiday that was dedicated to memory is itself remembered for having been forgotten. (100)

ENDNOTES

I want to thank Elizabeth Blackmar, Frederic Cople Jaher, and Daniel J. Singal for their criticism of this essay.

1. David Waldstreicher, In the Midst Adv. 1. in the midst - the middle or central part or point; "in the midst of the forest"; "could he walk out in the midst of his piece?"
midmost
 of Perpetual Fetes: The Making of American Nationalism, 1776-1820 (Chapel Hill, 1997); Simon P. Newman, Parades and the Politics of the Street: Festive Culture in the Early American Republic (Philadelphia, 1997); Len Travers, Celebrating the Fourth: Independence Day and the Rites of Nationalism in the Early Republic (Amherst, 1997); Stephen Nissenbaum, The Battle for Christmas (New York, 1996); Leigh Eric Schmidt, Consumer Rites: The Buying & Selling of American Holidays (Princeton, 1995); Kirk Savage, Standing Soldiers, Kneeling Slaves: Race, War, and Monument in Nineteenth-Century America (Princeton, 1997); David W. Blight, Race and Reunion: The Civil War in American Memory (Cambridge, 2001); and Robert Anthony Orsi, The Madonna of 115th Street: Faith and Community in Italian Harlem Italian Harlem is a neighborhood in East Harlem, formerly inhabitated by a large Italian American population. Today Italian Harlem is called Spanish Harlem because of its large Latino population. , 1880-1915 (New Haven New Haven, city (1990 pop. 130,474), New Haven co., S Conn., a port of entry where the Quinnipiac and other small rivers enter Long Island Sound; inc. 1784. Firearms and ammunition, clocks and watches, tools, rubber and paper products, and textiles are among the many , 1985). For the use of memory and history, see also Eric Hobsbawm Eric John Ernest Hobsbawm CH (born June 9, 1917) is a British Marxist historian and author. Hobsbawm was a long-standing member of the now defunct Communist Party of Great Britain and the associated Communist Party Historians Group. He is president of Birkbeck, University of London. , "Introduction: Inventing Traditions:" 1-14 and Hugh Trevor-Roper Hugh Redwald Trevor-Roper, Baron Dacre of Glanton (January 15, 1914 – January 26, 2003) was a notable historian of Early Modern Britain and Nazi Germany. Life
Early life and education
, "The Invention of Tradition: The Highland Tradition of Scotland:" 15-41, in Eric Hobsbawm and Terence Ranger Terence Osborn Ranger is a prominent African historian, focusing on the history of Zimbabwe. Part of the post-colonial generation of historians, his work spans the pre- and post-Independence (1980) period in Zimbabwe, from the 1960s to the present. , eds., The Invention of Tradition (Cambridge, 1983) and Roy Rosenzweig Roy Alan Rosenzweig (August 6 1950 – October 11 2007) was an American historian at George Mason University in Virginia. He was the founder and director of the Center for History and New Media from 1994 until his death in October 2007 from lung cancer, aged 57.  and David Thelen, The Presence of the Past: Popular Uses of History in American Life (New York, 1998).

2. Shils discusses the "dissolution" and "attenuation Loss of signal power in a transmission.
Attenuation

The reduction in level of a transmitted quantity as a function of a parameter, usually distance. It is applied mainly to acoustic or electromagnetic waves and is expressed as the ratio of power densities.
" of tradition and speaks of traditions that lose "adherence" to populations. Edward Shils, Tradition (Chicago, 1981): 283-286. For analyses of the purposeful and sometimes organized oblivion of social memory, see Adrian Forty and Susanne Kuchler, eds., The Art of Forgetting (Oxford, 1999). Other lapsed American traditions include Guy Fawkes Day Guy Fawkes Day  
n.
November 5, observed in England to commemorate the foiling of the attempt led by Guy Fawkes in 1605 to blow up the king and members of Parliament in retaliation for increasing repression of Roman Catholics in England.
, Juneteenth, and Pinkster. Alwyn Barr, "Juneteenth," Encyclopedia of Southern Culture, ed. Charles Reagan Wilson Reagan Wilson (born 6 March 1947 in Torrance, California) is an American model and actress who was Playboy magazine's Playmate of the Month for its October 1967 issue. Her centerfold was photographed by Ron Vogel.  and William Ferris There have been at least six prominent individuals with this name:
  • William D. Ferris (b. 1961), astronomer
  • William H. Ferris (1874-1941), African American journalist and author
  • William R. Ferris (b. 1942), folklorist and scholar of the U.S.
 (Chapel Hill, 1989): 216; "Guy Fawkes Day," The Folklore of American Holidays, ed. Henning Cohen cohen
 or kohen

(Hebrew: “priest”) Jewish priest descended from Zadok (a descendant of Aaron), priest at the First Temple of Jerusalem. The biblical priesthood was hereditary and male.
 and Tristram Potter Cohen, 2nd ed. (Detroit, 1991): 386-389.

3. This article is the first systematic analysis of Evacuation Day, but other accounts have been made of it, chiefly encyclopedia and almanac almanac, originally, a calendar with notations of astronomical and other data. Almanacs have been known in simple form almost since the invention of writing, for they served to record religious feasts, seasonal changes, and the like.  entries. Most attribute its disappearance to the decline of anti-English sentiment or to competition with Thanksgiving. Both factors did enter into the holiday's demise, but more subtly than earlier authors allow. See Robert I Robert I, duke of Normandy
Robert I (Robert the Magnificent), d. 1035, duke of Normandy (1027–35); father of William the Conqueror. He is often identified with the legendary Robert the Devil.
. Goler, "Evacuation Day," The Encyclopedia of New York City, ed. Kenneth T. Jackson Kenneth Terry Jackson (born 1939) is a professor of history and social sciences at Columbia University. A frequent television guest, he is best known as an urban historian and a preeminent authority on New York City, where he lives on the Upper West Side.  (New Haven, 1995): 385; Brooks McNamera, Day of Jubilee: The Great Age of Public Celebrations in New York, 1788-1909 (New Brunswick New Brunswick, province, Canada
New Brunswick, province (2001 pop. 729,498), 28,345 sq mi (73,433 sq km), including 519 sq mi (1,345 sq km) of water surface, E Canada.
, 1997): 35-39; Gary Jennings Gary Jennings (September 20 1928 – February 13 1999) was a U.S. author who wrote children and adult novels. In 1980, after the successful novel Aztec, he specialized in writing adult historical fiction novels. , Parades: Celebrations and Circuses on the March (Philadelphia, 1966): 59; and Jane M. Hatch, comp. and ed., The American Book of Days, 3rd ed. (New York, 1978): 1051-1053. For loyalist experiences of the evacuation, see Robert Ernst, "A Tory-eye View of the Evacuation of New York," New York History 64 (October 1983): 377-94.

