The speech may be read here: 
http://www.classicapologetics.com/special/4th/Declaration_of_Interdependence.1918.pdf
    (Canadians should note that Churchill's proposition was seconded by Arthur 
Meighen -- who would become Canada's Prime Minister in 1920, albeit briefly.)
RHM

Date: Tue, 3 Jul 2012 10:04:54 -0400
To: churchillchat@googlegroups.com
From: r...@chartwellcomm.com
Subject: Re: [ChurchillChat] 4th of July
CC: ibarra...@yahoo.com.br



In response to Daniel Ibarra's query, yes, on July 4, 1918, Churchill
spoke at Central Hall, Westminster, at the
Liberty Day meeting of the Anglo-Saxon Fellowship. In the American
monthly, Current History, the speech was published as
"American Independence Day" (Cohen E19), and it was
subsequently collected in Modern Eloquence, Vol. VII (Cohen
D47), and in Rhodes James' Complete Speeches, Vol. III, at
pp. 2613-6, there under the title‘“The Third Great Title-Deed” of
Anglo-American Liberties’.


Ron Cohen


Is there any special
speech made by Churchill regarding the US Independence
Day?




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