Loading Events

« All Events

Naturalization Ceremony & Patrick Henry’s 290th Birthday

May 29 @ 11:00 am

Details

  • Date: May 29
  • Time:
    11:00 am
  • Event Category:

Venue

The Patrick Henry Memorial Foundation will host its annual Naturalization Ceremony on the grounds of Red Hill, Henry’s last home and burial place, on the patriot’s 290th birthday.

A more fitting venue than the home of Patrick Henry would be hard to find for welcoming new citizens to the United States. Henry’s impassioned plea of “Give me liberty or give me death!” has endured as the world’s most famous cry for freedom. That cry and the events it inspired attract immigrants and refugees alike who believe in the freedoms on which our nation was formed.

Citizen applicants earn the right to become U.S. citizens by meeting several requirements, including passing a test demonstrating the applicant’s ability to read, write, and speak basic English. Applicants must also show they have a basic knowledge of U.S. history and government. Among the many questions individuals have been given to study has been, “Who declared, ‘Give me liberty or give me death!’?”

EVENT DETAILS

The Naturalization Ceremony is the final step in becoming a naturalized U.S. citizen. It welcomes citizens to celebrate their new status in the country. Approximately thirty individuals will be sworn in by officials of the U.S. District Court—Western District of Virginia.

Prior to the oath ceremony, docents will be available in Patrick Henry’s house and law office, Harrison’s Cabin, and kitchen to provide information about Henry’s life at Red Hill starting at 9:00 am. Seating begins at 10:15 am and visitors are invited to stay following the ceremony for a reception hosted by the Patrick Henry Auxiliary and Brookneal Woman’s Club. A light breakfast will also be provided for the new citizens and their families.

KEYNOTE SPEAKER

Red Hill is thrilled to welcome Mari Kuraishi, the president of the Jessie Ball duPont Fund, who leads the Fund’s efforts to create communities of belonging for the places and institutions that Jessie Ball duPont knew and loved by fostering inclusive growth and reducing structural and systemic barriers to resources and opportunity. 

In 2011, Mari was named one of Foreign Policy’s top 100 Global Thinkers for “crowdsourcing worldsaving.” Mari currently serves on the boards of GlobalGiving, Mission Investors Exchange, DataKind, the Jacksonville Chamber of Commerce, the Jacksonville Community Land Trust, and the Cummer Museum in Jacksonville, as well as on the advisory boards of the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies at Harvard University, the U.S.-Japan Council, and LISC Jacksonville.

In addition to her native Japanese, Mari also speaks Russian, Italian, and French. She earned an undergraduate degree in history from Harvard University and did graduate work in Russian and Japanese history and politics at Harvard and Georgetown Universities. Mari also completed the Advanced Management Program at Harvard Business School.

Register Here