She had
used two modes of travel and absorbed the scenery along the way. Katherine Lee
Bates tells a story about “America the Beautiful” that urges one to climb a mountain
to find a view, and also to ponder what might pass before one’s eyes on a train
ride. She’d already travelled abroad to study by the time she was 34 years old,
so maybe that helped her appreciate even more the homeland of which she wrote during
the last decade of the 19th Century. But, she didn’t stop with the vivid
imagery of the scenery she’d beheld. Toward whom did she and the nation she called
home owe their allegiance? This patriot would call upon the Provider and the
Creator for Divine intervention, and would remind her fellow citizens of His
presence and blessings on them.
Katherine
Bates and some other college professors went to the top of Pike’s Peak in Colorado’s
Rocky Mountains in 1893, apparently without the assistance of a railway (shown
here in 1901) that others might have taken later on that ascent. It was an
exhausting adventure, but that didn’t prevent her from capturing the vision she
beheld at the top. Skies and mountains towered over the plains (v.1), so how
could she not pause to appreciate what she was seeing for the first time from
that spot? She also thought about the gleaming ‘white city’ of Chicago and the
World’s Fair that she had visited on the way to Colorado (an ‘alabaster’ city,
v.4). Katherine was gifted with the English language, which served her well as
a professor at Wellesley College in Massachusetts, but the sights she apprehended
on her trip west that year in 1893 spawned something fresh, four verses of poetry
that she produced for publication first in 1895. She entitled it ‘Pike’s Peak’
initially and then ‘America’ for broader distribution, including in 1904 and
1911 when she re-crafted some of the words; this trip west was not something
she quickly forgot, apparently. She had studied abroad just a couple of years earlier
(1890-1) at Oxford, England, so travel to see other parts of the world far from
her East Coast hometown was becoming part of her personality. Another part of
her character was the spirit of her father, who was a Congregational minister
who died when she was just a few weeks old; her mother and aunt who raised Katherine
were graduates of Mount Holyoke Seminary, so Katherine had more than a notion
about her Creator when she reflected on the blessings of her home country as
she stood atop Pikes Peak.
She called
out to her own countrymen, and upon God, as she penned four stanzas that summer
of 1893. ‘Remember who has blessed us with these stunning vistas’ (v.1), she reminded
those who would read her words on that Fourth of July, 1893. ‘Brotherhood’, she
coaxed them, was the way to ‘pay forward’ what each of them as Americans
possessed; this would not have been a casual suggestion for her or any other
citizens still living in the shadow of the Civil War. The nation’s history that
included the first pilgrims (v.2) and other ‘heroes’ (v.3) up until her own
time occupied Katherine’s thoughts. Hers was not a spotless, invulnerable country,
so she asked everyone to call out to the Creator to ‘mend…flaw(s)’ (vv.2,4) ‘refine’
them as a people (v.3), and exercise ‘self-control’ in submitting to the law
(v.4). America! The Beautiful…it’s not just a picture-postcard collection. Katherine
Bates saw and hoped for much more than that. Think about what she said today,
OK?
See more
information on the song story in these sources: The Complete Book of
Hymns – Inspiring Stories About 600 Hymns and Praise Songs by William J.
Petersen and Ardythe Petersen, Tyndale House Publishers, 2006; Amazing
Grace: 366 Inspiring Hymn Stories for Daily Devotions by Kenneth W. Osbeck,
Kregel Publications, 1990; 101 More Hymn Stories, by Kenneth W. Osbeck,
Kregel Publications, 1985; Then Sings My Soul – 150 of the World’s Greatest
Hymn Stories, Robert J. Morgan, Thomas Nelson Publishers, 2003; and A
Treasury of Hymn Stories – Brief Biographies of 120 Hymnwriters with Their Best
Hymns, by Amos R. Wells, Baker Book House Company, 1945.
Also see this link, showing all four original verses: http://www.hymntime.com/tch/htm/o/b/f/obfsskis.htm
Also see this site for song information: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/America_the_Beautiful
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