Seasonal & Holidays
Fireworks Near Me: Oswego July 4th 2024 Events
Your guide to fireworks, parades and other July 4 celebrations in and around Oswego.
OSWEGO, IL — Independence Day is fast approaching so it's time to find out where you can celebrate in and around Oswego. Area events include fireworks, festivals and other Fourth of July fun.
To help you fit it all in on your Fourth of July calendar, Patch has put together a guide to what’s going on in Oswego and the surrounding areas.
July 4 Festivities For 2024
Find out what's happening in Oswegofor free with the latest updates from Patch.
What: Oswego Fourth of July Fireworks
Where: Prairie Point Community Park, 4120 Plainfield Road
When: July 4
What: Plainfield Fourth of July Fireworks and Food Truck Festival
Where: Gregory B. Bott Community Park, at 24550 W. Renwick Road in Plainfield
When: July 3. The food truck fest will run from 4-9 p.m., with the fireworks show starting around 9:15 p.m.
Find out what's happening in Oswegofor free with the latest updates from Patch.
What: Independence Day Celebration in Yorkville
Where: Town Square, 301 N. Bridge St.
When: A parade will step off at 9 a.m. July 4 at Yorkville High School and end at Town Square Park. Activities will commence after the parade, and fireworks will go off at dusk.
Today, Americans celebrate the birth of a new nation with fireworks, parades, concerts, and family gatherings and barbecues. Celebrations, though, predate by centuries the designation of Independence Day as a federal holiday, which didn’t happen until 1941.
During the pivotal summer of 1776, the pre-Revolutionary celebrations honoring King George III’s birthday were replaced with mock funerals as a symbolic break from the crown.
It was an exciting time in Philadelphia — the Continental Congress voted to break from the crown and, two days later on July 4, the Declaration of Independence was adopted by the original 13 colonies —New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland. Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia — to adopt the Declaration of Independence.
The first annual commemoration of the nation’s independence was in Philadelphia on July 4, 1777, while the Revolutionary War was ongoing. Fireworks have been part of Fourth of July festivities since the first celebration in Philadelphia.
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