4. Goler, "Evacuation Day," The Encyclopedia of New York City: 385.

5. Max Weber Noun 1. Max Weber - United States abstract painter (born in Russia) (1881-1961)
Weber

2. Max Weber - German sociologist and pioneer of the analytic method in sociology (1864-1920)
Weber
, "Class, Status, and Party:" 180-195, in From Max Weber: Essays in Sociology, ed. and trans. H.H. Gerth and C. Wright Mills (New York, 1946). For American elites, see Digby Baltzell, Philadelphia Gentlemen: The Making of a National Upper Class (Philadelphia, 1979); Frederic Cople Jaher, The Urban Establishment: Upper Strata in Boston, New York Boston is a town in Erie County, New York, United States. The population was 7,897 at the 2000 census. The town is named after Boston, Massachusetts.

The Town of Boston is an interior town of the county and one of the county's "Southtowns.
, Charleston, Chicago, and Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850.  (Urbana, 1982); David C. Hammack, Power and Society: Greater New York at the Turn of the Century (New York, 1982); Kathryn A. Jacob, Capital Elites: High Society in Washington, D.C., after the Civil War (Washington, D.C., 1995); and Sven Beckert, The Moneyed Metropolis: New York City and the Consolidation of the American Bougeoisie, 1850-1896 (New York, 2001). For an analysis of memory keepers, see Peter Dobkin Hall Peter Dobkin Hall, teaches at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. Education
Hall received his B.A. in American Studies at Reed College in 1968 and his M.A. (1970) and Ph.D. (1973) in American History from the State University of New York at Stony Brook.
, "The Empty Tomb Noun 1. empty tomb - a monument built to honor people whose remains are interred elsewhere or whose remains cannot be recovered
cenotaph

monument, memorial - a structure erected to commemorate persons or events
: The Making of Dynastic Identity:" 255-348, in George E. Marcus with Peter Dobkin Hill, Lives in Trust: The Fortunes of Dynastic Families in Late Twentieth-Century America (Boulder, 1992).

6. "Preliminary Articles for a Treaty of Peace:" 243-50, in Journals of the Continental Congress, v. 24, entry for April 15, 1783 (Washington, D.C., 1922); "Definitive Articles of a Treaty of Peace:" 23-28, in Journals of the Continental Congress, v. 28, entry for January 14, 1784 (Washington, D.C., 1928); Journals of the Continental Congress, v. 24, entries for April 24 and July 16, 1783: 274 and 436; Alexander Hamilton to George Washington, March 17, 1783: 290-93, Continental Congress Report on Proposal of Sir Guy Carleton Guy Carleton may refer to:
  • Guy Carleton, (1598-1685), Anglican Bishop
  • Guy Carleton, 1st Baron Dorchester, (1724-1808), Governor of Canada
, April 22, 1783: 338, and Alexander Hamilton and William Floyd
This article is about the signer of the Declaration of Independence. For the American football player, see William Floyd (football player).


William Floyd
 to George Clinton, April 23, 1783: 338-39, in The Papers of Alexander Hamilton, 1782-1786, v. 3, ed. Harold C. Syrett (New York, 1961); H.G. Letter V [attributed to Hamilton], February 25, 1789: 270, in The Papers of Alexander Hamilton, 1787-1788, v. 4, ed. by Harold C. Syrett (New York, 1962). For the Revolution and New York City, see Gary B. Nash, The Urban Crucible: Social Change, Political Consciousness and the Origin of the American Revolution (Cambridge, 1979); and Edward Countryman, A People in Revolution: The American Revolution and Political Society in New York, 1760-1790 (Baltimore, 1981).

7. Rivington's New York Gazette, November 26, 1783; The Independent New-York Gazette, November 29, 1783; Edwin G. Burrows Edwin G. Burrows (born in 1943) is a professor of history at Brooklyn College, and is the Pulitzer Prize winning author of . He currently resides in Northport, New York. Burrows is the husband of vice president of Hofstra, Patricia Burrows.  and Mike Wallace Mike Wallace may refer to:
  • Mike Wallace (journalist) (born 1918), television correspondent
  • Mike Wallace (historian), American historian
  • Mike Wallace (NASCAR) (born 1959), race car driver
  • Mike Wallace (politician), Canadian politician
, Gotham: A History of New York
This article is about the history of New York State.
For a history of the city see: History of New York City.


New York, the "Empire State" has been at the center of American politics, finance, industry, transportation and culture since it was created
 to 1898 (New York, 1999): 259-261; Douglas Southall Freeman, George Washington: A Biography, v. 5, Victory with the Help of France (New York, 1952): 461; James Thomas James Thomas may refer to:
  • James Thomas, the legend from Llanelli
  • James Thomas (Governor of Maryland) (1785–1845)
  • James Thomas (Australian politician) (1826–1884)
  • James Thomas (basketball) (b.
 Flexner, George Washington, v. 3, In the American Revolution (1775-1783) (Boston, 1967): 522-28. Van Arsdale has sometimes been identified as an Army enlisted man or an Army officer.

8. New York Packet, January 15, 1784; The Independent New-York Gazette, November 29, December 6, 1783; The Independent Journal: or, The General Advertiser, December 1, 1783.

9. The Independent Journal: or, The General Advertiser, December 1, 1783. Emphasis in the original.

10. New York Packet, January 15, 1784. Emphasis in the original.

11. Robert Thomas, Petition to the Mayor and the Corporation of the City of New York, April 14, 1784, reel 8, folder 303, New York City Common Council Papers, 1630-1831, microfilm edition, Municipal Archives of the New York City Department of Records, New York, NY (hereafter cited as CCP (Certified Computer Professional) The award for successful completion of a comprehensive examination on computers offered by the ICCP. See ICCP and certification.
.

1. (language) CCP - Concurrent Constraint Programming.
2.
). See also David Barclay, Petition to the Mayor, Aldermen, and Common Council, February 13, 1784, reel 8, folder 302, CCP, and Adolph Waldron, Petition to the Mayor, Aldermen, and Commonality, April 4, 1784, reel 8, folder 303, CCP. Some early petitioners did not use the term evacuation, speaking instead of "the approach of the British Troops," "the Invasion of this State by the British Troops," or "when the Enemy took Possession of the Island." Elizabeth Ritchie, Memorial, April 22, 1784, reel 8, folder 303, CCP; Richard Norwood, Petition to the Mayor, Aldermen, and Commonality, March 6, 1784, reel 8, folder 302, CCP; Michael Brooks For the former NFL football player, see Michael Brooks (American football).

Michael Brooks (born March 1, 1964) is an American historian and investigative journalist.
, Petition to the Corporation of the City of New York, March 21, 1784, reel 8, folder 304, CCP.

12. Andrew Thompson Andrew Thompson may refer to:
  • Andrew "Andy" Thompson (MSW), (b. 1924), Canadian politician;
  • Andrew Thompson, (b. 1972), Australian rules footballer with the St Kilda Football Club
  • Andrew Thompson, the musician and performer from New York State.
 and Joseph Cheesman, Petition to the Mayor, Recorder, Aldermen, and Common Council, March 30, 1784, reel 8, folder 303, CCP.

