Stanley L. Klos - Neighborhood Recovery Act - http://roi.us/nra.htm
REPUBLICAN NATIONAL CONVENTION - President Who? Exhibit - A Stan klos
Company
A FOUNDING U.S. PRESIDENTIAL EXHIBIT
As Exhibited at the
The
Smithsonian’s A Glorious Burden, The American
Presidency
2004 Republican
National Convention
The stories of the four
Continental Congress Presidents and the ten Presidents of the United States
serving before George Washington are inspiring narratives that are most
appropriate to the events of the 21st Century. The account of the 1st
US President, Samuel Huntington, is especially relevant as it focuses on an era
when the United States Army and Congress met their greatest challenges in the
Revolutionary War campaigns of 1780-1781.
Amidst military mayhem (the loss of the
Southern States to the British, former Continental Congress President Henry
Middleton swearing his allegiance to the King George III, and Benedict Arnold
burning Richmond after accepting a general’s commission in the British Army)
the States managed to rally and finally ratify the first constitution in 1781 –
The Articles of Confederation. The United States was established as a
Perpetual Union just in time as our friends and foes alike accepted the
unanimously ratified Articles of Confederation as evidence of one united
country. Almost immediately France threw her military might behind General
Washington enabling the decisive Victory at Yorktown.
In 1781, despite winning our Independence
militarily - "Mission
Accomplished”, many 18th Century
families whose sons made the greatest sacrifice were forced to suffer through an
almost helpless unicameral (one branch) government that effectively failed to
govern the United States. The monetary system nearly collapsed and by the summer
of 1783 unpaid and unfed Pennsylvania Soldiers mutinied holding the entire
United States in Congress Assembled with President
Elias Boudinot hostage at
Independence Hall. Even more remarkable, the Pennsylvania Militia refused a
direct order from the President, Congress, and the Pennsylvania Supreme Council,
whom were also held hostage, to free the founders from the new nation's most
historic building. It was only through the efforts of future President
Arthur
St. Clair and Col. Alexander Hamilton that the mutineers finally acquiesced. On
that fateful day a released Congress was force to flee from Philadelphia and
reconvene in Princeton where they were protected by the NJ militia. The 1783
letter from President Boudinot of “thanks” to Arthur St. Clair is on
display at this exhibit (Chapter 10).
In 1784 through 1786 the courts, taxes, voting
irregularities, intrastate duties and laws were so rife with injustices that
most citizens spoke of dissolving the Perpetual Union of the United States of America. The
year 1786 also saw the collapse of an Annapolis Convention to revise the
Articles of Confederation and a citizen insurgence which will be forever
known as Shays’ Rebellion whichwas not put down until March
1787.
The United States Military managed
to keep the peace after the war was won in these turbulent years of American
Democracy. It was the military that provided the precious time, for the United
States in Congress Assembled, to gather their best minds to revise the Articles of Confederationin Philadelphia in May of 1787. This time, when
the confederation seemed doomed, George Washington accepted the Presidency of the Constitutional Convention and
produced an entirely New Plan for the Federal Government - The United
States Constitution which is on display at this Exhibit (Chapter 14). This
new government was finally established in 1789 a full thirteen years after
independence was declared in 1776.
This exhibit,
President Who?
Forgotten Founders, goal is to educate you, the visitor, on
this important period in U.S. Founding History. This was a time when Statesmen and Philosopher Kings were the rule and not the exception in
U. S. politics. The sacrifices these patriots made to secure the freedoms we now
enjoy are immeasurable and in many cases most incomprehensible. Today, in
a different era, we are at the crossroads of implementing a plan to preserve our freedom
and it has taken us to the foreign shores of Iraq and Afghanistan. No longer protected by the great oceans the
U.S. finds itself in an era of nuclear proliferation and terrorism so vile that it
threatens the peace, freedom, and prosperities won and preserved by 11
generations of patriots for over 228 years.
The United States of America, whether you agree
or disagree with the mission in Iraq, must fulfill its mission and commitments
to these two nations mustering the resources necessary to establish two
governments of, for and by the Iraqi and Afghanistan people.
