The Pledge: Who Really Wrote the Pledge of Allegiance?

The Pledge: Who Really Wrote the Pledge of Allegiance?

Released Wednesday, 21st February 2024
Good episode? Give it some love!
The Pledge: Who Really Wrote the Pledge of Allegiance?

The Pledge: Who Really Wrote the Pledge of Allegiance?

The Pledge: Who Really Wrote the Pledge of Allegiance?

The Pledge: Who Really Wrote the Pledge of Allegiance?

Wednesday, 21st February 2024
Good episode? Give it some love!
Rate Episode

Episode Transcript

Transcripts are displayed as originally observed. Some content, including advertisements may have changed.

Use Ctrl + F to search

0:08

Great Originals.

0:10

This is an iHeart original.

0:16

It's October twenty first, eighteen

0:18

ninety two. Across the United

0:21

States, school kids are gathering

0:23

for a once in a lifetime celebration

0:26

the four hundredth anniversary of

0:29

Columbus's discovery of America.

0:32

Of course, Columbus never actually stepped

0:34

foot on American soil, and

0:36

he went to his grave thinking he really

0:38

landed in India. But that's

0:41

a topic for another podcast. Back

0:44

to eighteen ninety two. In

0:46

celebration of this flawed and

0:49

historically inaccurate holiday, then

0:52

President Benjamin Harrison issues

0:54

a special proclamation. He

0:57

calls for America's new system

0:59

of public schools to fly

1:02

the American flag high

1:04

and proud. As parades

1:06

of Civil War veterans file into

1:08

school yards across the country, students

1:11

prepare to salute the flag, and

1:14

not just that, they're about

1:16

to recite a new patriotic

1:18

oath. They've been practicing it

1:20

every day for a month, just

1:23

for this special occasion. It's

1:25

only twenty two words long, but it's

1:27

still a mouthful for a bunch of school

1:30

children. For anyone really.

1:32

Ledge allegiance to my flag and the

1:35

republic for which it stands. One

1:37

Nation indivisible with

1:39

liberty and justice for all.

1:43

Sound familiar, Sure, it's missing

1:45

a few words and phrases. Those

1:48

would come decades later. But

1:51

that day, October twenty first,

1:53

eighteen ninety two, was the

1:55

public debut of what we all

1:57

recognize now as the Pledge

2:00

of Allegiance. The thing

2:02

is, back then, it wasn't called

2:04

the Capital P Pledge of

2:07

Capital A Allegiance. It

2:10

wasn't a thing yet in

2:12

eighteen ninety two, no one had

2:14

an inkling that this short, patriotic

2:17

oath written for a one time

2:19

event would ever be uttered again.

2:22

As we'll see, the story of the

2:24

Pledge of Allegiance is a story

2:27

of a nation at a crossroads,

2:30

a nation still healing from the

2:32

collective trauma of the Civil War,

2:34

a nation experiencing one of the

2:37

largest influxes of immigrants

2:39

in its history. It was a

2:41

time of tremendous anxiety

2:43

over what it meant to be an

2:46

American, and the original

2:48

Pledge, with its twenty two words,

2:51

was supposed to offer an answer. The

2:54

crazy thing is more than one hundred and

2:56

thirty years later, after reciting

2:59

the Pledge every morning in nearly

3:01

every classroom in America, we

3:04

still have absolutely no idea

3:07

who wrote it. Welcome

3:09

to very special episodes and iHeart

3:12

original podcast. I'm

3:14

your host, Danash Schwartz, and this

3:16

is the pledge. I

3:19

think one thing that's always really surprising

3:22

to me is discovering how

3:24

these American traditions that seem so

3:27

ingrained in our country are actually far

3:29

more recent than people realize.

3:31

Oh totally.

3:33

Not only are they more recent, but kind of

3:35

started on a lark as

3:37

part of a don't no

3:39

spoilers. But there's a

3:42

magazine at the center of this. All three

3:44

of us come from at

3:46

one point in our careers working at magazine.

3:49

So good to look back at a time

3:51

when magazines were so dominant in the culture.

3:54

Ah remember those times.

3:56

It's just as so interesting. People have

3:59

such strong emotional feelings

4:02

to the pledge of allegiance and it really

4:04

kind of was arbitrary.

4:07

Also, in my humble opinion, I think America, we

4:09

don't really need a pledge of allegiance. We should

4:12

have like a national jingle like one of those

4:14

ads for a year in car sale, like come

4:16

on, grab the freedom, let's go.

4:18

That's right.

4:19

I will say, if you have a friend who's

4:21

not from the United States, and you tell

4:23

them that every single day in school, every

4:26

student stands up, puts their hand over their hearts

4:28

and says a pledge to the flag. They will

4:30

look at you like you are absolutely

4:32

insane.

4:33

Completely like we yell all brainwashed

4:35

in your cord does Yeah. Also,

4:38

isn't it funny how when you dig into any bit of American

4:40

history, even something simple as a pledge of allegiance, you will

4:42

always find a crime.

4:44

There's always a crime. There's always a crime. America

4:49

in the late nineteenth century was having

4:51

a full blown identity crisis.

4:54

When the pledge was first recited

4:56

in eighteen ninety two. It was

4:58

only twenty seven years since the

5:00

end of the Civil War. Young

5:02

people who had fought in and survived

5:04

the war were now full fledged volts.

5:08

Families who lost loved ones

5:10

still felt the ripple effect, and

5:13

the American institution of slavery

5:16

had only recently been formally

5:18

abolished.

5:19

I mean, we have to keep in mind that an entire

5:22

generation was wiped out in the Civil

5:24

War. Right you think about the number of soldiers

5:26

who were killed in the United States, I mean,

5:29

those are wounds that are not going to heal very quickly.

