July/August 2008
Oscar H. Will III, editor
 |
Kate Will
|
I learned to love the Fourth of July long before I could comprehend the date’s true significance. As a youngster in North Dakota, I knew the holiday meant that my sister, cousins and I would gather beneath gigantic cottonwood trees, along with hundreds of other folks, in a park on the Missouri River, south of Bismarck. Plenty of adults were on hand to tend to skinned knees and settle minor altercations, but for one sweet summer day, the Will children got to run around unsupervised, until long after dark.
RELATED CONTENT
National turkey calling contest offers real reward....
Community, county and state fairs offer odd and unusual events....
Photo contest celebrating Sunkist's 100th year to benefit Special Olympics...
Michigan market tops list of LocalHarvest’s top famers’ markets as the group’s Love Your Farmers’ M...
‘Arch de Triumph’ Wins Grit’s Woodstacking Contest...
These annual events generally included parades, pony rides, pie-eating contests, three-legged sack races, barbecue and more. I enjoyed the parades because my dad sometimes marched with a band, and there were horses and plenty of interesting pieces of equipment to look at. The sack races were always fun, and so was the egg toss. Pie eating was too messy for me – I loved pie, but not putting my face in it. Wonderful as those activities were, they really just helped us fidget our way through the day and tempered our anticipation of fireworks.
The older children always had fireworks in their pockets, and when I was in that group I did, too. A bottle rocket here, a ladyfinger there, and sparklers now and then did wonders for our collective adrenaline levels. As we got older, we discovered Roman candles, mortars and M-80s. Half the fun was setting them off, but the real thrill was in the freedom to possess them and the means to ignite them. We never really told our parents, and they never really asked, but for one glorious day, there was this understanding. And thankfully, in my family, no one lost an eye.
I can remember when I asked my dad about the tradition of fireworks on the Fourth of July. It was about the same time that I wondered what the phrase “rocket’s red glare” meant in the Star Spangled Banner. By then, I had experienced several Memorial Day parades and had some vague ideas on the Revolution, all gathered from a lavishly illustrated American Heritage coffee table book. But his reply came as a real childhood shock – it hadn’t occurred to me that the way of life I took for granted wasn’t available in many places around the world.