13. William Backhouse William Backhouse (1593-1662) was a renowned English Rosicrucian philosopher, alchemist, and astrologer. He was born on 17th January 1593 at Swallowfield Park, some 5 miles south of Reading in the county of Berkshire, a younger son of Samuel Backhouse. , Petition, July 9, 1785, reel 9, folder 322, CCP. See also Elizabeth Mesier, Petition to the Mayor, Aldermen, and Common Council, September 8, 1784, reel 8, folder 305, CCP; John Ferrers, Petition to the Mayor, Aldermen, and Commonality, December 12, 1785, reel 9, folder 325, CCP. Midway in 1784, references to the beginning of the British occupation became non-specific and almost never used the term evacuation. John Barlow John Barlow was an English diplomat and spy in the time of Henry VIII. Barlow was intimately involved in the King's attempts to secure a divorce from his first wife, Katherine of Aragon from the Pope.  thus referred to owing two years' rent "when the British came over & took New York." John Barlow, Petition to the Mayor, the Aldermen, and Common Council, September 8, 1784, reel 8, folder 305, CCP.

14. The Independent Journal; or, The General Advertiser, November 30, 1785. For the historical memory of ordinary Americans, see Alfred F. Young, The Shoemaker and the Tea Party: Memory and the American Revolution (Boston, 1999): vii-xvii, 87-91 and Robert E. Cray, Jr., "Commemorating the Prison Ship Dead: Revolutionary Memory and the Politics of Sepulture in the Early Republic, 1776-1808," William and Mary Noun 1. William and Mary - joint monarchs of England; William III and Mary II  Quarterly 3rd Series, 56 (July 1999): 565-590.

15. Richard L. Bushman, The Refinement of America: Persons, Houses, Cities (New York, 1992): 353-365. The data are too thin to be conclusive, but the first evacuation observances may also have been inspired by St. Andrew's Day St. Andrew's Day is the feast of Saint Andrew, celebrated on 30 November each year. Saint Andrew is the patron saint of Scotland and St. Andrew's Day is Scotland's official national day, although Burns' Night is more widely observed. , the Scottish name day, celebrated every November 30th and a signal event on the eighteenth-century social calendar that consisted of dinners that were attended by the governor, the mayor, aldermen, merchants, and their wives. By the 1780s, St. Andrew's Day had acquired an ethno-nationalistic component, and many New Yorkers used it to attack England for its tyranny of 'North Britain' and the United States. St. Andrew's Day probably contributed to the development of Evacuation Day by habituating New Yorkers to an anniversary that fell at the end of November, was marked with private dinners, and had a nationalistic content. New York Journal and State Gazette, December 2, 1784; New-York Journal, or the Weekly Register, December 1, 1785. Walter Friedman, "Scots:" 1052-1053, in The Encyclopedia of New York City.

16. The Independent Journal; or, The General Advertiser, November 25, 1786.

17. The New York Journal and State Gazette, December 2, 1784.

18. Waldstreicher, In The Midst of Perpetual Fetes: 18-52 and Newman, Parades and the Politics of the Street: 1-10, 39. See also Travers, Celebrating the Fourth: 1-14.

19. Independent Journal; Or, the General Advertiser, November 25, 1786.

20. Trevor N. Dupuy Trevor Nevitt Dupuy (Colonel, U. S. Army, retired), soldier and noted author, was born in New York on May 3, 1916. Biography
He attended the U. S. Military Academy at West Point, graduating in the class of 1938. During World War II he commanded a U.S.
, Curt Johnson Curt Johnson may refer to
  • Curt Johnson (soccer)
  • Curtis Johnson (American football), former cornerback with the Miami Dolphins
  • S. Curtis Johnson, of the S. C.
, and Grace P. Hayes, Dictionary of Military Terms: A Guide to the Language of Warfare and Military Institutions (New York, 1986): 88.

21. New-York Packet, November 28, 1788; New York Commercial Advertiser The New-York Commercial Advertiser was a nineteenth century American newspaper. , November 27, 1798. Waldstreicher, In the Midst of Perpetual Fetes: 47-51. For the celebration of national holidays before the Civil War, see Wilbur Zelinsky Wilbur Zelinsky (born 1921) is recognized as one of America's most prominent cultural geographers.

He is a professor emeritus at Pennsylvania State University. An Illinoisan by birth, but a "northeasterner by choice and conviction," Zelinsky received his education at
, Nation into State: The Shifting Symbolic Foundations of American Nationalism (Chapel Hill, 1988): 69-84 and Cecilia Elizabeth Leary, To Die For: The Paradox of American Patriotism (Princeton, 1999): 3-23.

22. New-York Packet, November 27, 1787.

23. American Minerva, November 26, 1796; New York Commercial Advertiser, November 27, 1798.

24. The New-York Journal, and Daily Patriotic Register, November 27, 1787, December 3, 1789; New York Commercial Advertiser, November 27, 1798. New York City Common Council, Minutes of the Common Council of the City of New York, 1784-1831, v. 2 (New York: n.p., 1831): 51, 53, 120, 202, 410, 484, 588, 689, 691. Russell F. Weigley, History of the United States “American history” redirects here. For the history of the continents, see History of the Americas.
The United States of America is located in the middle of the North American continent, with Canada to the north and the United Mexican States to the south.
 Army, enlarged edition (Bloomington, 1984): 74-94. Russell F. Weigley to author, October 12, 1999, letter in author's possession. See also Charles Royster, A Revolutionary People at War: The Continental Army and American Character, 1775-1783 (New York, 1979): 37-38, 45-48, 341-360.

25. U.S. Congress, Debates and Proceedings in the Congress of the United States Congress of the United States, the legislative branch of the federal government, instituted (1789) by Article 1 of the Constitution of the United States, which prescribes its membership and defines its powers. , v. 1, From March 3, 1789 to March 3, 1791 (Washington, D.C., 1834): 949-50.

26. Ibid., 958-959. George Adams George Adams may refer to:
  • George Adams (anthroposophist)
  • George Adams (basketball) (born 1949), American basketball player
  • George Adams (businessman) (1839 - 1904), founder of Tattersalls lottery in Australia
  • George Adams (football player)
 Boyd, Elias Boudinot: Patriot and Statesman, 1740-1821 (Princeton, 1952): 172-173. George Washington, "Thanksgiving Proclamation," October 3, 1789, in The Writings of George Washington from the Original Manuscript Sources, 1745-1799, v. 30, June 20, 1788-January 21, 1790, ed. by John C. Fitzpatrick (Washington, D.C., 1939): 427-428; New York Packet, November 24, 1789; New-York Weekly Journal, and Weekly Register, December 3, 1789; Douglas Southall Freeman, George Washington: A Biography, v. 6, Patriot and President (New York, 1954): 246. On Thanksgiving, see Jack Santino, All Around the Year: Holidays and Celebrations in American Life (Urbana, 1994): 167-178; Lin T. Humphrey, "Thanksgiving Day," American Folklore: An Encyclopedia: 705-06; and Hatch, comp. and ed., American Book of Days: 1053-57. On the national capital, see Stanley Elkins and Eric McKittrick, The Age of Federalism federalism.

