The most famous marching band leader in the world, John Philip Sousa, gave a concert at the Hippodrome Theater in Pottsville on Aug. 18, 1918. Coming three months before the end of World War I, the ...
This year marks the 125th anniversary of John Philip Sousa’s triumphant “The Stars and Stripes Forever”—the finest and most famous American march. It helped cement his reputation as the nation’s first ...
Jane van Middlesworth Sousa, ca. 1880s. Scott Schwartz John Philip Sousa at the Great Lakes Naval Training Center in 1917. Sigmund 'The Great Lafayette' Neuberger as John Philip Sousa in 1911. The ...
CLEVELAND'S official song, "The Diplomat" by John Philip Sousa, is performed by Lee University's Wind Ensemble during an ...
Schissel and John Philip Sousa IV recently co-authored the book, "John Philip Sousa's America: A Patriot's Life," a photo-biography of the March King. It brings to life an intimate portrait of the ...
In the mid-19th century, composer John Philip Sousa was one of America’s biggest “base ball bugs,” as fans were then called. In his autobiography, “Marching Along,” Sousa, born in 1854, described the ...
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