5:32

That's Charles dorn A historian at

5:34

Boden College.

5:36

Now we're into eighteen nineties and the war

5:38

ends in eighteen sixty five, but it still

5:40

stings, and the country is still trying

5:42

to figure out how to stitch itself back together

5:45

politically, economically, and socially.

5:48

If recovering from the Civil War wasn't

5:50

enough, the eighteen eighties and

5:52

eighteen nineties were also a time

5:55

of unprecedented urbanization

5:57

and immigration. Suddenly, Americans

6:00

who had been here for generations

6:02

found themselves competing for factory

6:04

jobs and tenement space with

6:07

millions of new immigrants from places

6:09

like Italy, Russia, and Poland.

6:13

So this is a very different kind of immigration

6:15

into the United States than what people

6:17

believe existed prior

6:20

to that. The people comprising

6:22

this wave of immigration are coming from a different

6:24

part of the world. So whereas initially

6:26

immigration in the United States is coming primarily

6:28

from northern and western Europe, now

6:31

these immigrants are coming from southern

6:33

and Eastern Europe. And what this means

6:35

is that they're speaking different languages, Slavic

6:38

languages for instance, They're practicing

6:40

different faiths.

6:43

What if these new arrivals failed

6:45

to assimilate into American

6:47

culture, What if they openly

6:49

rebelled against American ideals

6:52

and institutions. Tensions

6:55

reached a fever pitch, and.

6:57

There's a real fear and a concern

7:00

on the part of resident Americans,

7:02

Americans already living here, that this

7:04

could somehow dilute America,

7:07

and it could really sort of mess with the national

7:09

character, and that something has

7:11

to be done to these people in order

7:14

to essentially make them Americans.

7:16

What exactly do you do

7:19

to people to make them

7:21

American? Well, the

7:23

best way to Americanize people,

7:25

the government decided, was through

7:27

the public schools. Public

7:30

schools were still a relatively

7:32

new concept in most of the country,

7:34

but there were high hopes that these uniquely

7:37

American institutions could

7:39

teach little Italian, Slavic

7:41

and Irish kids to be patriotic

7:44

and productive Americans.

7:47

There's a sense that these public

7:49

schools are unlike anything else

7:51

that exists in any nation in the world, and

7:54

they are in some ways sort of symbols

7:56

of democracy and the democratic republic.

7:58

So there was a real faith in fact that public

8:01

schools could pull off this

8:03

Americanization mission that many

8:05

people believed needed to have happen in

8:07

order for immigrants to become a part of

8:09

the national project.

8:12

From the start, the Americanization

8:14

efforts in public schools centered

8:17

around the flag. Today,

8:19

it's not really unusual to see

8:21

an American flag flying outside

8:23

most schools and inside

8:26

most classrooms, but that wasn't

8:28

always the case. In fact,

8:30

the main reason schools are festooned

8:33

with flags today dates back

8:35

to this immigration anxiety

8:38

that gripped Americans. In the eighteen

8:40

eighties and eighteen nineties, there

8:42

was a nationwide campaign to put

8:45

quote a flag in every schoolhouse.

8:48

It was spearheaded by patriotic civic

8:50

organizations like the Grand Army

8:52

of the Republic and the Women's Relief

8:55

Corps. They wanted the flag

8:57

to be a physical symbol of America

9:00

to which young immigrant children could

9:02

pledge their loyalty.

9:05

And of course, there are national oaths

9:07

of loyalty in many countries

9:10

at this point in time. In fact, the United

9:12

States is a little bit of an outlier in not having

9:14

one, and so the idea that

9:16

there might be a national statement

9:19

of loyalty was not a new idea or

9:21

a strange thing whatsoever.

9:25

The very first version of a pledge

9:27

of allegiance was written around

9:29

eighteen ninety by a New York City

9:32

education reformer and Civil

9:34

War veteran named George

9:36

Balch. Bulch wasn't a fan

9:38

of mass immigration. He

9:40

referred to immigrant school children

9:43

as quote human scum

9:46

cast on our shores by the tidal

9:48

wave of a vast migration end

9:51

quote. So you know the kind

9:53

of person we're dealing with, the

9:55

most popular version of Balch's

9:57

pledge went like this.

10:00

We give our heads and our hearts to God

10:02

and our country, one country, one

10:04

language, one flag.

10:07

The message was hardly subtle. There

10:09

was only room in America for one

10:12

type of American god, fearing

10:14

English speaking and unwaveringly

10:17

loyal to the United States. Balches

10:20

owede to assimilation had

10:22

a nice little run. It was recited

10:24

in New York public schools well

10:27

into the twentieth century. But

10:29

obviously that's not the pledge

10:31

of allegiance that American school kids

10:33

know today, and it was not the

10:36

pledge that was read out during

10:38

the Columbus Day celebration in

10:40

eighteen ninety two. To

10:43

hear the story of that pledge,

10:46

the real pledge, we need to

10:48

travel to Boston. There

10:50

we'll find a former Baptist minister

10:53

turned magazine editor named

10:55

Francis Bellamy. There

10:58

he is hunched over his desk,

11:00

sweating through his wool suit, wrestling

11:04

with the words that would become an

11:06

American institution. It's

11:13

a swelteringly hot August

11:16

night in Boston eighteen ninety

11:18

two. Francis Bellamy, a

11:21

thirty seven year old writer and editor,

11:23

has shut himself away in his office

11:26

at The Youth's Companion, a

11:28

children's magazine and one of

11:30

the most popular magazines in

11:32

America. His waste paper

11:35

bucket overflows with false starts,

11:38

his pencil is ground down

11:40

to a nub. Bellamy's

11:42

boss, James b Upham, has

11:44

given him an impossible writing

11:47

assignment. Compose a

11:49

brief patriotic statement, a

11:51

salute to the American flag that

11:54

somehow encompasses all of

11:56

America's history and founding principles,

11:59

and keep it short. Bellamy

12:01

knows about the existing pledge written

12:04

by George Balch, One Country,

12:06

one language, one Flag, but

12:08

he dismisses it as too juvenile.

