Sunday, August 9, 2020

Star-Spangled Banner Classic KSA

Star-Spangled Banner Classic KSA Star-Spangled Banner Classic KSA Star-Spangled Banner: Classic KSA Long KSA stories might be in transit out, yet this KSA composed by Kathryn Troutman is a Fourth of July exemplary! This KSA highlights the Context, Challenge, Action, Results (CCAR) design favored by government HR experts. See our free KSA CCAR Builder to make your KSAs in the CCAR group. Peruse the first blog with the recorded foundation to this motivating story here: Star Spangled Banner Inspiration. Star-Spangled Banner: Classic KSA Applicant: Francis Scott Key, Sept. 14, 1814 Position: Public Affairs Officer, U.S. Congress KSA: Ability to Communicate in Writing Wrote THE STAR SPANGLED BANNER Setting: As a lawyer and confidant to General Smith, positioned close to Upper Marlboro, MD, I discovered my dear companion and old, Dr. Beane, who was caught by the British Army during a gathering at his home in Upper Marlboro. I was on a British vessel hailed for ceasefire by President Jackson, on my approach to get a caught companion in Marlborough. We got the extent that the mouth of the Patuxent and afterward we were not allowed to return in case a planned assault on Baltimore by the British ought to be unveiled. We were raised the Bay only opposite Fort McHenry and there we were constrained to observe the barrage of Fort McHenry, which the Admiral had flaunted that he would convey in a couple of hours, and that the city must fall. Challenge: We watched the banner at the Fort through the entire day with in excess of 500 bombs from British boats to Ft. McHenry. In the night the littler climate banner was flying while we watched the Bomb shells in dimness not realizing that the American Military had furtively arranged 4 canal boats, which the British didn't identify. These canal boats appended the British civilian army and sent them running, some with pulls helping. At the early first light our eyes were astounding welcomed by the gladly the 15-star banner of our nation (late to be known as the Star Spangled Banner). Activities: By morning, I was constrained to pen a sonnet that mirrored my musings of the war and especially of the banner, Oh state would you be able to see by the first lights early light? was my first idea. I composed four refrains that reflected themes about the day preceding and my vision of the banner toward the beginning of the day. The principal section audits the first lights light and the banner with wide stripes and brilliant stars that was all the while flying toward the beginning of the day; the subsequent stanza surveys the fear quietness and how the banner was erratically blowing; the third refrain surveys the devastation of war and the fights disarray; and the last and fourth stanza commends the triumph and harmony that safeguarded our country. Results: I saw the last foe fire to fall on Fort McHenry and in this memory, I composed the sonnet Defense of Fort McHenry, which has been renamed to The Star-Spangled Banner and has become a notable American enthusiastic melody. The sonnet and tune were perceived for legitimate Navy use in 1931 and turned into the national them by a congressional goals on March 3, 1931 and marked by President Herbert Hoover. +++++++++ Barrier of our Nation, Patrick Henry

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