Independence National Historical Park
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Photos and text © Gleaves Whitney 2005
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Independence Hall, Philadelphia, was originally built for the Pennsylvania State House. It is one of America's great pilgrimage sites -- a temple dedicated to the nation's founding -- for it was here that the Liberty Bell rang out, that the Second Continental Congress debated actions against the British, that Richard Henry Lee's resolution declaring independence was passed (July 2, 1776), that the Declaration of Independence was adopted (July 4, 1776), and that the U.S. Constitution was debated and crafted (from late May till September 17, 1787).
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This lamp on the southwest corner of Independence Hall is a fitting symbol of the influence the English and Scottish enlightenments had on the founding generation. The founders were not much influenced by the French Enlightenment, the thought of which tended to be more abstract, utopian, and ideological than that of the English and Scottish enlightenments.
The founders, even the most deistic among them, were also thoroughly informed by Judeo-Christian teachings. -
Congress Hall. The seat of government was moved from New York City to Philadelphia in December 1790. Philadelphia was never meant to be the permanent capital; it was the place-holder while the permanent site for our capital was prepared on the left bank of the Potomac River. This plaque on the east face of Congress Hall outlines a few of the landmark events that occurred within its walls during the 1790s. The Liberty Bell would have rung out from the Pennsylvania State House (Independence Hall) just a few paces away. Today these structures are pilgrimage sites of our constitutional republic, and are managed by the National Park Service in Independence National Historical Park.
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The Assembly Room in the Pennsylvania State House (Independence Hall) saw some of the most decisive actions in the creation of the United States. It was here, beneath the Liberty Bell, that Richard Henry Lee's resolution declaring independence was passed (July 2, 1776), that the Declaration of Independence was adopted (July 4, 1776), and that the U.S. Constitution was debated and crafted (from late May till September 17, 1787).
In the background is the chair in which George Washington sat while serving as president of the Constitutional Convention. A sun is carved on the back of the chair, and Benjamin Franklin would look at it and wonder whether it was a rising or setting sun. Eventually Franklin came to believe that the sun was a symbol of hope for the new republic, and so this famous piece of furnature came to be called the "sunrise chair." -
.S. House of Representatives in Congress Hall, Philadelphia (Independence National Historical Park). In this ground-floor room on March 4, 1797, John Adams was inaugurated the second president of the United States of America. He took the oath of office adjacent to the free-standing desk in the middle of the photograph. With this ceremony the young republic withstood a crucial test, as the first transfer of power took place peacefully when George Washington stepped down and Adams assumed the presidency.
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U.S. Senate Chamber on the second floor of Congress Hall, Philadelphia (Independence National Historical Park). Just a few paces from where this photograph was taken, on March 4, 1793, President George Washington raised his right hand and took the oath of office for a second time. Nearby, John Adams, the nation's vice president, presided over the Senate (as the Constitution prescribed) until March 4, 1797, when he in turn was inaugurated president (not in this chamber but downstairs where the U.S. House of Representatives met). Thus Congress Hall was the scene of momentous events and debates during the first years of the republic, from the Proclamation of Neutrality (1793) to Jay's Treaty (1795) to Pinckney's Treaty (1795). It was also the place where the XYZ Affair (1797) and Alien and Sedition Acts (1798) were thrashed out when John Adams was in office. John Marshall may have been questioned in this chamber after he was nominated to be chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court.