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The Flag
and the Fourth Degree
I pledge allegiance
to the flag
of the United States of America
and to the Republic for which it stands,
one nation under God,
indivisible,
with liberty and justice for all.
How the words "UNDER GOD"
came to be added to
the Pledge of Allegiance to the Flag.
The Pledge of Allegiance to the Flag of the United
States originated on Columbus Day, 1893. It contained no
reference to Almighty God, until in New York City on
April 22,195 1, the Board of Directors of the Knights of
Columbus adopted a resolution to amend the Pledge of
Allegiance as recited at the opening of each of the
meetings of the 800 Fourth Degree Assemblies of the
Knights of Columbus by addition of the words '(under
God" after the words "one nation". The adoption of this
resolution by the Supreme Board of Directors had the
effect of immediate initiation of this practice
throughout the aforesaid Fourth Degree Assembly
meetings.
At their annual State meetings, held in April and May of
1952, the State Councils of Florida, South Dakota, New
York and Michigan adopted resolutions recommending that
the Pledge of Allegiance be so amended and that Congress
be petitioned to have such an amendment made effective.
On August 21, 1952, the Supreme Council of the Knights
of Columbus at its annual meeting adopted a resolution
urging that the change be made general and copies of
this resolution were sent to the President, the Vice
President (as Presiding Officer of the Senate) and the
Speaker of the House of Representatives. The National
Fraternal Congress meeting in Boston on September 24,
1952, adopted a similar resolution upon the
recommendation of its President, Supreme Knight Luke E.
Hart. Several State Fraternal Congresses acted likewise
almost immediately thereafter.
At its annual meeting the following year, on August
20,1953, the Supreme Council of the Knights of Columbus
repeated its resolution to make the amendment to the
Pledge of Allegiance to the Flag general and sent copies
of this resolution to the President, Vice President,
Speaker of the House, and to each member of both Houses
of Congress.
From this latter action, many favorable replies were
received, and a total of seventeen resolutions were
introduced into the House of Representatives to so amend
the Pledge of Allegiance as set forth in Public Law
relating to the Flag. The resolution introduced by
Congressman Louis C. Rabaut of Michigan was adopted by
both Houses of Congress, and it was signed by President
Eisenhower on Flag Day, June 14, 1954, thereby making
the official amendment conceived, sponsored and put into
practice by the Knights of Columbus more than three
years before.
In a message to Supreme Knight Luke E. Hart at the
meeting of the Supreme Council in Louisville, August 17,
1954, President Eisenhower, in recognition of the
initiative of the Knights of Columbus in originating and
sponsoring the amendment to the Pledge of Allegiance,
said:
"We are particularly thankful to you for your part in
the movement to have the words "under God" added to our
Pledge of Allegiance. Those words will remind Americans
that despite our great physical strength we must remain
humble. They will help us to keep constantly in our
minds and hearts the spiritual and moral principles
which alone give dignity to man, and upon which our way
of life is founded. For the contribution which your
organization has made to this cause, we must be
genuinely grateful."
In August 1954, the Illinois American Legion Convention
adopted a resolution whereby recognition was given to
the Knights of Columbus as having initiated, sponsored
and brought about the amendment to the Pledge of
Allegiance; and on October 6, 1954, the National
Executive Committee of the American Legion gave its
approval to that resolution.
The Liberty
Bell
The Liberty Bell, Let Freedom Ring. In 1976 during our
nations bicentennial celebration, the Liberty Bell was
moved from Independence Hall in Philadelphia to its knew
home at the pavilion located on Market Street between
5th and 6th streets. The Fourth Degree Assemblies
donated the oak flooring for that pavilion from the
Delaware Valley. A plaque was placed inside the pavilion
that states, "The oak floor is presented to the people
of the United States by the First Pennsylvania District
- Calvert Province Fourth Degree Knights of Columbus May
16, 1976".
The Liberty Bell will be moving to a new location in the
future and the pavilion will be demolished. The plaque
is a part of the buildings history and the National Park
Service intends to retain it as part of its archives.
The Superintendent of the United States Department of
the Interior - National Park Service noted in her letter
to Former Vice Supreme Master, William M. Harper, dated
April 14,1999. "The National Park Service is grateful to
the Knights of Columbus for its generosity and public
spirit. Your donation made it possible for millions of
visitors to see the Liberty Bell in a fitting context".
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