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           Welcome to Call to Decision 

 American Minute with Bill Federer

 July 5

 They both served in the Continental Congress.

 One was elected the second President and the other was elected the
 third.

 Once political enemies, they became close friends in later life.

 An awe swept America when they both died on the same day, JULY 4,
 1826, exactly 50 years since they passed the Declaration of
 Independence.

 Their names were John Adams and Thomas Jefferson.

 In his Second Annual Message to Congress, December 5, 1826, President
 John Quincy Adams referred to Jefferson and Adams, stating:

 "Since your last meeting at this place, the fiftieth anniversary of
 the day when our independence was declared...two of the principal
 actors in that solemn scene - the hand that penned the ever-memorable
 Declaration and the voice that sustained it in debate - were by one
 summons, at the distance of 700 miles from each other, called before
 the Judge of All to account for their deeds done upon earth."

 President John Quincy Adams added in an Executive Order, July 11,
 1826:

 "A coincidence...so wonderful gives confidence...that the patriotic
 efforts of these...men were Heaven directed, and furnishes a
 new...hope that the prosperity of these States is under the special
 protection of a kind Providence."