April 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerAmerican Village – Alabama Semiquincentennial Kickoff
On April 19, 1776, British Redcoats marched on Lexington and Concord, Massachusetts. In this first battle of the American Revolution, Massachusetts colonists defied British authority, outnumbered, they nevertheless outfought the Redcoats.
History does not tell us who fired the first shot, “the shot heard round the world,” but it triggered events that led to a lengthy war the American colonists fought to earn their independence.
On April 19, 2026, Alabama will kickoff a celebration of the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence – America’s 250th Birthday. The kickoff will begin at the replica Concord Bridge at American Village in Montevallo.
April 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyerApril 18, 2025
Two Lights For Liberty
The events that sparked the War for Independence outside Boston in April of 1775 are immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” with the famous line about One if by land, Two if by sea.
Today, 250 years later, we gather together as a state to plan ways to ensure that not only are those events remembered, but more importantly to ensure that not just the “what” of “what happened” is remembered but the “why”. We are called not to remember history just for history’s sake, but to make it relevant, meaningful, and engaging for the public today.
The famous signal from the North Church’s steeple that night in ’75, One if by land, Two if by sea, was a signal meant to shine across the water to others on the opposite shore so that they could carry the message forward – not just as a back-up for Paul Revere, but to make sure that the message got spread as far and as wide as possible. And just like then, we have that same calling today – to spread a message calling on everyone in the country to join together in support of one another, to serve each other, our neighbors, and our communities.
On April 18, 2025, we’re calling for two lights to be displayed in every statehouse, business and home across the country as a reminder that the message of light shining out in the darkness is not just something that mattered back then – it’s something that matters today and for tomorrow.
Download the flyer