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1976 Bicentennial Celebrations Featured Military Participation Across the Nation

Once every 50 years, the United States holds milestone Independence Day celebrations. This year marks the nation's 250th birthday and fifth semicentennial celebration. 

A man in a suit rings a large ceremonial bell on a ship as another man in similar attire stands beside him. There are four people in military dress uniforms standing in the background.
Ringing the Bell
President Gerald R. Ford rings the ceremonial bell aboard the aircraft carrier USS Forrestal during the international naval review and the nation's bicentennial activities in New York City, July 4, 1976.
Credit: Department of Navy
VIRIN: 760704-N-D0439-106

The bicentennial was celebrated nationwide, July 4, 1976. It was celebrated only a year after the last U.S. troops left South Vietnam during the fall of Saigon, April 30, 1975. 

President Gerald R. Ford's administration stressed the themes of healing and rebirth, as well as nostalgia for the nation's founding. Ford was a World War II Navy officer, serving in the Pacific aboard the aircraft carrier USS Monterey. 

New York City celebrated the bicentennial with a parade of ships that included dozens of historic and current ships. Operation Sail, as it was called, began in New York Harbor and moved up the Hudson River.

Two men in suits hold an old-style American "Don't Tread on Me" flag, as people in military dress uniforms stand in formation in the background.
Ceremony
President Gerald R. Ford, right, receives the prototype of the ceremonial Continental Navy Jack from Navy Secretary J. William Middendorf II during a ceremony in Washington, Oct. 29, 1975. A smaller version of the flag was flown from every Navy ship in December 1976 as part of the bicentennial celebration.
Credit: Navy Chief Petty Officer Richard Montgomery
VIRIN: 751029-N-D0439-101

One of the ships, the aircraft carrier USS Forrestal, carried Ford, Vice President Nelson Rockefeller and State Secretary Henry Kissinger.  

The event was also attended by 70 foreign ambassadors and chiefs of naval operations from 35 countries.

An oil painting depicts people at night pulling on ropes attached to a statue, atop which is a man on a horse. Other people in colonial attire are standing around the statue, observing.
Oil Painting
A painting depicting people in New York City in 1776, trying to pull down a statue of King George III.
Credit: Johannes Adam Simon Oertel 
VIRIN: 750115-O-D0439-004

A statue of King George III was beheaded, reenacting when his statue was beheaded during the Revolutionary War and melted down to make bullets. 

During the celebration in the city, bands and ceremonial units from all of the military services marched down Constitution Avenue.

A postage stamp with a soldier dressed in a colonial uniform and playing a drum, as people in the background dance.
Stamp
A bicentennial stamp from 1976 depicts a drummer alerting people that British troops are approaching during the Revolutionary War.
Credit: U.S. Postal Service
VIRIN: 750115-O-D0439-003
A postage stamp with people on a sailing vessel throwing boxes overboard as others in row boats holding lanterns row at night. Another ship is in the distance, and people are standing on a pier watching the activities.
Stamp
A bicentennial stamp depicts the 1773 Boston Tea Party, which was a protest of the Tea Act by the Sons of Liberty.
Credit: U.S. Postal Service
VIRIN: 730115-O-D0439-005
In Greenfield Village, Michigan, members of the military dressed in Revolutionary and Civil War period uniforms. Military parades like these took place across the nation. 

In 1976, Donald Rumsfeld was the defense secretary; Martin Richard Hoffmann was the Army secretary; Gen. Frederick C. Weyand was the Army chief of staff, followed by Gen. Bernard W. Rogers in October of that year; J. William Middendorf II was the Navy secretary; Adm. James L. Holloway III was the chief of naval operations; Thomas C. Reed was the Air Force secretary; David C. Jones was the Air Force chief of staff; and, Gen. Louis Wilson was the Marine Corps commandant. 

The military wasn't involved in any conflicts in 1976, the last being the Mayaguez incident in May 1975, in Kampuchea, now called Cambodia.

A red, white and blue star graphic with the words, “American Revolution Bicentennial” encircling it.
Logo
The bicentennial logo commissioned by the American Revolution Bicentennial Commission appointed by President Gerald R. Ford for celebratory and event purposes, 1975-1976.
Credit: Bruce N. Blackburn
VIRIN: 750115-O-D0439-002

The U.S. was involved in the Cold War, which lasted from 1947 until the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991. 

During this timeframe, the U.S. military maintained a large presence in West Germany, Japan and South Korea.

A steam locomotive painted in red, white and blue pulls a passenger train through a flat landscape under a blue sky.
On the Move
The American Freedom Train passes through Naval Air Station Miramar, Calif., Jan. 15, 1976. Today, that base is called Marine Corps Air Station Miramar.
Credit: Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class Masnica
VIRIN: 760115-O-D0439-001

At Panmunjom, South Korea, Aug. 18, 1976, two U.S. soldiers were killed by North Korean soldiers while trying to chop down part of a tree in the Korean Demilitarized Zone, which had obscured their view of North Korea. Three days later, Operation Paul Bunyan took place with a show of force made up of dozens of U.S. and South Korean troops, who completed cutting down the rest of the tree. 

On Nov. 2, 1976, Jimmy Carter, a former naval officer like Ford, was elected president. 

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