12:11

Bellamy's boss wants something more sweeping

12:14

and comprehensive, so

12:16

Bellamy racks his brain for a new

12:19

approach. But how could

12:21

he possibly express the true

12:23

essence of America in so few

12:25

words? This scene played

12:28

out in a stuffy Boston office

12:30

will become a watershed moment in

12:33

Bellamy's life. When he writes

12:35

about it thirty years later, he recounts

12:37

the details like it was yesterday.

12:42

The strain of the next two hours

12:44

is still a distinct memory.

12:47

Very dramatic stuff. Bellamy

12:49

certainly has a way with words, but

12:52

he wasn't always a writer and editor.

12:55

Before he worked for the Youth's Companion,

12:58

Bellamy was a Baptist minister,

13:01

but he wasn't your typical fire and

13:03

brimstone preacher. Bellamy

13:05

and his friends were Christian socialists

13:09

in the nineteenth century. Christian

13:11

socialists believed that true

13:13

Christians shouldn't just sit around

13:16

praying and waiting for God to act.

13:19

Christians should get out there and actually

13:21

try to fix some of society's

13:23

toughest problems. Here's Charles

13:26

Dorn again.

13:29

And so the Christian Socialists

13:31

are coming out of this kind of belief system that

13:34

society can act in

13:36

cooperative ways to

13:39

create systems that will

13:41

create a kind of paradise or kind

13:43

of heaven on earth.

13:45

Although Bellamy eventually left

13:48

the ministry, he still wanted

13:50

to help people and improve society.

13:53

But like a lot of good old, homegrown

13:55

Americans, in the eighteen nineties, Bellamy

13:58

was pretty rattled by the influx

14:00

of immigrants from Eastern and southern

14:03

Europe.

14:04

There is a real fear, I mean, we shouldn't

14:06

understand, there's a real fear that

14:09

bringing these people to the United

14:11

States could really destabilize

14:14

an already destabilized

14:16

nation. So we've got to do something to make sure

14:18

that that doesn't happen.

14:22

Like many others, Bellamy subscribed

14:24

to the idea that the best way to

14:27

americanize immigrants was

14:29

through public schools, and

14:31

he found a welcome home for his

14:33

ideas at the Youth's Companion.

14:36

The Companion was one of the first

14:39

subscription magazines in America.

14:42

Launched in eighteen twenty seven, It

14:44

was like an early version of Boys

14:47

Life, stuffed with serialized

14:49

adventure novels, news items,

14:51

and casually racist reports

14:54

from around the globe. It was

14:56

a hit with young readers and their

14:58

parents, and every week three

15:01

hundred and eighty five thousand copies

15:03

were delivered to homes across the country.

15:07

James B. Upham, Bellamy's boss

15:09

at The Companion, was a deeply

15:11

patriotic man, but he

15:14

also had magazines to sell.

15:16

It was Upham's idea to get the magazine

15:19

involved in the flag in every

15:21

schoolhouse movement of the eighteen

15:24

eighties. The Companion ran

15:26

ads offering American flags

15:28

to any school that needed one. The

15:31

flags weren't free. A nine foot

15:33

flag cost the equivalent of one

15:35

hundred and sixty dollars today, but

15:38

schools could recoup their money. The

15:40

magazine provided flag certificates

15:43

that students could sell to friends and

15:45

neighbors for about three

15:47

dollars in today's money. Buyers

15:50

were entitled to quote one

15:52

share in the patriotic influence

15:54

of the school flag. It

15:56

was an ingenious scheme that paid

15:59

off handsomely. The

16:01

Youth's Companion sold more than

16:03

twenty five thousand American flags

16:05

to public schools. Not

16:08

only did the Companion make a killing,

16:10

but the magazine became synonymous

16:13

with patriotism. And with

16:15

this pivot to patriotism, the

16:17

magazine brass wanted to lean heavily

16:20

into their new identity, and

16:23

just their luck, the perfect

16:25

opportunity came knocking. As

16:28

I mentioned, eighteen ninety two marked

16:30

the four hundredth anniversary of

16:32

Columbus's historic voyage. Civic

16:35

organizations floated the idea of

16:37

a national public school celebration

16:41

and the Youth's Companion was

16:43

chosen by a committee of educators

16:46

to create the actual program that

16:48

schools would follow during the celebration.

16:51

If the Youth's Companion pulled this off,

16:54

it would sell a crazy amount

16:56

of magazines.

16:59

So the idea is that the Youth's Companion

17:01

will propose a celebratory

17:04

program that will take place

17:06

on a particular weekend, and

17:08

there will literally be like a sequence of activities

17:11

or events or programs that communities

17:14

can adopt and participate in. And

17:17

one of those is going to be bringing kids

17:19

together at schools and listenings

17:22

who has some addresses and some speeches,

17:24

and then celebrating by reciting

17:27

a national pledge.

17:30

A national pledge that was

17:32

the kicker. James Upham was insistent

17:35

that the Youth's Companion program include

17:38

a salute to the flag. He

17:40

tried to write one himself a bunch of

17:42

times, but gave up as

17:45

the date of the celebration neared.