1 In political science, see federal government.

2 In U.S. history, see states' rights.
federalism

Political system that binds a group of states into a larger, noncentralized, superior state while allowing them
: The Early American Republic, 1788-1800 (New York, 1993): 163-193.

27. Although Washington's decision to declare November 26th, 1789 a day of prayer and thanksgiving was not intended to create a holiday with a fixed place on the annual calendar, it did establish a relationship between Thanksgiving and late November that became meaningful later. Before the early twentieth century, there was no single, nationally standardized Thanksgiving but rather a patchwork of thanksgivings that varied by region, class, and ethnicity. The custom of celebrating the holiday on the last Thursday in November was nonetheless established in New England and the Middle Atlantic states Middle Atlantic States also Mid-At·lan·tic States  

The U.S. states of New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and usually Delaware and Maryland.
 by the 1840s. The creation of a national legal holiday took place independently. When Abraham Lincoln revived the idea of a national Thanksgiving in 1863 and when Franklin D. Roosevelt codified cod·i·fy  
tr.v. cod·i·fied, cod·i·fy·ing, cod·i·fies
1. To reduce to a code: codify laws.

2. To arrange or systematize.
 it in 1942, both slated the holiday for the last Thursday in November because that was when the first Thanksgiving day following the Constitution's adoption had occurred. Although Lincoln did not explicitly link his thanksgiving proclamation to Washington's 1789 proclamation, he emphasized the same themes that Washington did--war, national independence, and national unity under the Constitution--and he chose to issue it on the same day of the year, October 3rd. The fact that Lincoln and Roosevelt designated Thanksgiving for the last Thursday in November rather than for November 25th or 26th indicates that the original connection to the evacuation of New York City had been forgotten. Sarah Anne Todd, Diary, entries for November 31, 1837, November 27, 1846, November 25, 1847, and November 25, 1851, Library, New-York Historical Society, New York, NY (hereafter cited as N-YHS N-YHS New-York Historical Society ); Henry Dana Henry E. P. Dana (1820-1852) established the Native Police Corps near Melbourne in the former Australian colony of New South Wales in 1842. Compared to other attempts at forming a native police force, it was the most successful and lasted 10 years.  Ward, Diary, entry for November 27, 1851, Rare Book and Manuscripts Division, New York Public Library New York Public Library, free library supported by private endowments and gifts and by the city and state of New York. It is the one of largest libraries in the world. , New York, NY; Andrew Lester, Diary, entry for November 25, 1852, N-YHS; John Ward Diary, entry for November 24, 1858, N-YHS; Alfred Janson Bloor, Diary, 1848-1858, entries for November 29, 1855 and November 26, 1857, N-YHS. New York City Common Council, Minutes of the Common Council of the City of New York, 1784-1831, v. 8: 87-88 and v. 9: 354; New York Daily Express, November 25, 1837. Hatch, comp. and ed., American Book of Days: 1053-57; Santino, All Around the Year: 172. Abraham Lincoln, "Proclamation of Thanksgiving," October 3, 1863: 496-97, in Roy P. Basler, ed., The Collected Works Collected Works is a Big Finish original anthology edited by Nick Wallace, featuring Bernice Summerfield, a character from the spin-off media based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who.  of Abraham Lincoln, v. 6 (New Brunswick, 1953).

28. New York Journal, and Patriotic Register, November 26, 1791. Emphasis in original.

29. New-York Journal, and Daily Patriotic Register, November 27, 1787.

30. New York City Society of St. Tammany, or Columbian Order, "Minutes, March 4, 1799-Feb. 1, 1808," entry for meeting of November 25, 1799. Manuscripts and Archives Division, New York Public Library, New York, N.Y. New York City Society of Tammany, or Columbian, Order, Committee of Amusement, "Minutes, Oct. 24, 1791-Feb. 23, 1795," entry for meeting of November 26, 1792. Manuscripts and Archives Division, New York Public Library, New York, NY See also New-York Journal, and Patriotic Register, November 29, 1790 and November 27, 1793.

31. New York Evening Post, November 25, 1801, November 25, 1807, November 26, 1810. November 25, 1811; November 25, 1813, November 28, 1815. For a conception of customs as "the usual way of doing things," defined as "an activity performed with such regularity that it is considered social behavior In biology, psychology and sociology social behavior is behavior directed towards, or taking place between, members of the same species. Behavior such as predation which involves members of different species is not social.  or part of social protocol," see Richard Sweterlitsch, "Custom," American Folklore: An Encyclopedia, ed. Jan Harold Brunvald (New York, 1996): 186.

32. New York Journal and State Gazette, December 2, 1784.

33. New York Commercial Advertiser, November 27, 1798, November 26, 1799; The Spectator, December 1, 1798, November 27, 1799; American Minerva, November 26, 1796; New-York Packet, November 28, 1788. See also Elkins and McKittrick, The Age of Federalism: 163-193.

34. American Minerva, November, 26, 1796; The Spectator, November 27, 1799.

35. Dr. Alexander Anderson, Diary, entry for November 25, 1794. N-YHS.

36. John Anderson John Anderson may be:

Science:
  • John H. D. Anderson (1726–1796), Scottish natural philosopher
  • John Anderson (zoologist) (1833–1900), Scottish zoologist
  • John August Anderson (1876–1959), American physicist and astronomer
, Jr., Diary, entry for November 25, 1795. N-YHS.

37. Alexander Anderson Diary, entry for November 25, 1793. N-YHS.

38. The New-York Journal, and Daily Patriotic Register, November 27, 1787, December 3, 1789, November 29, 1790, November 27, 1791; New York Commercial Advertiser, November 27, 1798, November 26, 1799. On crowds, see Paul Gilje, The Road to Mobocracy mob·oc·ra·cy  
n. pl. mob·oc·ra·cies
1. Political control by a mob.

2. The mass of common people as the source of political control.
: Popular Disorder in New York City, 1763-1834 (Chapel Hill, 1987): 5-35, 43-52 and George Rude, The Crowd in History: A Study of Popular Disturbances in France and England, 1730-1848, revd. ed. (London, 1981): 3-16.

