Florida to celebrate Seward Day Saturday

FLORIDA — The Florida Historical Society is celebrating the 23rd annual Seward Day.
The society’s annual William Henry Seward Birthday Celebration will begin with a wreath laying at the W.H. Seward Monument on Saturday, May 17, at 9:45 a.m. Admission is free and refreshments will be served.
The celebration will continue in the S.S. Seward Institute cafetorium with the 4th graders from Golden Hill School singing their traditional “Seward Song” and the Young Historians, grades 4 through 6, will perform a skit featuring historic Florida personas.
The 7th graders from S.S. Seward Institute will present a Power Point program honoring William Henry Seward.
The Florida Historical Society will give a presentation previewing its second book that is nearing publication.
About Seward
Seward served as the 12th governor of New York, United States senator and the United States secretary of state under Abraham Lincoln and Andrew Johnson.
A determined opponent of the spread of slavery in the years leading up to the American Civil War, he was a dominant figure in the Republican Party in its formative years, and was widely regarded as the leading contender for the party's presidential nomination in 1860.
Denied the nomination, he became a loyal member of Lincoln's wartime cabinet, and played a role in preventing foreign intervention early in the war.
On the night of Lincoln's assassination, he survived an attempt on his own life.
As Johnson's secretary of state, he engineered the 1867 purchase of Alaska from Russia in an act that was ridiculed at the time as "Seward's Folly."
His contemporary, Carl Schurz, described Seward as "one of those spirits who sometimes will go ahead of public opinion instead of tamely following its footprints."