Adoption of The Star-Spangled Banner [Deep Dive] - March 3rd, 2026
[00:00] Elise Moreau: From Neural Newscast, this is Deep Dive, exploring the moments that shape today.
[00:10] Peter Rowan: I'm Peter Rowan. Welcome to Deep Dive from the Neural Newscast.
[00:16] Peter Rowan: It is March 3rd, 2026, and today we are looking back at a date that finally gave a young nation its official unified voice.
[00:28] Elise Moreau: And I'm Elise Moreau.
[00:30] Elise Moreau: It is a day where we find a fascinating intersection of national identity, massive technological leaps, and even a bit of the truly bizarre.
[00:40] Elise Moreau: Peter, the way a country chooses to represent itself is always a matter of intentional design and policy, and today marks a major milestone in that story.
[00:49] Peter Rowan: Exactly. That is where we start. On March 3rd, 1931, President Herbert Hoover signed a congressional resolution that officially adopted the Star-Spangled Banner as the national anthem of the United States.
[01:04] Peter Rowan: It is a bit surprising to realize that before that moment, the country didn't actually have one official song.
[01:12] Elise Moreau: It really is interesting to think about what filled that void before 1931.
[01:17] Elise Moreau: People often used my country tis of thee, which of course shares the exact same melody as the British anthem, God Save the King.
[01:24] Elise Moreau: From a design perspective, transitioning to Francis Scott Key's lyrics provided something uniquely American,
[01:31] Elise Moreau: even if the melody itself was originally based on an old English social song.
[01:36] Peter Rowan: Key originally wrote those lyrics in 1814 as a poem titled Defense of Fort McHenry during the War of 1812.
[01:46] Peter Rowan: It had been unofficially popular for over a century, but it took a specific act of Congress to solidify its status.
[01:53] Peter Rowan: It really reflects an institutional drive to define American patriotism during that complex interwar period of the early 20th century.
[02:03] Elise Moreau: Absolutely. The anthem certainly sets a grand stage for the country.
[02:08] Elise Moreau: But while the nation was busy defining its symbols, individuals born on this day were busy redefining the world itself.
[02:16] Elise Moreau: We have three remarkable birthdays to celebrate today,
[02:20] Elise Moreau: starting with the man whose work we are essentially utilizing right now to have this conversation.
[02:26] Peter Rowan: You're talking about Alexander Graham Bell. Born in 1847, he was a Scottish-born inventor who
[02:32] Peter Rowan: essentially erased the concept of distance. When he patented the telephone in 1876,
[02:39] Peter Rowan: he didn't just create a new gadget, he established an entirely new infrastructure for human
[02:44] Peter Rowan: interaction that we still rely on today.
[02:47] Elise Moreau: His focus on the mechanics of sound and transmission was so refined for his time.
[02:52] Elise Moreau: And speaking of infrastructure, we also share this birthday with George Pullman, born in 1831.
[02:59] Elise Moreau: Peter, you have to appreciate what Pullman did for the actual experience of travel across the continent.
[03:06] Elise Moreau: Pullman was a visionary of comfort and form.
[03:09] Elise Moreau: He founded the Pullman Company and invented the luxury sleeping car.
[03:13] Elise Moreau: Before he came along, rail travel was often a grueling dirty ordeal.
[03:18] Elise Moreau: He turned the train into a rolling hotel, focusing on aesthetics and luxury, which completely changed how Americans viewed their vast landscape and the possibilities of travel.
[03:30] Announcer: Then, moving from industrial luxury to the silver screen, we have Gene Harlow, born in 1911.
[03:39] Announcer: She was known as the blonde bombshell.
[03:42] Announcer: a major Hollywood icon of the 1930s. She starred in landmark films like Platinum
[03:49] Announcer: Blonde and Hell's Angels before her life and career were tragically cut short at
[03:55] Announcer: the age of 26.
[03:57] Elise Moreau: Harlow had such a curated, striking image. She was a master of the era's glamour and