39. Two reasons why Evacuation Day was sometimes observed in Brooklyn and, less often, in Jersey City and Hoboken are that, first, the British also occupied these areas during the Revolutionary War and that, second, the three cities


The Three Cities is a collective description of the three fortified cities of Cospicua, Vittoriosa, and Senglea on the Island of Malta, which are enclosed by the massive line of fortification created by the Knights of St John, the Cottonera Lines.
 became part of New York's cultural orbit by the mid-nineteenth century. New York Herald The New York Herald was a large distribution newspaper based in New York City that existed between May 6, 1835 and 1924. The first issue of the paper was published by James Gordon Bennett, Sr. (1795–1872). , November 26, 1847, November 26, 1850, and November 26, 1854; New York Times, November 26, 1853, November 27, 1855, November 26, 1856, and November 26, 1858. Wood's Almanac for the Year of Our Lord 1813 (New York, 1812): unpaginated un·pag·i·nat·ed  
adj.
Unpaged.
; Hutchins' Improved: Being an Almanac and Ephemeris ephemeris (ĭfĕm`ərĭs) (pl., ephemerides), table listing the position of one or more celestial bodies for each day of the year.  for the Year of Our Lord 1818 (New York, 1817): unpaginated; Hutchins' Improved: Being an Almanac for the Year of Our Lord, 1821 (New York, 1820): unpaginated; Farmers' Diary, or Catskill Almanack for the Year of Our Lord 1831 (Catskill, 1830): unpaginated; Hutchin's Revived Almanac, for the Year of Our Lord 1833 (New York, 1832): unpaginated; Hutchins' Improved Family Almanac for the Year 1845 (New York, 1844): 15. One of the few times Evacuation Day was commemorated beyond the New York City area was in 1829, when residents of Baltimore dedicated a statue of George Washington on November 25th to acknowledge the aid New Yorkers had sent during the War of 1812. New York Evening Post, November 25, 1829; excerpt from unnamed and undated un·dat·ed  
adj.
1. Not marked with or showing a date: an undated letter; an undated portrait.

2.
 Baltimore newspaper, quoted in New York Journal of Commerce, November 28, 1829. New York Tribune The New York Tribune was established by Horace Greeley in 1841 and was long considered one of the leading newspapers in the United States. In 1924 it was merged with the New York Herald to form the New York Herald Tribune, which ceased publication in 1967. , November 26, 1863. Walter Lord Walter Lord (October 8 1917–May 19 2002) was an American author, best known for his documentary-style non-fiction account A Night to Remember, about the sinking of the RMS Titanic. , The Dawn's Early Light (New York, 1972): 235-37, 295-97.

40. Sue Ellen Thompson and Barbara W. Carlson, comps., Holidays, Festivals, and Celebrations of the World Dictionary (Detroit, 1994): 160; Allen Cabaniss, "Holidays," Encyclopedia of Southern Culture: 628-29; Hatch, comp. and ed., The American Book of Days: 227-30, 359-60, 383-85, 686-90, 790-91; Schmidt, Consumer Rites: 21, 33-34. The insistence that Evacuation Day had national significance was part of an effort to create a heroic past for New York City in response to its rapid economic and population growth after 1820. See Clifton Hood, "Journeying to 'Old New York': Elite New Yorkers and Their Invention of an Idealized i·de·al·ize  
v. i·de·al·ized, i·de·al·iz·ing, i·de·al·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To regard as ideal.

2. To make or envision as ideal.

v.intr.
1.
 City History in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries." Journal of Urban History 28 (September 2002): 699-716.

41. Shils, Tradition: 36-38, 63-74; Edward Shils, "Traditions and the Generations: On the Difficulties of Transmission," American Scholar 53 (Winter 1983-84): 27-40.

42. John Pintard to Eliza Noel Pintard Davidson, November 25, 1828: 47, in Letters from John Pintard to His Daughter, Eliza Noel Pintard Davidson, 1816-1833, v. 3, 1828-1831 (New York, 1940).

43. John Pintard to Eliza Noel Pintard Davidson, November 25, 1825: 202, in Letters from John Pintard to His Daughter, Eliza Noel Pintard Davidson, 1816-1833, v. 2, 1821-1827 (New York, 1940).

44. Allan Nevins and Milton Halsey Thomas, eds., The Diary of George Templeton Strong, v. 1, Young Man in New York, 1835-1849 (New York, 1952): 6.

45. Ibid.: 42.

46. Ibid.: 42.

47. Allan Nevins and Milton Halsey Thomas, eds., The Diary of George Templeton Strong., v. 4, Post-War Years, 1865-1875 (New York, 1952): 458.

48. Ibid.: 458.

49. American Minerva, November 26, 1796; The Spectator, November 28, 1798. New-York Journal, and Patriotic Register, December 5, 1792.

50. New York Evening Post, November 26, 1821, New York Herald, November 26, 1847. The understanding of the evacuation was simplified, too. Nearly every account written before the 1820s described the evacuation of the British troops or the British army. In the 1820s, New Yorkers started referring to the evacuation of the British. The two usages were commonplace until the 1870s, when the new form became standard. The new usage did not take into account the complexity of the city's transfer from British to American hands. It also indicates that nineteenth-century New Yorkers imagined that Evacuation Day marked New York's transition from a British colonial town into a modern American city, a transition leading to two related developments: the emergence of the United States and the growth of New York City as the national metropolis. New York Times, November 27, 1855, New York Evening Post, November 26, 1823. For an example of Evacuation Day's use as a break point in city history, see William L. Stone, History of New York City
This article traces the history of New York City, New York. For the history of the State of New York, see the article History of New York.


The region was inhabited by about 5000 [1]
 from the Discovery to the Present Day (New York, 1865): 163.

51. New York Evening Post, November 25, 1828.

52. New York American, November 26, 1839.

53. New York Herald, November 26, 1848.

54. Claims of declension also involved violations of the sacred, in terms of Durkheim's sacred/profane dichotomy. Emile Durkheim Noun 1. Emile Durkheim - French sociologist and first professor of sociology at the Sorbonne (1858-1917)
Durkheim
, The Elementary Forms of Religious Life, trans. Joseph Ward Swain (London, 1915): 36-42. See also Alessandro Falassi, "Festival: Definition and Morphology:" 1-3, in Alessandro Falassi, ed., Time Out of Time: Essays on the Festival (Albuquerque, 1987) and Stanley Brandes, Power and Persuasion: Fiestas and Social Control in Rural Mexico (Philadelphia, 1988): 1-9, 167-186.

55. New York American, November 26, 1839; New York Herald, November 26, 1848.

56. New York Evening Post, November 26, 1820; New York Journal of Commerce, November 28, 1829; New York Daily Express, November 27, 1837; New York Times, November 26, 1858, November 26, 1859.

57. New York Journal of Commerce, November 28, 1829, November 27, 1830; New York Times, November 28, 1858. Although the decline of American hostility to Britain has been advanced as an explanation of Evacuation Day's dissolution, the holiday was rarely used to express anti-British sentiments after the War of 1812. One exception involves Irish-Americans, discussed later. Another exception followed the Oregon controversy of the 1840s. In 1849 the New York Herald celebrated Evacuation Day for humbling "the pride of mighty Britain ... in the dust." New York Herald, November 27, 1849. In 1850 the Herald re-imagined the evacuation by having American soldiers drive the fleeing British troops to their ships in disarray and "at the point of the bayonet bayonet

Short, sharp-edged, sometimes pointed weapon, designed for attachment to the muzzle of a firearm. According to tradition, it was developed in Bayonne, France, early in the 17th century and soon spread throughout Europe.
" and capture the Union Jack atop Fort George as a war trophy In ancient Greece and Rome, military victories were commemorated with a display of captured arms and standards and cultural objects, called war trophies.