The stories of the the U.S. founding and its struggle towards self-government aremost
appropriate and filled with lessons on how to overcome the challenges now facing a free Iraq and Afghanistan. We must
never forget that it was the 2nd constitution, not the 1st, enacted thirteen
years after U.S. Independence in 1776 that finally established a body of law capable (with many amendments and
a civil war) governing the United States of America.
Stanley L. Klos
1. Which Continental Congress president did George
Washington call the “Father of Our Country?”
2. Which U.S. president wrote and introduced the
resolution that declared U.S. Independence on July 2, 1776?
3. Which Continental Congress president signed
George Washington’s commander-in-chief commission?
4. Which U.S. president conspired in the Conway
Cabal to replace George Washington as commander-in-chief with General Horatio
Gates?
5. Which U.S. president persuaded holdout Maryland
to ratify the Article of Confederation in 1781, thereby creating the “Perpetual
Union” known as the United States of America?
6. Which Continental Congress president was
imprisoned in the Tower of London and later ex changed for General Cornwallis?
7. Which Continental Congress president persuaded
John Adams and Benjamin Franklin to ignore the direct order of the United States
in Congress Assembled demanding that France be included in the negotiations of
the Treaty of Paris?
8. Which U.S. president negotiated the peaceful
release of President Elias Boudinot and the entire Continental Congress from
Independence Hall in the summer of 1783?
9. Which U.S. president’s signature ratified the
treaty that ended the war with England?
10. Which U.S. president sponsored the legislation
to hold the 1787 Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia after the Annapolis
Convention failed to reach a quorum in 1786?
The on-line 2004 exhibit
begins with:
Peyton
Randolph 1st President of the Continental Congress United Colonies of America September 5, 1774 to October 22, 1774
and May 20 to May 24, 1775
A Five Pound
Virginia Colonial Note dated March 4, 1773 and signed by Continental Congress
President Peyton Randolph, US Constitution Signer and Supreme Court Justice John
Blair on the front. It is also signed on the reverse by Virginia Treasurer
Robert Carter Nicholas. This historic note is in exceptional condition
measuring 5 x 6 1/2 inches.
Peyton Randolph traveled to Pennsylvania and
Continental Congress was officially formed on September 5, 1774 in
Philadelphia's Carpenters Hall to petition King George III after England passed
the Intolerable Acts. The first unofficial meeting of delegates actually
took place the day before in The City Tavern just down the street (yes
the true birthplace of the Continental Congress and
the Presidency was in a
Philadelphia tavern). The debates at this tavern meeting were significant as the decision was
made to hold the First Continental Congress in a private, rather than public
hall. When Congress convened the next day, South Carolina delegate Thomas Lynch nominated
Peyton Randolph to be chairman. Peyton was elected by unanimous vote.
Henry Middleton 2nd President of the Continental Congress United Colonies of America October 22, 1774 to October 26, 1774
A Printing of the
October 24th, 1774 Address to the
People of Great Britain and To the Inhabitants of the Coloniessigned by Henry Middleton and the other founding members of the
Continental Congress.
In 1774 he was sent as a delegate
to the Continental Congress and was one of the most conservative members of the
entire delegation. For that reason, among others, he was elected President of
the Continental Congress in October 1774. Although Middleton's tenure as
President was only four days and Peyton Randolph was re-elected in 1775, the
following Petition of Congress to King George III passed during his Presidency
and was unanimously approved and sent to Great Britain
Forgotten Founders Historic Documents and Coins of Freedom - By Stanley
L. Klos - Last Exhbit at the 2008 GOP Convention:
http://www.pinellasrepublican.org/
Forgotten Founders Historic Documents and Coins of Freedom - By Stanley
L. Klos
Entombment of President Samuel Huntington
and First Lady Martha
1st President of the United States
in Congress Assembled
The United Colonies 1st
government began in a Philadelphia Tavern
and the United States 1st federal government ended in a
NYC Tavern!
The Founders convened the government in 11 different capitol buildings and
experienced 15 years of challenges that
included war,
hyper-inflation, a failed
constitution, judicial corruption, armed citizen and U.S. Army rebellions.
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