The Great Victory—Its Cost and Its Value Address delivered at Chestnut Hill, Pennsylvania, July 4th, 1865

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The Great Victory—Its Cost and Its Value Address delivered at Chestnut Hill, Pennsylvania, July 4th, 1865

by M. Russell (Martin Russell) Thayer

EN·~25 minutes·1 chapter

Chapters

1 total

Part 1

25:38

Description

Delivered on the Fourth of July in 1865, this stirring address opens by recalling the ancient Roman rites of thanksgiving that followed triumphs, drawing a vivid parallel to America’s own celebration of hard‑won peace. The speaker paints a picture of a nation finally breathing easy after a conflict of unprecedented scale, inviting listeners to pause in gratitude for the divine hand that secured victory.

From there the oration turns to the staggering sacrifices that made the peace possible—hundreds of thousands of soldiers, massive financial outlays, and countless personal losses. Yet the message is not one of sorrow alone; it is a reaffirmation of the principles that underpinned the struggle: liberty, law, and the enduring promises of the Declaration and Constitution. By framing the end of the war as a true, hard‑won triumph rather than a fleeting compromise, the speech encourages listeners to honor the past while looking forward to a future built on those hard‑earned freedoms.

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Full title

The Great Victory—Its Cost and Its Value Address delivered at Chestnut Hill, Pennsylvania, July 4th, 1865 Address delivered at Chestnut Hill, Pennsylvania, July 4th, 1865

Language

en

Duration

~25 minutes (24K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Ethan Kent, Library of Congress and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)

Release date

2015-07-18

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

M. Russell (Martin Russell) Thayer

M. Russell (Martin Russell) Thayer

1819–1906

A Philadelphia lawyer, judge, congressman, and occasional poet, he moved easily between public life and literary work. His writing includes legal and historical pieces as well as verse gathered from what he called his “leisure hours.”

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