In more recent times, it has been common for soldiers return home with souvenirs, such as enemy weapons and flags.
. New York Herald, November 26, 1850.

58. W. Lloyd Warner, The Living and the Dead: A Study of the Symbolic Life of Americans, Yankee City Series (New Haven, 1959): 278. For a critical assessment of Warner's neo-Durkheimian analysis, see Steven Lukes, Essays in Social Theory (New York, 1977): 52-73.

59. New York Times, November 27, 1854, November 26, 1876, November 26, 1878; November 26, 1885; New York Herald, November 26, 1845; New York Times, November 26, 1885, November 26, 1890. Although the parades sometimes passed by, and paused at, the Worth Monument, the chief New York site associated with the Mexican War Mexican War, 1846–48, armed conflict between the United States and Mexico. Causes


While the immediate cause of the war was the U.S. annexation of Texas (Dec., 1845), other factors had disturbed peaceful relations between the two republics.
, Evacuation Day was not used to memorialize me·mo·ri·al·ize  
tr.v. me·mo·ri·al·ized, me·mo·ri·al·iz·ing, me·mo·ri·al·iz·es
1. To provide a memorial for; commemorate.

2. To present a memorial to; petition.
 the Mexican War. New York Times, November 27, 1865.

60. New York Evening Post, November 27, 1820; New York Journal of Commerce, November 27, 1830. On the social dimension of early nineteenth-century parades, see also Sean Wilentz Sean Wilentz (IPA: /ˈʃɔːn wɨˈlents/) (born 1951 in New York City) is the Dayton-Stockton Professor of History at Princeton University, where he has taught since 1979.

Wilentz took his B.A.
, Chants Democratic: New York City and the Rise of the American Working Class, 1788-1850 (New York, 1984): 3-22 and Susan G. Davis, Parades and Power: Street Theatre in Nineteenth-Century Philadelphia (Philadelphia, 1986): 9-22.

61. National Trades' Union, November 28, 1835; New York Herald, November 26, 1841, November 26, 1848; New York Times, November 27, 1855.

62. The adoption of a new route moved the parade to the new residential and commercial districts being developed farther uptown. By the 1830s, the parade went down Broadway from Union Square to City Hall Park. The spatial expansion of New York City also precipitated urban development in areas that had Revolutionary War and War of 1812 sites, including Fort Washington Fort Washington, military post during the American Revolution, situated on the highest point of Manhattan island, New York City, overlooking the Hudson River opposite Fort Lee, N.J.  in upper Manhattan Upper Manhattan denotes the more northerly region of the New York City Borough of Manhattan. Its southern boundary may be defined anywhere between 59th Street and 155th Street.  and McGowan's Pass in what is now Central Park. These sites, formerly beyond the city limits and not featured in the early commemorations, were used for flag-raising and other ceremonies during the nineteenth century, as urban growth led to these previously forgotten sites being rediscovered, viewed as 'historic,' and venerated as ruins. New York Herald, November 26, 1840, November 26, 1844, November 26, 1847, November 27, 1854, November 26, 1858; New York Times, November 27, 1854, November 27, 1857. See also Henry A. Patterson, Diary, July 1836-June 1839, entry for November 25, 1836, N-YHS.

63. Falassi, "Festival: Definition and Morphology:" 10, in Falassi, ed., Time Out of Time. For the relationship between contests and upper-class virtues such as honor and bravery, see Johan Huizinga Johan Huizinga (IPA: [joːhɑn hœyzɪŋxaː]) (December 7, 1872 - February 1, 1945), a Dutch historian, was one of the founders of modern cultural history. , Homo Ludens: A Study of the Play-Element in Culture, trans. R.F.C. Hull (London, 1949): 1-27, 63-71.

64. John Ward, Jr., Diary, entry for November 25, 1859. N-YHS. Bloor Diary, 1848-1858, entry for November 25, 1857.

65. New York Times, November 26, 1859.

66. Of the 1859 parade, for instance, Ward merely noted: "In the morning at 10.15 am I paraded in the 6th Company, 7th Reg't. Capt. Nevers." Ward Diary, entry for November 25, 1859. N-YHS.

67. Ward Diary, entry for November 24, 1865. N-YHS. New York Daily News New York Daily News

Morning daily tabloid newspaper published in New York City. It was founded in 1919 by Joseph Medill Patterson and his cousin Robert McCormick as a subsidiary of the Tribune Co. of Chicago. The first successful tabloid-format newspaper in the U.S.
, November 25, 1865; New York Sun, November 25, 1865; New York Tribune, November 26, 1865; New York Times, November 25 and 27, 1865.

68. Irish-American, November 30, 1850, November 29, 1856.

69. Irish World, November 23, 1873.

70. Irish World, November 27 and 28, 1873.

71. Irish-American, November 21 and 28, December 7 and 8, 1868, December 6, 1884; Irish World, November 23 and 25, 1876. The Battle of Lookout Mountain took place on November 23-25, 1863, with the climatic assault on Missionary Ridge Missionary Ridge: see Chattanooga campaign.  occurring on the 25th. The one exception to my statement that Irish-American newspapers reduced their coverage of Evacuation Day in the late 1870s involves the holiday's centennial, in 1883, discussed below. Since the newspapers that discussed the centennial celebration did so to condemn the tradition's manipulation by an Anglophilic business elite, their commentaries are consistent with the point that Evacuation Day no longer fit the needs of many Irish-Americans.

72. Irish-American, December 7, 1872, December 2, 1876, November 30, 1878; Advocate, November 21, 1914. Evacuation Day is a legal holiday in Massachusetts' Suffolk County Suffolk County may refer to:
  • One of the following counties in the United States:
  • Suffolk County, New York - central and eastern Long Island - the largest Suffolk County by population and geographic size
. Thompson and Carlson, comps., Holidays, Festivals, and Celebrations of the World Dictionary: 100-01; Ruth W. Gregory, Anniversaries and Holidays, 4th ed. (Chicago, 1983): 38.

