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Twelve Days of Christmas – Day 9 – Temperance

“Surely God Himself must tremble at the task before you,“ Churchill declared with trembling consternation. To this General Dwight D. Eisenhower serenely replied, “If God is at my side, how can I fail? When Eisenhower believed the time was right to begin the invasion, he ceased his pacing, humbly looked his subordinates in the eye,...
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Twelve Days of Christmas – Day 8 – Henry Knox Perseverance

The “noble train of artillery”led by the young and unassuming Continental Army Colonel, Henry Knox could only be called an unbelievable display of technical brilliance and sheer determination. Just what was this train and what is its significance to the advancement of the cause of freedom? Well, the train involved the transfer of much-needed heavy...
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Twelve Days of Christmas – Day 7 – Love

All the king’s horses and all the kings men were in hot pursuit of the brazen young man, barely nineteen. The whole of Paris, and soon all of France was transfixed by the melodrama of the princely rogue’s flight. He became the topic du jour in the taverns and salons throughout the ancient land. Crowds,...
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Twelve Days of Christmas – Day 6 – Humility

The great patriotic artist John Trumbull’s iconic paintings have adorned the walls of many an American home and art gallery. The colorful and dramatic oil painting “The Death of General Warren at Bunker Hill” portrays the last moments of the life of one of the founders most devoted to liberty, though he died thirteen months...
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Twelve Days of Christmas – Day 5 – Charity

Abraham Lincoln, when describing his fighting general to a friend remarked that, “He’s the quietest little fellow you ever saw. He makes the least fuss of any man you ever knew. I believe he had been in this room a minute or so before I knew he was here.” “Grant is the first [true] general...
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Twelve Days of Christmas – Day 4 – Honesty

Son of Scottish immigrants to Virginia and named after his clergyman-uncle, PatrickHenry with his ringing voice and unvarnished rhetoric led his countrymen into rebellion against the tyranny of King George; he was christened “The Trumpet of the Revolution.” As a youngster he had sat at the feet of the great preacher Samuel Davies during the“Great...
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Twelve Days of Christmas – Day 3 – Industry

James Monroe was a fascinating figure in American history. One story in particular stands out and demonstrates perfectly the fragility and happenstance that comprises the better part of our lives. Below is the story we like to tell while enjoying a James Monroe with friends… The unrelenting barking of the dogs was so loud that...
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Twelve Days of Christmas – Day 2 – Hope

John Adams was not always a sunny-side up kind of man. He would have said that himself. But his volcanic desire to see his fellow countrymen and women free forged in him an inextinguishable fountain of hope. Below is his short speech which he gave just after the vote of the Declaration Of Independence from...
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Twelve Days of Christmas – Day 1 – Courage

Andrew Jackson once boldly remarked that “One man with courage makes a majority.” If there is one man who personified those words, it is Theodore Roosevelt. Born with a boisterous mind but frail body, “Teedie”, as he was then called, struggled mightily with his health. He wrote in his autobiography of one night when asthma...
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Twelve Days of Christmas – Prelude

Our virtues come to us down from the ages. They began with Moses’s exodus from the Nile River Valley; made their way through the rolling hills of ancient Greece; then through Rome, next the meandered deep into the forests of Saxony to England, and across the most dangerous ocean in the world to us. They...
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