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Thoughts on the 250th Year of the Adoption of the Declaration of Independence

Washington Crossing the Delaware, by Emanuel Leutze

As I reflect on 250 years of American independence, the weight of that anniversary feels profoundly personal, woven into the fabric of my family’s story. My ancestors answered the Lexington Alarm in April 1775, leaving their farms at a moment’s notice when the call went out that British troops were marching on Concord. From those first shots that “were heard round the world,” they stood among the minutemen, shouldering muskets and risking everything, like their grandparents did in 1689, for the radical idea that ordinary people could govern themselves. To me, today is not just a date on the calendar; it is living proof that Liberty is never guaranteed but that it must be defended by citizens willing to rise at dawn and march toward uncertainty. Their courage at the Alarm reminds me that independence began not in grand declarations but in humble, determined acts of defiance.

Through the long years of war that followed, my forebears carried that commitment from Bunker Hill, through the frozen trenches of Valley Forge, to the decisive fields of Yorktown. They endured supply shortages, disease, and the constant shadow of defeat, yet they persisted because they believed in a future where their children would inherit a nation free from tyranny. By the time the Treaty of Paris was signed in 1783, formally recognizing American sovereignty, they had helped transform thirteen fractious colonies into a sovereign republic. For me, this arc, from Alarm to treaty, embodies the meaning of independence as a hard-won covenant across generations. It is the knowledge that my blood carries the memory of sacrifice, teaching me that freedom demands vigilance, resilience, and an unshakable faith in self-government even when the odds seem impossible.

Today, as we mark a quarter-millennium of independence, I feel both gratitude and responsibility when I look at my ancestors’ journey. Their role from the first alarm to the final treaty and the sacrifices of the generations that followed anchors my understanding that liberty is not an abstract gift, but a legacy earned through sweat, blood, and moral conviction. It calls me to cherish the rights they secured while confronting the imperfections that remain, always striving to perfect our union. Two hundred fifty years later, their story renews my commitment to ensure that the American experiment continues, not as something inherited passively, but as a living promise I must help steward for my children and my children’s children for generations to come.

Saul Montes-Bradley wrote this on July 2, 2026, on the 250th anniversary of the adoption of the Declaration of Independence.

Saul Montes-Bradley II is a Fellow at the Gold Institute for International Strategy, a Washington D.C. based foreign policy and defense think tank.