73. New York Times, November 26, 1870, November 26, 1872, November 26, 1873, September 15 and November 25 and 26, 1876, November 26, 1875, November 27, 1877, November 26, 1878. 'Conventionalisation' is F. C. Bartlett's term for the process by which new customs, beliefs, and trends become established as memories. F.C. Bartlett, Remembering: A Study in Experimental and Social Psychology (Cambridge, 1932): 244-246, 268-280. For a re-assessment of Bartlett, see Jerome S. Bruner, Acts of Meaning (Cambridge, 1990): 55-59. For the Civil War's transformation of American understandings of war, see Charles Royster, The Destructive War: William Tecumseh Sherman, Stonewall stone·wall  
v. stone·walled, stone·wall·ing, stone·walls

v.intr.
1. Informal
a.
 Jackson, and the Americans (New York, 1991): 321-417; Gerald F. Lindeman, Embattled Courage: The Experience of Combat in the American Civil War American Civil War
 or Civil War or War Between the States

(1861–65) Conflict between the U.S. federal government and 11 Southern states that fought to secede from the Union.
 (New York, 1987): 7-33, 266-297; Philip Shaw Paludan, "A People's Contest:" The Union and the Civil War, 1861-1865, 2nd ed. (Lawrence, 1996): ix-xx, 339-374; and David A. Mindell, War, Technology, and Experience aboard the USS Monitor USS Monitor was the first ironclad warship commissioned by the United States Navy. She is most famous for her participation in the first-ever naval battle between two ironclad warships, the Battle of Hampton Roads on March 9, 1862 during the American Civil War, in which  (Baltimore, 2000): 1-10. For changing understandings of war remembrance, see O'Leary, To Die For: 1-8, 29-48; Michael Kammen Michael Kammen is a professor of American cultural history in the Department of History at Cornell University. He was born in 1936 in Rochester, New York, grew up in the Washington, DC area, and was educated at the George Washington University and Harvard University (Ph.D., 1964). , Mystic Chords of Memory Mystic Chords Of Memory are an American alternative rock band formed by sometime Tyde drummer and Beachwood Sparks frontman Christopher Gunst.

Frustrated by his time in Beachwood Sparks, Gunst quit music and enrolled at Graduate School to study teaching Special Education
: The Transformation of Tradition in American Culture (New York, 1991): 3-14; Edward Tabor Linenthal, Sacred Ground: Americans and Their Battlefields, 2nd ed. (Urbana, 1993): 1-7; James M. Mayo, War Memorials as Sacred Places Sacred Places


Alph

sacred river in Xanadu. [Br. Poetry: Coleridge “Kubla Kahn”]

Delphi

shrine sacred to Apollo and site of temple and oracle.
: The American Experience American Experience (sometimes abbreviated AmEx) is a television program airing on the PBS network in the United States. The program airs documentaries about important or interesting events and people in American history, many of which have won impressive  and Beyond (New York, 1988): 1-13; Savage, Standing Soldiers, Kneeling Slaves: 3-20, 162-208; and Blight, Race and Reunion: 1-30. For masculinity in the late nineteenth century, see Mark C. Carnes and Clyde Griffen, eds., Meanings for Manhood: Constructions of Masculinity in Victorian America (Chicago, 1990); Gail Bederman, Manliness & Civilization: A Cultural History of Gender and Race in the United States Racial demographics

Main article: Racial demographics of the United States


The United States is a diverse country racially. It has a majority of persons of White/European ancestry spread throughout the country.
, 1880-1917 (Chicago, 1995); and Michael S. Kimmel, Manhood in America: A Cultural History (New York, 1996). For the historical memory of the Revolutionary War, see Young, The Shoemaker and the Tea Party; David Hackett Fischer David Hackett Fischer (b. December 2, 1935) is University Professor and Earl Warren Professor of History at Brandeis University. His major works have tackled everything from large macroeconomic and cultural trends (Albion's Seed, The Great Wave , Paul Revere's Ride "Paul Revere's Ride" is an American poem by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow that commemorates the actions of American patriot Paul Revere on April 18, 1775. [1] The poem was written on April 19, 1860 and first published in The Atlantic Monthly in January of 1861.  (New York, 1994); Barbara MacDonald Powell, "The Most Celebrated Encampment: Valley Forge in American Culture, 1777-1983" (Ph.D. dissertation, Cornell University Cornell University, mainly at Ithaca, N.Y.; with land-grant, state, and private support; coeducational; chartered 1865, opened 1868. It was named for Ezra Cornell, who donated $500,000 and a tract of land. With the help of state senator Andrew D. , 1983); Lorett Treese, Valley Forge: Making and Remaking a National Symbol (University Park, 1995). See also Charles Royster, A Revolutionary People at War: The Continental Army and American Character, 1775-1783 (New York, 1979) and Marcus Cunliffe Marcus Cunliffe (1922-1990) was a British historian and academic, who has written on topics mainly concerning America. Biography
Education
Cunliffe was educated at Oxford, Sandhurst and Yale [1].
, George Washington, Man and Monument (Boston, 1958). For Saratoga, see Alfred Billings Street, Burgoyne: A Poem Written for the Centennial Celebration at Schulyerville, on the 17th of October 1877, of Burgoyne's Surrender (Albany, 1877); and William L. Stone, comp., Ballads and Poems Relating to relating to relate prepconcernant

relating to relate prepbezüglich +gen, mit Bezug auf +acc 
 the Burgoyne Campaign (Albany, 1893). For Bunker Hill, see Daniel Webster, An Address Delivered at the Laying of the Cornerstone of the Bunker Hill Monument Coordinates:  The Bunker Hill Monument, erected to commemorate the Battle of Bunker Hill, is the first public obelisk.  (Boston, 1825).

74. New York Daily Tribune, November 26, 1861. See also New York World The New York World was a newspaper published in New York from 1860 until 1931. It played a major role in the history of American newspapers.

The newspaper was unsuccessful until it was purchased by Joseph Pulitzer in 1883.
, November 26, 1861 and New York Times, November 26, 1861.

75. New York Daily Tribune, November 26, 1862.

76. New York Tribune, November 26, 1862, November 26, 1863, November 26, 1865, November 26, 1867, November 26, 1868; New York Times, November 25 and 27, 1865, November 27, 1866, November 26, 1867, November 26, 1868, November 26, 1869; New York Daily News, November 25, 1865.

77. New York Times, November 25, 1870; New York Tribune, November 26, 1873, November 26, 1876, November 26, 1879; New York Herald, November 26, 1870, November 26, 1872, November 25, 1873, November 26, 1877, November 26, 1878; New York World, November 26 1874, November 26, 1875

78. New York Herald, November 24, 1872.

79. New York Times, November 26, 1870, November 26, 1872, November 26, 1873, September 15 and November 25 and 26, 1876, November 26, 1875, November 27, 1877, November 26, 1878.

80. Shils, Tradition: 253-254, 283-286. Shils says that the resurgence of an attenuated tradition occurs when there are still some adherents to it, a point that applies to the revival of Evacuation Day by Stevens and the Sons of the Revolution. Shils also distinguishes between the resurgence of a tradition in the process of dissolution and the reconstruction of a tradition that has disappeared.