17:47

Upham turned in desperation to his

17:49

junior employee, Francis Bellamy.

17:53

That's how Bellamy finds himself cloistered

17:55

in his office on a hot August night

17:57

in eighteen ninety two with a deadline

18:00

looming for the most important part

18:02

of the Columbus Day program, the

18:04

Salute to the Flag. Bellamy

18:07

sweats it out for a while before finally

18:10

having his first breakthrough. One

18:12

word allegiance. It

18:15

means loyalty, faithfulness, obedience,

18:18

everything. Bellamy wants the flag to

18:20

inspire in immigrant school children,

18:23

and just like that, six fateful

18:25

words appear at the top of the page.

18:29

Here's what Bellamy wrote about that moment,

18:31

looking back decades later.

18:35

I pledge allegiance to my flag when

18:38

those first words looked up at me from the

18:40

scratch paper. The start appeared

18:43

promising.

18:45

On a roll.

18:45

Now Bellamy wrestles with the next part.

18:48

Should it be country, nation or

18:50

republic?

18:52

Republic? One because it distinguished

18:54

the form of government chosen by the fathers

18:57

and established by the Revolution.

18:59

The true reason for allegiance to

19:01

the flag is the republic for which

19:04

it stands.

19:05

Next, Bellamy turned to his American

19:08

heroes, George Washington, Alexander

19:11

Hamilton, and Abraham Lincoln.

19:13

How would they characterize their beloved

19:16

republic in the wake of a

19:18

wretching Civil war.

19:20

After many attempts, all that

19:22

pictured struggle reduced itself

19:24

to three words. One nation,

19:27

indivisible, to reach that compact

19:29

brevity was, as I recall,

19:32

the most arduous phase of the task, and

19:34

the discarded experiments at phrasing overflowed

19:37

the scrap basket.

19:39

Sure he was laying it on a little

19:41

thick but with those words

19:44

locked in One Nation, indivisible,

19:47

Bellamy searches.

19:48

For a closer What

19:50

doctrines, then, would everybody agree upon?

19:52

As the basis of Americanism, Liberty

19:55

and justice were surely basic, were undebatable,

19:58

and were all that any one nation could handle

20:01

if they were exercised for all. They

20:03

involved the spirit of equality and fraternity.

20:06

So that final with liberty and justice

20:08

for all came with a cheering rush

20:11

as a clincher. It seemed to assemble the

20:13

past and to promise the future.

20:15

That I remember is how the sequence of

20:17

the ideas grew, and how the words

20:19

were found. On that August night, with

20:21

the cooling Boston seabreeze coming softly

20:24

through the open window of my room.

20:28

After two hours of writing, Bellamy

20:31

had his twenty two word national

20:33

creed. I pledge allegiance

20:36

to my flag and the Republic

20:38

for which it stands, One nation,

20:41

indivisible, with liberty and

20:43

justice for all. Bellamy

20:45

proudly presents his pledge to Upham.

20:48

His reaction, Francis,

20:51

You've written a thing which I believe will

20:53

live long after you and I are

20:55

dead.

20:56

When the day of the Columbus celebration

20:59

finally arrives, Bellamy is

21:01

there to witness the very first reciting

21:04

of his Pledge of Allegiance at

21:06

a boss in high school. He's floored

21:09

when four thousand students roar

21:12

his words in unison. At

21:14

the top of the episode, I said, we have

21:16

no idea who wrote the Pledge of Allegiance,

21:19

yet we just listened to Francis Bellamy's

21:22

word by word account of how

21:24

he wrote it. So case

21:26

closed, right, Well,

21:28

that depends who you ask.

21:33

Francis Bellamy insisted

21:35

that he wrote it in August

21:37

eighteen ninety two, had a very specific

21:40

story about that, and this

21:42

is a crucial point. He swore

21:45

out legal affidavits telling

21:48

a detailed story of how he originated

21:51

it in August eighteen ninety two.

21:53

But the evidence that we now have

21:56

really suggests that he falsified

21:58

the entire story. I think

22:00

it's impossible to

22:02

read all the evidence and not conclude.

22:04

That turns out

22:07

Bellamy's detailed story of a

22:09

sweltering August night, hunched over

22:11

his desk with an impossible assignment,

22:14

The arduous search for the right words,

22:16

the Eureka moment spurred by patriotic

22:19

reverence to the founding fathers, Well,

22:23

it might all be a big,

22:25

fat lie.

22:31

Cherryvale, Kansas, is a tiny

22:34

farming town about one hundred miles

22:36

outside of Wichita, a flat

22:38

sea of corn stretching to the horizon.

22:41

I'm assuming I've never been. The

22:44

year is eighteen ninety, a full two

22:46

years before Francis Bellamy says

22:48

he wrote the Pledge of Allegiance On a

22:51

hot August night in eighteen ninety

22:53

two. In small town

22:55

Cherryvale, the eighth grade teacher

22:57

gives her students an assignment. Like

23:00

most of her students, the teacher is an

23:03

avid reader of the Youth's Companion,

23:06

the magazine bell And he works at. And

23:08

the Companion has just announced

23:11

a writing contest for kids. They

23:13

call it the Flag and the Public Schools.

23:17

The teacher encourages her students

23:19

to enter. She tells them to

23:21

write a few sentences expressing

23:23

the thoughts that run through their heads when

23:26

they salute the American flag. One

23:28

winning entry would be chosen from each

23:31

state, and along with bragging

23:33

rights, their school would get a shiny

23:36

new American flag as a prize.

23:40

Not all of the eighth graders take the assignment

23:42

seriously, but Frank does.

