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Page 6 text:
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In this bicentennial year, the nation commemorates the founding of our country and reafirms, through its various programs and celebrations, the aspirations and dreams of our forebearers who struggled and eventually achieved the freedom which we cherish today. However, the Battle for Independence was not easily won. Today’s rhetoric is surely an echo, cast from a struggle which levied its toll upon the citizens of colonial times. In reality, the Revolution was our first civil war. It was a war which pitted father against son, brother against brother, daughter against mother and even wife against husband. The bicentennial celebration, in its various forms, is merely an attempt to recreate a facsimile of the events that occurred during the American Revolution and to pay tribute to those persons who invested their own fortunes and, in some cases, their lives in support of a cause they firmly believed. As throughout every period of history, the time produced some unique events. In addition, it placed into public view the lives of individual persons whose deeds created a sense of pride in their fellow patriots; but in other cases, the deeds of some produced shame and dishonor within the community and its citizens. Throughout the colonies, the matter was similar. Emotion was high and opinion strong, relative to the leading political questions of the day. The mood was set in Central Massachusetts — the Worcester County area was a microcosm of the political controversy which existed throughout the colonies. Standing at one extreme were the Colonists, Revolutionaries or Rebels, as they were referred to by the British. At the other end ' of the spectrum were the Royalists, Loyalists or Forces as they were called by the Colonists. The Loyalists, for a variety of not necessarily altruistic reasons, remained faithful to the Crown and, for their decision to do so, lost their rightful property, their citizenship, and were banished from the colonies into exile. 2
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