81. Kammen, Mystic Chords of Memory: 101-131; Wallace Evan Davies, Patriotism on Parade: The Story of Veterans' and Hereditary Organizations in America, 1783-1900 (Cambridge, 1955): 44-73. Report of the Joint Committee on the Centennial Celebration of the Evacuation of New York by the British, November 26, 1883, with an Historical Introduction by John Austin Stevens (New York, 1885): 7, 160-169; Minutes of the Committee of Arrangements, volume 1, entries for November 8, 9, and 13, 1883, Evacuation Day, Committee of Arrangements Box, John Austin Stevens Papers, N-YHS; New York City Board of Aldermen, Proceedings of the Board of Aldermen of the City of New York, from October 1st 1883 to January 7th, 1884 (New York, 1884): 7, 404-405, 620-625; New York Times, November 24, 26, and 27, 1883; Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, December 1, 1883; Andrew Lester, Diary, November 23, 1879-April 29, 1888, entry for November 26, 1883, N-YHS.

82. Irish-American, December 2, 1883.

83. Irish-American, December 8, 1883.

84. New York Sun, November 25, 1883.

85. John Swinton's Paper, November 25, 1883.

86. New York Times, December 24, 1883, November 6, 1884. For members' names, see Society of the Sons of the Revolution, New York Society, Yearbook, 1899 (New York, 1895): 9-12. The Sons of the Revolution (SR) was separate from and a rival of the Sons of the American Revolution The National Society of the Sons of the American Revolution (SAR) is a Louisville, Kentucky-based fraternal organization in the United States. It is a 501(c)3 non-profit corporation that describes its purpose as "maintaining and extending the institutions of American . Society of the Sons of the Revolution, New York Society, Yearbook, 1899: 9. See also Davies, Patriotism on Parade: 47-53; Kammen, Mystic Chords: 211-224; and John St. Paul St. Paul

as a missionary he fearlessly confronts the “perils of waters, of robbers, in the city, in the wilderness.” [N.T.: II Cor. 11:26]

See : Bravery
, Jr., The History of the National Society of the Sons of the American Revolution (New Orleans New Orleans (ôr`lēənz –lənz, ôrlēnz`), city (2006 pop. 187,525), coextensive with Orleans parish, SE La., between the Mississippi River and Lake Pontchartrain, 107 mi (172 km) by water from the river mouth; founded , 1962): 1-4, 7-9. For the D.A.R., see Peggy Anderson, The Daughters: An Unconventional Look at America's Fan Club--The DAR (New York, 1974) and Martha Strayer, The D.A.R.: An Informal History (Washington, D.C., 1958). For the colonial revival movement The Colonial Revival movement was a national expression of early North American culture, primarily the built and artistic environments of the east coast colonies. The Colonial Revival is generally associated with the eighteenth-century provincial fashion for the Georgian and , see Karal Ann Marling Marling can refer to:
  • Marling Family a land-owning family in Gloucestershire, and founders of Marling School,
  • Marling School in the UK,
  • Marling, Italy, a town in Italy
, George Washington Slept Here: Colonial Revivals and American Culture, 1876-1986 (Cambridge, 1988).

87. Hood, "Journeying to 'Old New York'" Journal of Urban History: 699-716.

88. James Riker, Evacuation Day, 1783; Its Many Stirring Events; With Recollections of Capt. John Van Arsdale of the Veteran Corps of Artillery, By Whose Efforts on That Day the Enemy Were Circumvented and the American Flag Successfully Raised on the Battery (New York, 1883): 3.

89. Ibid.: 3.

90. New York Times, November 26, 1890, November 26, 1891.

91. Daniel J. Singal, "Towards a Definition of American Modernism

Main article: Modernism
American modernism like modernism in general is a trend of thought that affirms the power of human beings to create, improve, and reshape their environment, with the aid of scientific knowledge, technology and practical
," American Quarterly American Quarterly (sometimes abbreviated AQ), is an academic journal and the official publication of the American Studies Association. The journal covers topics of both domestic and international concern in the United States and is considered a leading resource in  39 (Spring 1987): 12-13.

92. New York Times, November 26, 1884.

93. New York Times, November 26, 1891, November 26, 1892, November 25 and 26, 1893, November 26, 1896, November 26, 1899, November 26, 1901, November 26, 1908; New York Tribune, November 26, 1895, November 26, 1897; New York World, November 26, 1893, November 26, 1895, November 26, 1896, November 26, 1897.

94. New York Times, November 25, 1888.

95. New York Tribune, November 26, 1897; New York World, November 26, 1895, November 25, 1900; New York Times, November 26, 1907, November 26, 1914.

96. New York Times, November 26, 1907.

97. New York World, November 26, 1906, November 26, 1908; New York Times, November 26 1912, November 26, 1913, November 26, 1914.

98. On modernism and urban culture, see Lewis A. Erenberg, Steppin' Out Steppin' Out or Stepping Out may refer to: Theater
  • Stepping Out (play), a 1987 broadway play
Television
  • Stepping Out (TV series), a Chinese drama in Singapore
  • "Steppin' Out", an episode of Yu-Gi-Oh!
: New York Nightlife and the Transformation of American Culture, 1890-1930 (Chicago, 1981); William Leach, Land of Desire: Merchants, Power, and the Rise of a New American Culture (New York, 1993); Ann Douglas, Terrible Honesty: Mongrel mongrel

of mixed or uncertain breeding; said of dogs in particular but also used adjectivally to refer to any species.
 Manhattan in the 1920s (New York, 1995); and Christine Stansell, American Moderns: Bohemian New York and the Creation of a New Century (New York, 2000).

99. New York Sun, November 26, 1868, November 25, 1875, November 30, 1882; New York World, November 26, 1897; New York Times, November 26, 1903. For Thanksgiving and the nationalization of New England regionalism re·gion·al·ism  
n.
1.
a. Political division of an area into partially autonomous regions.

b. Advocacy of such a political system.

2. Loyalty to the interests of a particular region.

3.
, see Joseph Conforti, Imagining New England: Explorations of Regional Identity from the Pilgrims to the Mid-Twentieth Century (Chapel Hill, 2001): 195-96. On the social significance of forgetting or not remembering customs, see David Lowenthal, "Preface:" xii, in The Art of Forgetting.

100. New York Times, October 19, 1924. William A. Marble, "Address of Welcome," Eighteenth Annual Banquet of the Empire Society of the Sons of the American Revolution, Hotel Waldorf-Astoria, New York, November 25, 1907, 41-42, in the Sons of the American Revolution, Empire State Society, Yearbook of the Empire State Society of the Sons of the American Revolution, 1907-1908 (New York, 1908.).

By Clifton Hood

Hobart and William Smith Colleges Hobart and William Smith Colleges, located in Geneva, New York, are together a liberal arts college. The Colleges adhere to a "coordinate system", which retains some elements of the original single-sex institutions, though the student experience is largely co-ed.

Department of History

Geneva Geneva, canton and city, Switzerland
Geneva (jənē`və), Fr. Genève, canton (1990 pop. 373,019), 109 sq mi (282 sq km), SW Switzerland, surrounding the southwest tip of the Lake of Geneva.
, NY 14456-3397
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