Dave Does History
Here is a podcast introduction optimized for search terms related to Caesar Rodney, the Ride to Philadelphia, July 2, 1776, Independence Day, the Continental Congress, and the American Revolution. The episode content is based on the material in your draft and radio transcript. As Americans, we celebrate July 4, 1776, as Independence Day. We gather for fireworks, parades, and patriotic ceremonies, honoring the signing of the Declaration of Independence. Yet many historians point to another date as the true moment the United States was born: July 2, 1776. In this episode of Liberty 250, we explore one of the most dramatic and overlooked stories of the American Revolution, the legendary ride of Caesar Rodney. As the Second Continental Congress debated Richard Henry Lee's Resolution for Independence, the vote hung in the balance. Pennsylvania was divided. South Carolina hesitated. New York abstained. Delaware stood deadlocked. Only one man could break that tie. Eighty miles away in Dover, Delaware, Caesar Rodney mounted his horse and rode through a violent summer storm toward Philadelphia. Suffering from illness and exhaustion, he pressed forward through mud, darkness, thunder, and rain to reach Independence Hall before the decisive vote. His arrival on July 2, 1776 helped secure Delaware's support for independence and paved the way for the unanimous approval of the Lee Resolution, the legal act that severed the American colonies from Great Britain. Join us as we examine the events leading to American independence, the debates of the Continental Congress, the role of John Adams, John Dickinson, Richard Henry Lee, and Caesar Rodney, and why one remarkable overnight ride helped change the course of history. This is the story behind the Delaware Quarter, the birth of the United States, and the forgotten day that John Adams believed would be celebrated forever.
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