Coffee with the County - America’s Birthday Gift
There’s a movie I used to watch with my siblings during my teenage years. It really had no deep value, other than sheer entertainment. However, the movie still rings relevant in my present-day conversations with my siblings because of one line that we often attempt to mimic. In a nasally, high-pitched tone, one of the main characters is captured saying, “Happy birthday, America!” And on every fourth of July, in the same nasally voice, my siblings and I recite that line at least once. It’s become a tradition.
What is ironic about the line is that, while the movie is in no way truly patriotic, the phrase has stuck. Mostly joking, always consistent, it has become our family’s way of marking Independence Day–a reminder that even lighthearted traditions can carry deeper meaning over time.
In 2026, that line takes on a much bigger significance. The United States will mark its Semiquincentennial–America’s 250th birthday. Known nationally as America 250, this once-in-a-generation milestone commemorates the signing of the Declaration of Independence and the ideals that shaped a new nation. As U.S. Semiquincentennial Commission Chair Rosie Rios notes, “America’s 250th Anniversary is about more than reflecting on our past–it’s about honoring the contributions of individuals who built this country, the innovations that put this country on the map and a man on the moon, and imagining what the next 250 years might look like for our children and the generations to come.”
In essence, America 250 is about honoring the past, convening and collaborating in the present, and building for the future. It’s a celebration–but also an invitation. An invitation to reflect on the remarkable gift of freedom we’ve inherited, and the responsibility that comes with it.
That invitation feels especially timely as we just commemorated President’s Day this past Monday, February 16, a federal holiday rooted in the legacy of George Washington. Washington didn’t just become our first president; he led the Continental Army to victory in the American Revolutionary War, helping secure the independence that would later be formalized through the Declaration of Independence. His leadership laid the foundation for a nation built on representative government, civic duty, and shared sacrifice.
The freedoms outlined in that Declaration–life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness–were radical ideas in 1776. They remain powerful today. But they were never meant to be passive gifts. They require participation. Stewardship. Engagement. Freedom gives us the ability to be individuals–entrepreneurs, innovators, workers, parents, neighbors. Civic responsibility reminds us that we are also part of something larger: a community, a county, a state, a nation. One body of Americans, bound together not by uniformity, but by shared values and mutual accountability.
That’s where this anniversary matters most–right here, at the local level. Policy decisions shape how we live, how we work, how we grow businesses, educate our children, build infrastructure, and care for one another. Civic engagement isn’t reserved for election cycles or distant capitals. It shows up in school board meetings, town councils, county commissioners, chambers of commerce, nonprofit boards, and community conversations.
As we look ahead to America’s 250th birthday, my hope is that we don’t just celebrate with fireworks and festivities–though those have their place–but that we recommit to the work of citizenship. That we link arms with neighbors. That we stay informed. That we engage respectfully. That we understand how policy, collaboration, and participation shape the vitality of our communities and our local economy.
America 250 isn’t just about looking back. It’s about asking what kind of country–and what kind of communities–we want to help build next. So maybe this year, when we say, “Happy birthday, America,” we say it with a little more intention. With gratitude for the freedoms we’ve been given–and a renewed commitment to use them well.
To learn more about the America 250 movement, visit www.america250.org.





