Traveling
Tuesday: Vermont Declares War
Vermont has a history of being independently-minded. A
long history. Before it was our fourteenth state, Vermont was an independent
nation. You read that correctly. Not recognized by the Continental Congress as
a state, but rather the “New Hampshire Grants,” as it was referred to, Vermont
didn’t join the union until after the Revolutionary War. In January 1777,
delegates from twenty-eight towns met and declared independence from the
jurisdictions and land claims of both the British colony of Quebec and the
American states of NH and NY, thereby making it a separate nation.
Fast forward one hundred and sixty-three years later.
The United States didn’t officially enter WWII until
the day after the attack at Pearl Harbor, December 8, 1941. However, by the
then Vermont had been involved in the war effort for over a year. How and why
did they manage that?
You have to follow the money to get the full story.
It came to the attention of the Vermont legislature
that the families of servicemen struggled to make ends meet because of the low
level of pay they received. An average salary of $70 per month and average
expenses of $62, left very little money for extras or unanticipated costs.
What to do?
The Legislature wanted to award a bonus of some sort
to Vermonters called to serve, but their hands were tied because of the state’s
laws. To grant the bonus, lawmakers would have had to vote for a new tax in
peacetime in order to appropriate the funds. However, they could vote a bonus during a time of armed conflict. Fortunately for Vermont, on September 11,
1940, President Roosevelt ordered the U.S. Navy to shoot first if it
encountered German warships entering U.S. waters. By interpreting this military
order to meet the letter of the law, Vermont effectively declared war on
Germany, and the Legislature quickly voted in a $10-a-month bonus for draftees.
Newspaper praised the action saying, “The rest of the
nation, perhaps, may be satisfied by assurances and euphemisms of our national
leaders to the effect that we are not at war and have no intention of entering
upon a shooting war with the Nazis or their Axis henchmen. But not so Vermont.”
Tune in next Tuesday to find out how Vermonters served during the war.
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Love’s
Belief is now available for pre-order!
Midwife Pia Hertz and her mother Sabine have been
delivering babies long before the Nazis came to power. Now, the Third Reich has
implemented mandates that require Jewish babies and other “undesirables” to be
killed as part of The Final Solution. Is Pia’s new faith in Christ strong
enough to defy the laws of man?
Despite the agony of the injury at the Battle of Drøbak
Sound that took his arm, Dieter Fertig is relieved he’s no longer part of
Hitler’s army. He returns to Berlin and discovers Jews are being deported by
the thousands. When he realizes the Nuremburg Laws require his best friend’s
baby girl to be killed, he must find a way to spirit the child out of Germany
before the Nazis discover her existence.
Inspired by the biblical story of Shiprah and Puah,
the midwives who saved Jewish babies during Pharaoh’s reign, Love’s Belief shows how one person’s
actions can change the world.
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