 Rembrandt Peale's "Porthole" portrait of George Washington Generally known as "The George Washington Copy," c. 1855, oil on canvas. To see a larger image (20K) and for more information, click on George Washington. | |
It
being evident,
from the steady decline of a proper celebration of the National Holidays
of the United States of America, that popular concern in the events and
men of the War of the Revolution is gradually declining, and that such lack
of interest is attributable, not so much to the lapse of time and the rapid
increase of immigration from foreign countries, as to the neglect, on the
part of descendants of Revolutionary heroes, to perform their duty in keeping
before the public mind the memory of the services of their ancestors and
of the times in which they lived;
therefore,
the Society of Sons of the Revolution has been instituted to perpetuate
the memory of the men who, in the military, naval and civil service of the
colonies and of the Continental Congress, by their acts or counsel, achieved
the Independence of the country, and to the proper celebration of the anniversaries
of the birthday of Washington, and of prominent events connected with the
War of the Revolution; to collect and secure for preservation the rolls,
records and other documents relating to that period; to inspire the members
of the Society with the patriotic spirit of their forefathers; and to promote
the feeling of friendship among them.
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