23:45

Frank is a naturally patriotic

23:48

kit. He likes to read stories

23:50

about George Washington and the American

23:52

Revolution. The flag really

23:55

means something to him. He wants

23:57

to become a soldier someday, but

23:59

like any thirteen year old, he struggles

24:02

to find the right words to express his

24:04

feelings. After weeks

24:06

of writeaceading, and rewriting, Frank

24:09

finally has something he's proud of.

24:11

Before mailing his submission off to

24:14

the magazine, he reads it out loud

24:16

to himself while saluting an imaginary

24:19

American flag.

24:20

I pledge allegiance to my flag and

24:22

the Republic for which it stands, one

24:25

nation indivisible with

24:27

liberty and justice for all.

24:30

Sound familiar. Keep

24:32

in mind this is eighteen ninety

24:35

in Kansas and Frank is

24:37

thirteen years old. Months

24:39

go by, but Frank doesn't hear anything

24:42

from the Youth's companion. He's

24:44

disappointed, but figures the magazine

24:46

must have received a ton of submissions.

24:49

Maybe his just wasn't good enough. More

24:52

time passes two years

24:54

to be exact. Now it's eighteen

24:57

ninety two. School kids across

24:59

the country are preparing for the

25:01

national public school celebration

25:04

of Columbus Day. Frank

25:06

is excited. He picks up

25:08

the official program published

25:10

in The Youth's Companion, and

25:13

he can't believe his eyes. There

25:18

it is the very same

25:20

pledge he wrote two years ago

25:22

in eighth grade. Word for word,

25:25

Frank is blown away. How

25:27

did this happen? Did he win the

25:29

contest but the magazine couldn't find

25:31

him? His own words are in

25:34

a national magazine. But

25:36

why hadn't he heard from the Companion?

25:39

There must have been some kind of mistake.

25:41

Frank rushes home after school and

25:44

writes a letter to The Youth's Companion

25:46

explaining everything. How

25:48

he submitted his pledge for the contest

25:51

two years ago, how there must

25:53

have been some confusion because

25:55

no one told him that he'd won. He

25:58

couldn't wait to tell his parents.

26:00

They'd be so proud. A

26:03

few weeks later, a letter finally

26:05

arrives from the magazine. Frank

26:07

tears it open, holding his breath as

26:09

he reads the reply.

26:11

All essays, statements, or written matter submitted

26:13

in this contest, she'll remain and is the

26:16

property of the Youth's Companion magazine.

26:19

What that's it? No

26:22

congratulations, not even a

26:24

flag. Didn't they understand

26:26

that he had written the pledge of allegiance.

26:30

That's the last that Frank hears

26:32

from the Youth's Companion, But

26:36

despite his disappointment, he doesn't

26:38

lose his love for his country. In

26:40

eighteen ninety eight, he achieves his dream

26:43

of becoming a soldier. He enlists

26:45

in the army to fight in the Spanish American

26:48

War. While serving in the Philippines,

26:50

he contracts tuberculosis. Frank

26:53

makes it home but never gets his

26:55

health back. It's a struggle, and

26:58

he dies a few months shy of

27:00

his fortieth birthday. Frank

27:03

is buried in the Fairview Cemetery

27:05

back in Cherryvale, Casas. His

27:08

gravestone says nothing about

27:10

the pledge, just his service

27:12

in the war and his name, Frank

27:16

Bellamy.

27:18

Hold on, hold on, hold on. This

27:20

kid's name is Frank Bellamy. Yep,

27:23

as in Francis Bellamy.

27:26

Spelled exactly the same, but

27:29

it's not.

27:29

The same person. Somehow, Frank

27:32

isn't short for Francis.

27:34

Nope, Frank Bellamy is a

27:36

completely different person than

27:38

Francis Bellamy. They're unrelated.

27:42

They just happen to have the same

27:44

name, and they both claim

27:46

that they wrote the Pledge of Allegiance.

27:49

That's insane, completely

27:51

insane, but it's true.

27:53

Just ask Fred Shapiro.

27:57

The story really gets astonishing

28:00

when you mentioned Frank E.

28:02

Bellamy.

28:03

If you look in Kansas newspapers

28:06

and Kansas Historical Society

28:09

website and resolutions

28:11

that have been passed by the Kansas Legislature.

28:14

In Kansas, they have long believed

28:16

that Frank E. Bellamy

28:19

wrote the Pledge of Allegiance.

28:21

Fred is the editor of the New

28:23

Yale Book of Quotations, and

28:25

he is the authoritative

28:28

source on who said what when.

28:31

As Fred correctly points out, the

28:33

state of Kansas has always backed

28:36

a different Bellamy, thirteen

28:38

year old Frank Elmer Bellamy,

28:40

as the true author of the Pledge of

28:43

Allegiance. As recently

28:45

as twenty fourteen, the Kansas

28:47

State Senate passed a resolution

28:50

to quote recognize and

28:52

celebrate Cherryvale, Kansas, and

28:55

Frank Bellamy's authorship of the Pledge

28:57

of Allegiance. In nineteen

28:59

ninety six, the citizens of Cherryvale

29:02

erected a memorial with a

29:04

photo of Frank Bellamy. A small

29:07

plaque explains how Frank, as

29:09

a school kid, composed the

29:12

nation's best known patriotic

29:14

statement. But could

29:16

it be true? Could an eighth grader

29:19

from Kansas have written the original

29:21

pledge in eighteen ninety and

29:24

could Francis Bellamy and The

29:26

Youth's Companion have stolen

29:29

Frank's pledge and claimed it as

29:31

their own. Fred Shapiro

29:33

thinks it's possible.

