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Dear Friends,
As we come to this season of Thanksgiving, we give thanks that
we live in the land of the free and the home of the brave. These
words are, of course, so familiar to us because they are taken from
the final line of our national anthem, The Star Spangled Banner.
These words have taken on a new sense of conviction and pride in
our nation since the tragic events of September 11, 2001, and the
wars in Afghanistan and Iraq that followed.
Did you know that our national anthem was written during a similar
period in history when America was under direct attack? During the
War of 1812, the British attempted to regain control of the United
States by invading our nation. The enemy actually took over our
nation's capitol and burned the White House to the ground. Had it
not been for the heroic efforts of Dolly Madison, the wife of President
James Madison, many of our most treasured national documents, such
as the Declaration of Independence, would have been lost in the
blaze. During that attack, Dr. William Beanes, an elderly physician,
was captured by the British and accused of harboring British deserters
in his home.
In September 1814, a young lawyer and amateur poet, Francis Scott
Key, under orders from President Madison, set sail from Baltimore
Harbor under a flag of truce. His goal was to secure the release
of Dr. Beanes from his British captors. Key and another American
representative, John Skinner, were allowed to board the enemy flagship
anchored in Chesapeake Bay.
Over dinner with British General Robert Ross and Admiral Alexander
Cochrane, Key and Skinner advocated for Beanes' release. The British
officers refused to release the captured American physician until
Key produced handwritten letters from several wounded British soldiers
who praised Dr. Beanes and the Americans for their kind treatment.
However, the story does not end there.
Because Key and his associate overheard much of the British plans
for the attack on Fort McHenry, they were detained for several more
days until the attack was over. Key watched with an anxious heart
as the 25 hour naval bombardment of Fort McHenry began. Withering
fire from countless British ships bombarded the beleaguered fort
all day and all night. As Key stood watching the "rockets'
red glare and the bombs bursting in air," he knew all too well
the fate of America hung in the balance. Would this direct attack
on America succeed?
To his overwhelming joy and relief, the "dawn's early light"
revealed a giant red, white, blue and star spangled banner still
waving over Fort McHenry. Key, deeply moved by the knowledge that
America had survived this terrible onslaught, pulled an envelope
out of his coat pocket and wrote, "our flag was still there."
Francis Scott Key could never have imagined that his words would
one day be sung by tens of millions of freedom loving Americans.
In 1916, President Woodrow Wilson ordered that it be performed at
military events. Two years later, in 1918, at a time when America
was again at war, it was sung for the first time during the 7th
inning stretch of the World Series. Finally, in March of 1931, Congress
established it as our national anthem.
Did you know there are more stanzas to the national anthem Key
wrote than just the one we sing at the opening of a baseball game?
Let us share with you portions of several verses you likely have
never heard from this great national treasure:
And where is that band who so vauntingly swore
That the havoc of war and the battle's confusion,
A home and a country should leave us no more! |
The verse has an amazingly contemporary feel, doesn't it? Where
today are those who boasted they could destroy our homes and our
country? Where are those who proclaimed America would crumble under
the onslaught of attack and terror? As Key notes, they were wrong
in 1814, and we know in 2004 they are still wrong. He goes on to
give credit not only to the gallant soldiers who defended Fort McHenry,
but to God whose hand had preserved our nation from defeat:
Oh! Thus be it ever, when freemen shall stand
Between their loved home and the war's desolation!
Blest with victory and peace, may the heaven-rescued land
Praise the Power that hath made and preserved us as a nation. |
We believe it is important now, 190 years later, for us to continue
to "Praise the Power that hath made and preserved us as a nation."
Let us during this season give thanks to our God who has granted
us this "heaven rescued land." Let us stop and take stock
of all the countless ways we have been blessed, protected, and have
prospered by the hand of the Lord in our individual lives and families.
We are so thankful for each of you who we know and treasure as
friends, colleagues, and clients. It has been our privilege to serve
you, and hopefully encourage you, during both the joyous and more
difficult seasons of life.
We find great comfort in the final words of the last stanza of
Francis Scott Key's poem:
Then conquer we must, when our cause it is just,
And this be our motto: "In God is our trust." |
This sentiment offers us the same assurance in the 21st century
as it did our forefathers of the 19th century.
HAPPY THANKSGIVING
2004
LAW OFFICES OF MARK S. KNUTSON, S.C
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