Posted on 21 January 2009. Tags: Local, Pennsylvania, Pottstown, President Barack Obama, presidential inauguration, Sanatoga, Washington DC
WASHINGTON DC – In his first official act since taking the oath of office, President Barack Obama yesterday (Tuesday, Jan. 20, 2009) declared a National Day of Renewal and Reconciliation and called on Americans to serve one another and the nation’s common purpose “of remaking this Nation for our new century.”

The inauguration scene Tuesday on the steps of The Capitol, and a portrait of the nation's newest, and 44th, president.
“We are in the midst of a season of trial. Our Nation is being tested, and our people know great uncertainty,” the Obama-signed proclamation said. “Yet the story of America is one of renewal in the face of adversity, reconciliation in a time of discord, and we know that there is a purpose for everything under heaven.
“On this Inauguration Day, we are reminded that we are heirs to over two centuries of American democracy, and that this legacy is not simply a birthright – it is a glorious burden. Now it falls to us to come together as a people to carry it forward once more.”
Photos from WhiteHouse.gov
Send this page to a friend.
Sign up to get The Sanatoga Post delivered free daily by e-mail.
Posted in Politics
Posted on 14 November 2008. Tags: Local, Pennsylvania, Pottstown, presidential inauguration, Sanatoga, Washington DC

The platform for the 2009 presidential inauguration is under construction in Washington DC.
LOWER POTTSGROVE PA – If you hoped to see history being made in person and wanted free tickets to Barack Obama’s presidential inauguration Jan. 20 in Washington DC, you’re too late. You not only can’t get tickets, now you can’t even get on the ticket waiting list.
Congressman Charlie Dent (R-PA 15th Dist.), who represents Sanatoga and Lower Pottsgrove Township, said Thursday (Nov. 13, 2008) it stopped taking requests for Inauguration Day swearing-in tickets due to “unprecedented” demand.
Dent’s staff began accepting constituent requests for tickets before Election Day. Orders were placed on a first-come, first-served waiting list. But being on the list, staffers cautioned, was no guarantee of seating; the number of tickets allotted to each Congressional office has not yet been publicly announced.
As of Thursday it became clear, according to Dent’s office, that no matter how many tickets are distributed the requests will far exceed supply. “Unfortunately, anyone calling … at this point would have no chance,” it said in a press release.
Tickets will be distributed to Congressional offices the week before inauguration. Those lucky enough to go must pick them up in person, with proper identification. And if you think you can buy a ticket, beware. “No Web site or other ticket outlet has tickets to sell,” Dent adds, “regardless of what they may claim.”
Photo supplied by the Joint Congressional Committee on Inauguration Ceremonies
Posted in Politics