29:37

They did have a contest. I've looked

29:39

at the old issues of The Youth's

29:41

Companion. They definitely had a

29:43

contest. The core Frank Bellamy

29:46

argument is that he sent it in as part

29:48

of this contest, which definitely did happen

29:51

with Youth's Companion. So the part

29:53

of the anti Francis

29:55

Bellamy argument may be that if Frankie

29:58

Bellamy did send it in, that Francis

30:00

spell Me plagiarized

30:02

it and wouldn't show

30:05

anyone the original mission

30:08

and later claimed it as his

30:10

own. That's the conspiracy

30:12

theory to deny

30:14

Frankie bell and his priority

30:17

if he was indeed the first.

30:21

And if it is a conspiracy

30:23

theory, it's a pretty juicy one.

30:26

Big City Magazine guy steals

30:28

credit for the pledge of allegiance from farm

30:30

Kit in Kansas, who has the exact

30:33

same name. But does

30:35

this theory hold up to scrutiny.

30:38

To get some answers, let's take

30:40

a closer look at the writing contest

30:42

held by the Youth's companion, Fred

30:44

Shapiro is right. In the

30:46

January ninth, eighteen ninety

30:49

issue of the magazine, there's a call

30:51

for submissions to a contest called

30:54

the Flag and the Public Schools.

30:57

But something is a little off.

30:59

The description of the writing contest

31:01

given in the magazine is really

31:04

different from the assignment supposedly

31:07

given by Frank's teacher. The

31:09

ad in the magazine says.

31:12

Students are invited to write an essay

31:14

of not more than six hundred words in length

31:16

on the patriotic influence of the American

31:18

flag when raised over the public schools.

31:22

Huh okay. This is very clearly

31:25

an essay contest with a

31:27

six hundred word limit. It

31:29

seems a little weird that Frank Bellamy would

31:31

have submitted a single twenty three word

31:34

sentence. To be fair, maybe

31:36

the pledge portion was a part of

31:39

a longer essay about the importance

31:41

of flags in schools. We don't

31:43

know. Unfortunately, there

31:45

are no documents or other tangible

31:48

proof that Frank Bellamy ever

31:50

submitted a pledge to the Youth's Companion

31:53

in eighteen ninety

31:56

fast forward to nineteen fifty seven.

31:59

Believe it or not, the Library of Congress

32:01

decided to get to the bottom of this.

32:03

They assigned a researcher to investigate

32:06

the various authorship claims for the pledge

32:09

of allegiance. James Upham, Bellamy's

32:11

boss, was also in the running, but

32:13

we don't have time to fall down that particular

32:16

rabbit hole. The Library of Congress

32:18

investigation, all one hundred and forty

32:20

eight pages of it, concluded

32:23

that the most likely author

32:25

of the pledge was Francis Bellamy

32:28

of the Youth's Companion. While

32:30

the report acknowledged some doubts

32:33

about Bellamy's account, it decided,

32:35

quote.

32:36

Unless one is prepared to believe that

32:38

Francis Bellamy was a deliberate

32:41

and consciousless liar, the mass

32:43

of his testimony is overwhelmingly

32:45

in his favor.

32:47

So where does that leave little Frank

32:50

Bellamy? In a short paragraph

32:52

in the report, the Library of Congress

32:55

dismissed the kid from Kansas

32:57

as nothing more than a plagiarist. It

33:00

alleged that Frank quote lifted

33:03

the text from the Columbus Day Program

33:06

and attempted to claim it as his own.

33:08

So much for Frank E. Bellamy,

33:11

it seemed. But remember

33:13

the Library of Congress report was

33:15

written in nineteen fifty seven.

33:18

That was sixty seven years ago. Would

33:21

you believe that new evidence

33:23

has come to light that puts

33:25

young Frank Bellamy back

33:27

in the running. A

33:30

few minutes ago, I said there were no

33:33

surviving documents that corroborated

33:35

Frank Bellamy's story that

33:37

he wrote the Pledge of Allegiance in eighteen

33:40

ninety while a school kid in

33:42

Kansas. That's not quite

33:45

the case anymore.

33:47

Barry Popic is

33:49

a retired attorney who

33:52

has done fantastic

33:55

research on all kinds of questions

33:58

of priority origination

34:01

for American history.

34:03

Barry is probably the greatest

34:06

NewSpace paper researcher in

34:08

the world, and this is a fantastic

34:10

discovery and his part.

34:13

In twenty twenty two, Barry Poppeck

34:16

was searching newspapers dot com

34:18

for the earliest published mention

34:21

of the Pledge of Allegiance when

34:23

he made a wild discovery.

34:26

On May twenty first, eighteen ninety

34:29

two, a Kansas newspaper

34:31

called the Ellis County Republican

34:33

ran a tiny story on page

34:36

four. It's a dispatch from

34:38

the nearby town of Victoria, Kansas.

34:41

It reads, on April thirtieth,

34:43

our schools closed with a flag raising.

34:46

The pupils had been drilled to make a military

34:49

salute and to repeat the following

34:51

words while holding the hand at arm's

34:53

length toward the flag. I

34:56

pledge allegiance to my flag and

34:58

the Republic for which it stands, one

35:01

nation inseparable with liberty

35:03

and justice for all.

35:07

Francis Bellamy, the adult magazine

35:10

editor, swore up and down

35:12

that he wrote the pledge of allegiance in

35:15

August of eighteen ninety two. He

35:18

literally swore multiple legal

35:20

affidavits to that effect. But

35:22

here, buried in a small

35:25

town Kansas newspaper is

35:27

irrefutable proof that

35:29

he didn't. The article says

35:32

that on April thirtieth, eighteen ninety

35:34

two, school kids in Kansas

35:37

recited an almost identical

35:39

pledge that's more than three

35:42

months before Francis

35:44

Bellamy says that he wrote the pledge.

