Quarter-Millennium of Genius: Inside the USPTO’s America 250 Flagship Celebration
Alexandria hosts federal celebration of America’s 250 years of invention, pageantry, and intellectual-property history

ALEXANDRIA, VA — Walking toward the United States Patent and Trademark Office in Alexandria’s Carlyle neighborhood, one is immediately struck by the soaring edifice. The building’s majestic entrance is graced with a towering glass atrium that gleams in the light, glaring sunlight dancing off its shadows, reaching seemingly to the sky.
On Wednesday, July 1, that magnificent glass canopy served as the gateway to history. While the facility’s National Inventors Hall of Fame and Museum is open to the public, the energy humming inside the building was entirely private. Behind closed doors, the USPTO hosted its official America 250 Flagship Celebration, gathering a full auditorium of 300 federal leaders, innovators, and dignitaries from the USPTO, the National Science Foundation, and the U.S. Department of Commerce to honor a quarter-millennium of American ingenuity.
The air inside was charged with pageantry. The program opened with a dramatic entrance by a military color guard, followed by Alexandria Town Crier Dr. Benjamin Fiore-Walker in his trademark booming oratory. Fiore-Walker, appearing in full colonial dress that sweltering afternoon, welcomed the audience with a “rousing rhyming cry,” bridging the gap between 1776 and 2026.
When Jason P. Clark, the USPTO’s director of strategic initiatives, climbed the short stairs to the stage, he fired off a series of centennial milestones, recognizing the March 10 sesquicentennial of Alexander Graham Bell’s discovery of the telephone. Then, he leaned into the linguistic gymnastics of the nation’s upcoming milestone.
“250 years is called a semiquincentennial,” he pointed out, or sometimes a sestercentennial. “Or you can just call it a quarter of a millennium,” he quipped, prompting a burst of laughter from the audience. “These words are all quite a mouthful, and I know somewhere my Latin high school teacher is sitting in a room smirking to herself, saying, boy, Jason should have paid more attention.”
Turning to the significance of the day, Clark remarked: “Whether you call it a semiquincentennial or sestercentennial or quarter of a millennium, 250 years is a long time. Today we get to celebrate with all of you, the people who make innovation flourish and succeed here in America. And as we are reminded time and again, the story of America begins with innovation. In fact, the very words that Thomas Jefferson wrote, ‘life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness,’ are a form of innovation.”
The defining theme of the day was that very spirit of discovery. Over the past 250 years, inventors and entrepreneurs have used their ingenuity, talents, and determination to make life better for all Americans. The exhibits inside the building tell a stunning story of evolution: how a tool used on the moon is now a household item, or how toys that make the past have come to life for a new generation.
Following Clark, John A. Squires, under-secretary of commerce for Intellectual Property and USPTO director, delivered a powerful address, anchoring the agency’s vital role as the steward of the nation’s creative engine.

“Where else would you rather be?” Squires asked the crowd. “The best way to honor our heroic past is to joyously celebrate your role, our role, in igniting American ingenuity at a time and a moment in history when innovation has never been more important or prominent or central to who we are as Americans.”
Squires underscored the deep historical roots of the office. “Suddenly but profoundly, our young nation created its governance structure and guiding document the likes of which never have been seen before. Our founders went even further, they enshrined IP (Intellectual Property) protection into the very part of the American Constitution.”
Squires, added, “It always astonishes that the USPTO is, in fact, one of the oldest federal missions in our government. Before there was a Department of the Treasury, before there was a Department of State, before most of the institutions we take for granted in the executive branch, there was a permanent indelible commitment to innovation.”
The audience then rose and stood at attention, each person holding up an American flag. The US Army Old Guard Fife and Drum Corps marched through the auditorium before taking their performance downstairs to the lower atrium.

Early American history took physical form with the Presidentially Signed Patents Ribbon Cutting Ceremony, featuring appearances by “George Washington” and “Thomas Jefferson.” The reenactors brought an enduring reminder to the modern attendees: it was George Washington himself who signed the very first patent.

The dignitaries officially cut the ribbons on the presidentially signed patents and the new “Step Into Their Shoes: Experience 250 Years of Patent Examination” exhibits.

The celebration then transformed into a vibrant innovation fair. Employees enjoyed a custom USA 250 birthday cake, selfie stations, and a digital wish wall. Guided Trademark Trail tours gave attendees an insider look at the symbols shaping commerce.

While Wednesday’s ceremony was private, the celebration of American genius remains highly accessible. Over 10,000 people have visited the exhibits this season. For those walking through Carlyle, the majestic glass atrium stands as an open invitation to look back at a quarter-millennium of discovery—and glimpse the inventions that will write the next 250 years.





