
I
was born on July 4, 1776, and the
Declaration of Independence is my birth
certificate. The bloodlines of the world
run in my veins, because I offered freedom
to the oppressed. I am many things
and many people. I am the United States.
I am 213
million living souls, and the
ghost of millions who have lived and died
for me.
I am Nathan Hale and Paul Revere. I stood
at Lexington and fired the shot heard
around the world. I am Washington,
Jefferson, and Patrick Henry. I am John
Paul Jones, the Green Mountain boys, and
Davy Crockett. I am Lee, Grant, and Abe
Lincoln.
I am the Brooklyn Bridge, the wheat lands
of Kansas, and the granite hills of
Vermont. I am the coal fields of the
Virginias and Pennsylvania; the fertile
lands of the West; the Golden Gate and the
Grand Canyon. I am Independence Hall, the
Monitor and the Merrimac.
I am big. I sprawl from the Atlantic to
the Pacific...my arms reach out to embrace
Alaska and Hawaii...three million square miles
throbbing with industry. I am more than
5,000,000 farms; I am forest, field, mountain and desert. I am quiet
villages...and cities that never sleep.
You can look at me and see
Ben Franklin walking down the streets of
Philadelphia with his bread loaf under his
arm. You can see Betsy Ross with her
needle. You can see the lights of
Christmas, and hear the strains of "Auld
Lang Syne" as the calendar turns.
I am Babe Ruth and the World Series. I am
110,000 schools and colleges and 330,000
churches where people worship God as
they think best. I am a ballot dropped in
a box, the roar of a crowd in a stadium,
and the voice of a choir in a cathedral. I
am an editorial in a newspaper, and a
letter to a Congressman.
I am Eli Whitney and Stephen Foster. I am
Tom Edison, Albert Einstein, and Billy
Graham. I am Horace Greeley, Will Rogers,
and the Wright brothers. I am George
Washington Carver, Jonas Salk and Martin
Luther King Jr. I am Longfellow, Harriet
Beecher Stowe, Walt Whitman and Thomas Paine.
Yes, I am the Nation, and these are the
things that I am. I was conceived in
freedom, and, God willing, in freedom will
I spend the rest of my days. May I possess
always the integrity, the courage, and the
strength to keep myself unshackled, to
remain a citadel of freedom and a beacon
of hope to the world.
I am the United States!
Otto Whittaker
1955