While we are looking at last
month’s Loyalty Day, this month we will relook the American Pledge of
Allegiance. Thirty-one words which
affirm the values and freedom that the American flag represents are recited
while facing the flag as a pledge of Americans’ loyalty to their country. The
Pledge of Allegiance was written for the 400th anniversary, in 1892, of the discovery
of America. A national committee of educators and civic leaders planned a
public-school celebration of Columbus Day to center around the flag. Included
with the script for ceremonies that would culminate in raising of the flag was
the pledge. So it was in October 1892 Columbus Day programs that school
children across the country first recited the Pledge of Allegiance this way:
I pledge allegiance to my Flag and to the Republic for
which it stands: one Nation indivisible, with Liberty and Justice for all.
Controversy continues over
whether the author was the chairman of the committee, Francis Bellamy — who
worked on a magazine for young people that published the pledge, or James
Upham, who worked for the publishing firm that produced the magazine. The pledge
was published anonymously in the magazine and was not copyrighted.
According to some accounts of
Bellamy as author, he decided to write a pledge of allegiance, rather than a
salute, because it was a stronger expression of loyalty, something particularly
significant even 27 years after the Civil War ended. “One Nation
indivisible” referred to the outcome of the Civil War, and “Liberty and Justice
for all”, expressed the ideals of the Declaration of Independence.
The words “my flag” were
replaced by “the flag of the United States” in 1923, because some foreign-born
people might have in mind the flag of the country of their birth, instead of
the U.S. flag.
A year later, “of America” was
added after “United States.” No form of the pledge received official
recognition by Congress until June 22, 1942, when it was formally included in
the U.S. Flag Code. The official name of The Pledge of Allegiance was adopted
in 1945. T
he last change in language came
on Flag Day 1954, when Congress passed a law which added the words “under God”
after “one nation.” Originally, the pledge was said with the hand in the
so-called “Bellamy Salute,” with the hand resting first outward from the chest,
then the arm extending out from the body.
Once Hitler came to power in
Europe, some Americans were concerned that this position of the arm and hand
resembled the salute rendered by the Nazi military. In 1942, Congress
established the current practice of rendering the pledge with the right hand placed
flat over the heart.
Section 7 of the Federal Flag
Code states that when not in military uniform, men should remove any headdress
with their right hand and hold it at the left shoulder, thereby resting the
hand over the heart. People in military uniform should remain silent, face the
flag and render the military salute.
The Flag Code specifies that any
future changes to the pledge would have to be with the consent of the
president.
The Pledge of Allegiance now
reads:
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.

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