35:47

Who could forget to quote that August

35:49

night with the cooling Boston Sea breeze

35:51

coming softly through the open window of

35:54

my room. What's more,

35:56

the only difference between Bellamy's

35:58

pledge and the one that predates it in

36:01

a Kansas newspaper is a

36:03

single word inseparable

36:05

instead of india visible.

36:08

How do we explain the fact that

36:10

the exact same words virtually

36:13

appeared several months earlier

36:15

in a Kansas newspaper. And the

36:17

thing is in his affidavits,

36:20

Francis belling me. He didn't just say

36:22

yeah, I think I wrote it in eighteen

36:24

ninety two. He told us very

36:26

specific story where his boss asked

36:29

him to come up with a pledge and he sat

36:31

down and it was a hot day in August.

36:34

This is not just a question of dates. This

36:37

affects the question of authorship.

36:39

How could Francis Beelmy be the

36:42

author?

36:43

Good question, Fred, I've got

36:45

another one for you. This article

36:48

was published in a small town Kansas

36:50

newspaper. You know who else was

36:52

from a small town in Kansas. After

36:56

all this time, after being ignored

36:58

by the youth's companion and

37:01

being labeled a pleagiarist by the

37:03

Library of Congress, could

37:05

thirteen year old Frank E. Bellamy

37:08

from Cherry Vale, Kansas have

37:10

been telling the truth. Did

37:13

a kid really write the

37:15

Pledge of Allegiance?

37:17

I can't say that Frankie Bellamy

37:20

was the originator, but he may

37:22

have been. The fact that he was the only person

37:24

from Kansas, and that this this strong

37:26

link with Kansas, suggests

37:29

that he may have been the author.

37:33

In a few years, Fred plans to

37:35

publish a revised and updated

37:38

edition of the New Yale's Book of Quotations.

37:41

He's still on the fence about what to do

37:44

with the entry for the Pledge of Allegiance.

37:46

He always attributed it to Francis

37:49

Bellamy, editor at the Youth's

37:51

Companion, just like everybody

37:53

else. Now Fred

37:55

is considering changing the author

37:58

to anonymous. A

38:00

long forgotten article in a long

38:03

forgotten Kansas newspaper has

38:05

called everything into question.

38:08

Fred can't read Francis Bellamy's

38:11

overwrought descriptions of that

38:13

hot August night in eighteen ninety

38:16

two, the overflowing waste

38:18

paper basket, Bellamy racking

38:21

his brains for inspiration, the

38:23

words finally coming to him one

38:26

by one, each imbued

38:28

with immense patriotic significance.

38:31

Fred can't read all of that without wondering,

38:34

was it an elaborate fiction. Did

38:37

Francis Bellamy make the whole story

38:40

up? And if so, who

38:43

really wrote the Pledge of Allegiance.

38:47

It's a complex story. I

38:49

can't say for sure who the author

38:52

was, but I do feel that I can

38:54

say that it was not Francis

38:56

Bellamy, and that it

38:59

appears to me that he essentially

39:02

fabricated a detailed

39:04

story of how he wrote it, which

39:07

was not accurate.

39:10

Today, in schools across America,

39:12

kids start each day by standing

39:15

up, hand over heart and

39:17

reciting the Pledge of Allegiance.

39:20

I pledge allegiance to the flag

39:23

of the United States of America,

39:25

and do the Republic for which it stands,

39:28

one nationship under God, indivisible

39:31

with liberty and justice for all.

39:34

The Pledge has gone through some changes since

39:36

it debuted more than one hundred and thirty

39:39

years ago. The biggest was the addition

39:41

of under God. That was

39:43

President Dwight D. Eisenhower's

39:46

idea. He wanted to stick it to

39:48

those godless commis in the Soviet

39:50

Union, so under God was

39:52

added in nineteen fifty four. But

39:55

despite a few new words, the job

39:57

of the Pledge is still very much

39:59

the same as it was in eighteen

40:02

ninety two to instill

40:04

a spirit of patriotism in the

40:06

next generation. Meanwhile,

40:08

we're still arguing about what it means

40:11

to be an American until

40:13

we find an answer, We'll keep saying

40:15

the Pledge. We'll probably

40:17

never know who really wrote it,

40:20

but we can take its message to heart.

40:23

Wouldn't it be nice if this nation

40:25

was a little less divided and more

40:28

indivisible, and that liberty

40:30

and justice were truly for all.

40:33

One of those Bellamy boys was onto

40:36

something, unless, of course,

40:38

they were both liars. Okay,

40:42

Saren, I feel like you already have casting

40:45

in mind for this one. Yes, our go to casting

40:47

director.

40:48

You are one hundred percent right. I'm going to put on my Hollywood

40:50

hat for a second. Okay, imagine the movie version

40:53

of this you go to see it, because on the

40:55

poster and in the trailers you have as

40:57

Frank Bellamy, the older one, the adult

40:59

Paul Rudd, and as Kid Bellamy,

41:02

it's the kid from Young Sheldon.

41:05

Yeah, get Young Sheldon here.

41:07

That's perfect, right, He's got the vibe you want

41:09

for this.

41:10

Yeah, a little poem writing child,

41:12

perfect.

41:13

Totally sensitive, loves America. He's in the

41:15

heartland, looks good in a bow tie

41:18

exactly. Little Geeky really cares.

