Federal officials ordered the National Mall cleared Saturday evening, sending thousands of visitors scrambling into museums, subway platforms and government buildings just as America’s 250th birthday celebration was supposed to reach full swing.
The warning arrived shortly after 7 p.m. at Washington’s Great American State Fair, where severe weather forced an abrupt halt to festivities that organizers had spent the better part of a year planning. Crowds packed into the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center, some collapsing into chairs, others simply sitting on the floor to escape the heat that had already pushed past triple digits across much of the East Coast.
Washington wasn’t alone. Hartford, Connecticut, canceled its celebrations outright. So did Harrisburg and Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. Boston briefly herded fireworks spectators into shelter before resuming its concert once the danger passed. Philadelphia ordered its own evacuation. New York and Pittsburgh pushed their fireworks displays to later start times, betting the weather would cooperate by nightfall.
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By the time skies cleared over the capital, President Trump had waited hours for his moment. He finally took the stage around 11:15 p.m. Eastern, more than four hours after the evacuation order, to declare the milestone “one of the most joyous and glorious milestones of all time.”
Veterans stood behind him as he spoke, including several who served in World War II and one of the first Black officers to command a Special Forces team in combat in Vietnam. They stood beneath flags carrying their own weight of history — one that had draped Abraham Lincoln’s casket, another that flew aboard the Wright brothers’ first plane.
Lee Greenwood, a fixture at Trump rallies, warmed up the delayed crowd with “God Bless the USA” before the introduction.
“We will always be on top,” Trump told the assembled crowd. “We will never let our country fall.”
Three hundred miles north, the weather cooperated more generously. Tall ships with white sails and rigged masts circled the Statue of Liberty and pushed up the Hudson River in a procession deliberately built to echo the bicentennial fanfare of 1976. Forty-three vessels in total made the passage, trailed overhead by a stealth bomber, the Navy’s Blue Angels, and France’s Patrouille de France acrobatic team, its jets streaking red, white and blue smoke over New York Harbor.
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Oona Moore biked roughly a mile from her home in Jersey City to catch the show from the waterfront.
“We saw the tall ships and we saw the planes, you know, all different manner of military aircraft,” she said, adding she’d never seen so much of it converge in the sky at once.
Philadelphia’s celebration collided with something else entirely: a World Cup knockout match between France and Paraguay, kicking off at Philadelphia Stadium with its own Independence Day tribute woven in beforehand. Fireworks had already started cracking by midday near Independence Hall, blocks from where delegates to the Second Continental Congress adopted the Declaration of Independence 250 years earlier. Carlos Alban made the trip from Chicago just for the match.
“It’s one big party in here,” he said, describing a Founding Father costume he’d spotted wandering the stadium parking lot.
Not every scene involved crowds or spectacle. At Mount Vernon, George Washington’s former estate, a smaller group stood with eyes closed and hands over hearts for the national anthem, having just taken the Oath of Allegiance to become American citizens on the exact anniversary the country was marking.
Back in Washington, before the storm warning forced everyone indoors, Tina Hale watched three of her grandchildren dip their hands into a museum fountain while military jets thundered overhead. She pointed toward the sky.
“If that doesn’t make you proud to be an American,” she said, letting the sentence trail into the noise of the flyover.
In Phoenix, where no storm interrupted anything, brothers Steven and JayLn Dortch tried to start a new tradition of their own with a cookout at Granada Park. JayLn, 23, said he draws hope from a generation of young Americans willing to think for themselves rather than accept what older generations tell them at face value. He added that the country can’t lose sight of the people who show up to work every day and keep it running.
Between the evacuations, the delayed remarks, and the ordinary families gathered around a park grill three time zones away, the country’s 250th birthday unfolded less as a single unified spectacle than as dozens of separate ones — interrupted, rescheduled, sweated through, and, in most places, finished anyway.