The Jubilee of the Constitution Delivered at New York, April 30, 1839, Before the New York Historical Society

audiobook

The Jubilee of the Constitution Delivered at New York, April 30, 1839, Before the New York Historical Society

by John Quincy Adams

EN·~56 minutes·1 chapter

Chapters

1 total

By John Quincy Adams

56:22

Description

Delivered before the New York Historical Society in 1839, this oration marks the fiftieth anniversary of the Constitution with a flourish of imagination and reverence. The speaker weaves a vivid tableau of George Washington’s inaugural oath, portraying the founding moment as a celestial ceremony in which the fledgling nation receives armor forged from piety, justice, and the self‑evident truths of the Declaration. The language is richly metaphorical, casting the Constitution itself as a heavenly shield bearing the future history of the United States.

Beyond the ceremony, the address surveys the diverse origins of the thirteen colonies—English settlers, Dutch, Swedish, German, and French refugees—and the hardships that forged their collective yearning for liberty. It recounts the clash with British authority, the resistance to taxation without representation, and the rallying cries of early champions of trial by jury and habeas corpus. Listeners will be drawn into a stirring portrait of America’s formative struggles, celebrating the ideals that the Constitution was intended to protect.

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Full title

The Jubilee of the Constitution Delivered at New York, April 30, 1839, Before the New York Historical Society Delivered at New York, April 30, 1839, Before the New York Historical Society

Language

en

Duration

~56 minutes (54K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Anthony J. Adam, and David Widger

Release date

1997-04-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

John Quincy Adams

John Quincy Adams

1767–1848

Raised in a family at the center of the American Revolution, he grew into one of the young republic’s most accomplished diplomats before becoming the sixth president of the United States. His public life did not end with the presidency: in Congress, he became a forceful voice against slavery and for civil liberties.

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