41:20

I'd see that movie. I would also see

41:22

the off Broadway

41:24

play version where one person plays

41:27

both Frank and young Frank Bellamy

41:29

and you just kind of go with it and and

41:32

lean into the insanity

41:34

that they both

41:37

yes, yes, and if he's unavailable,

41:39

Paul Dano, it's

41:42

perfect. How about very

41:44

special character? Did anyone jump

41:46

out at you to to

41:48

anoint this episode?

41:50

I'm gonna throw out Fred Shapiro while

41:53

you're thinking yes, from the Book

41:55

of Quotations, because keeping

41:57

this alive one hundred thirty

42:00

years later, good for him, giving

42:02

us a nice hook to bring it back to the present

42:04

day as well.

42:06

And he's like the snow dot Com of

42:08

quotes. We need people like him to make sure we

42:10

get these things right. It's like, Okay, here's the real

42:12

story people. Did you know Dana? Do you do you have one?

42:14

Because I have one? But it's a little bit of a theory.

42:17

I want your theory please.

42:18

Okay. Mine is the anonymous

42:21

woman who I believe actually wrote this pledge.

42:23

And you're wondering, Zaren, I didn't hear any woman in this

42:25

Where are you coming with this?

42:26

Right?

42:27

Wow, here's how

42:29

it goes ready. I think both Bellamies

42:31

were plagiarists because the adult Frank Bellamy

42:33

clearly he played dress from kid Bellamy and Kansas

42:35

right. But the newspapers dot com guy, he finds

42:38

it two years earlier than that.

42:40

Kid Bellamy apparently allegedly wrote his

42:42

pledge of allegiance in a nearby town in Kansas.

42:44

Right now, imagine a school marm is going

42:46

between these two towns. She's the one who wrote

42:49

the pledge of allegiance. She teaches these Kansas

42:51

kids. One day, Kid Bellamy sees the contest,

42:54

he pilfers her pledge. She sends it

42:56

in. Editor Frank Bellamy's like, oh this is

42:58

amazing. He pilfers it from the kid. Both

43:00

Bellambi's they steal the pledge of allegiance from

43:02

some anonymous school marm in Kansas.

43:04

It's like Virginia Wolf's goold quote about the

43:07

women, which is you know, for most of history anonymous

43:09

was a woman. Did you point out, Jason the Yale

43:11

Book of Quotations they were going to consider listing

43:14

dude is anonymous, And I think dude is a woman

43:16

because it's anonymous. I bet a woman

43:18

wrote it. That's my theory.

43:20

I love this theory. And just a round of

43:22

applause on behalf of all women.

43:25

Thank you.

43:26

I would have Elizabeth Moss play that.

43:27

Woman in our film, Yes amazing.

43:30

One other quick thing that came to mind

43:33

while listening to this one.

43:36

We've talked about my dated cultural references

43:38

in the past. The

43:40

Sports Illustrated football phone was

43:42

a big one growing up, and commercials

43:45

they would try to get people to subscribe

43:47

to Sports Illustrated by promising

43:50

this phone that looked like a football

43:54

in this story, like the American flag is

43:56

the original football?

43:59

Og football phone? Oh my god, good

44:01

connection. Wow.

44:03

Yeah.

44:04

It was such like a leveraged buy for

44:06

the schools too. I mean like it's like, there, let's

44:08

get these kids out there. It's like pushing the chocolate

44:10

bars. It's like, though, like these kids, how are you gonna

44:12

say no to a kid? Let's make him part

44:14

of capitalism now, Jason, are you upset

44:16

about the death of Sports Illustrated?

44:18

I mean I'm upset whenever

44:20

I hear the entire publications

44:23

are laying off all their staff. Just

44:25

uh, just a very

44:28

sad. It feels like it's a little bit of a

44:30

long time coming. It's been a slow death,

44:33

uh time and time again, so

44:36

hopefully they get back on their feet sometime. I'm

44:38

worried it's gonna be like Toys r Us

44:40

which like nine years ago.

44:43

They bring it back every year and there's

44:45

some now it's like it's in a corner of Macy's

44:48

or it's there's one store and

44:50

one mall in Houston and uh

44:53

so, yes, I would say it was

44:55

always in my house growing up as a kid. We

44:57

didn't have a football phone though.

44:58

I see.

44:59

I think that's the mistake. They need to bring back the football

45:01

phone or whatever would be the modern equivalent. That's going

45:03

to save SI because they had the flag

45:05

boom, we need a football phone.

45:07

I think that wraps it up for another very

45:10

special episode.

45:11

Thanks for listening.

45:14

Very Special Episodes is made by some

45:16

very special people. This episode

45:18

was written by Dave Rouse. Our

45:21

producer is Josh Fisher. Editing

45:24

and sound design by Jonathan Washington,

45:28

Mixing and mastering by Beheid Fraser.

45:31

Very Special Episodes is hosted by Danish

45:33

Schwartz, Zaren Burnette and

45:35

me Jason English.

45:38

Original music by Elise McCoy.

45:41

Our story editor is Aaron Edwards.

45:45

Research in fact checking by Austin Thompson.

45:48

Show logo by Lucy Quintania.

45:52

I'd like to thank our excellent voice actors,

45:54

especially two of my three daughters,

45:56

Kate and Juliette English. We

45:59

couldn't meet Charlotte's asking price,

46:01

but good work Kate and Juliette. And

46:04

today is Juliette's birthday.

46:06

Happy Birthday.

46:07

No better way to spend your birthday than

46:09

reading the Pledge of Allegiance multiple times

46:12

into a podcast microphone. So

46:15

Special Day, Very

46:17

Special Episodes is a production of iHeart

46:20

Podcasts.

Unlock more with Podchaser Pro

  • Audience Insights
  • Contact Information
  • Demographics
  • Charts
  • Sponsor History
  • and More!
Pro Features