The primary symbol of our
country is our flag, the “stars and stripes.” Closely connected to our flag is
the song Star-Spangled Banner, based
on an 1814 poem by Maryland lawyer Francis Scott Key (1779-1843). It is
customary to stand and doff one’s cap when our anthem is performed at the
beginning of every sporting event. There is, by the way, no obligatory rubric
about other songs at the ballpark. America
the Beautiful, a 1910 tune by Katherine Bates and Samuel Ward, is not our
national anthem, though some fans seem to think it is. Nor is there any compulsory
ritual around the seventh inning song about Katie Casey, produced in 1908 by
Jack Norwoth and Albert Von Tilzer. Likewise, fans can do and think what they
like when the public address system blares out the 1978 song by Victor Willis
and Jacques Morali, YMCA… So too in
Boston with the 1969 song by Neil Diamond, Sweet
Caroline.
Our
country’s second most important symbol is the Statue of Liberty. Whereas the
U.S. flag is revered mostly by U.S. residents and those of us serving or
working overseas, the “Statue of Liberty is the world’s most universally
recognized symbol,” writes Steve Fraser in Class
Matters (Yale University Press, 2018). What does it symbolize? “Above all,
Lady Liberty is thought of as the patron saint of hard-pressed immigrants.” Our
statue in the Upper New York Bay stands for “an uplifting promissory note.”
The
statue has a conflicted history and was not always associated with immigrants, Fraser
recounts, as does Tyler Anbinder in his massive City of Dreams (Houghton, Mifflin, 2016).
It was
1865 when Edouard Rene de Laboulaye (1811-1883) first proposed a gift from his
fellow French citizens to the citizens of the U.S. in recognition of our
country’s extension of liberty to former slaves. His project went slowly.
Frederic Bartholdi (1834-1904), a sculptor, joined the effort. The original
completion date having past, the goal then became delivery to the U.S. for the
100th anniversary of our independence. As the days went by, the
theme for the proposed statue came to include a beacon of liberty to those
still under regressive or colonial governments. The motivation of the French
committee, writes Fraser, was “to inspire and memorialize their dedication to a
stable, middle-class society.” It was not so much to have “a monument to the
nation that had pioneered in inventing [liberty],” to the U.S. The premise was
that both France and the U.S. “cherished learning, enterprise, peaceable
commerce and republican liberties.”
No
matter the theme, the project remained in low gear. Finally in 1880 the French
committee delivered the statue in crates to the U.S. Embassy in Paris. The
statue’s eventual location in New York Harbor was assumed, but because the
French committee was broke the U.S. was responsible for building a pedestal.
Four government entities said no to
an allocation for the project. Likewise, several wealthy people here declined
to donate.
A
stateside committee held a fundraiser; an auction of original paintings and
literary pieces. It was a bust; only $1,500 was raised. One item in the
November 1883 auction was well received: The
New Colossus, a poem by Emma Lazarus (1849-1887).
It
looked like the statue might forever be warehoused in crates. But in March 1885
Joseph Pulitzer (1847-1911), a Hungarian immigrant, ridiculed the wealthy in
his newspaper and called upon working families to send along their nickels. The
common people responded; the pedestal was built; a dedication was held in
October 1886. Of note: No mention of Lazarus, of her poem or of immigration was
made at that ceremony. Thus for many years the statue was a symbol mostly for
French-U.S. friendship and vaguely for liberty as an exportable ideal.
The
common people enter the story once again. In 1903 friends of Lazarus had the
14-line The New Colossus inscribed on
a bronze plaque and with permission installed it inside the statue, on the
second-floor landing. The theme of welcome to immigrants, especially the thousands
who arrive in this harbor, was making a slow comeback. In 1945 the poem was
moved to the main entrance of Lady Liberty. It was then, Fraser writes, that
“the Statue of Liberty became the symbol we have assumed it always was.” The
statue, the famous poem, Liberty Island and nearby Ellis Island are now basically
one, and together are firmly associated with our country’s grand experiment in
pluralism, with the compassion of our citizens and with the gratitude nearly
all of us feel for the opportunities that this great country gave our
ancestors.
New York
City is inexhaustible. But all visitors and residents need to find the Liberty
Island/Ellis Island ferry in Battery Park at the bottom of Manhattan. Here’s
one way to reflect on what your tour means: Look to the bow and see our
country’s story of “huddled masses” and then look to the stern and see the
great skyscrapers of finance. Fraser’s book can add to that reflection because
he examines the tension between bow and stern, the give-and-take of our
American Dream. The subtitle of Anbinder’s book is The 400-Year Epic History of Immigrant New York. It too examines the
reality of give-and-take.
Droel edits INITIATIVES
(PO Box 291102, Chicago, IL 60629) a free newsletter about faith and work.
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