"This glorious natal day" - Independence Day in the Washington Territory
[caption id="attachment_5304" align="alignright" width="254" caption="Mr. and Mrs. Judson on their 50th Anniversary, June 20, 1899."]
Here all the settlers within a radius of ten to twenty miles had gathered. The company was not so large but I could count them all, for I have not forgotten their names or faces, but we found a good time did not depend upon numbers; for never was festal day spent more joyously than this, our first Fourth of July celebration in the territory--showing our patriotism by unfurling the Stars and Stripes to the breeze and saluting it by hearty cheers that made the sunlit air ring with the music of peace and joy--a more fitting tribute than the deafening roar of the cannon, which speaks of carnage, and the awful desolation and woe that follow in the train of war.Sadly, this peaceful celebration was soon followed by an outbreak of war, as conflicts heightened between the Territorial Government and local Indian tribes. Read more about the day, and sample many more slices of Territorial life lovingly chronicled in Phoebe Goodell Judson's memoir.
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