articleexposed.com articleexposed.com
  Home >> About Us >> Add Your Link >> Privacy >> ToS >> Submit Article
Search:   
Add Url
 
 

Medical Care

 

Health & Hygiene

 

Shopping & Auction

 

Lifestyle & Fashion

 

Entertainment

 

Issues & News

 

Careers & Employment

 

Automobile & Automotive

 

Realty & Property

 

Self Management

 

Games & Play

 

People & Society

 

Government & Politics

 

Business & Companies

 

Sports

 

Travel & Vacation

 

Cooking & Drinking

 

Teens & Kids

 

Technology & Science

 

Finance & Investment

 

Academics & Education

 

Culture & Art

 

Software & Networking

 

Family & Home


 

  Home › Issues & News › History & News
   
 

Old Glory

   
Author: Lindsey Williams

It's a charming story - but Betsy Ross did not sew together the first American flag from a design by George Washington.

That claim was made by her grandson when he was an old man. He said Betsy, a widow seamstress, told him the story when he was an 11-year-old boy.

He stated a delegation consisting of Gen. Washington; Robert Morris, a member of the Continental Congress; and George Ross, the uncle of Betsy's late husband, came to her Philadelphia home in May 1776. They asked her to make the first American flag of 13 stripes and 13 six-pointed stars.

Mrs. Ross was said to have accepted the job but recommended a five-point star that could be cut perfectly from folded cloth by one snip of a scissors.

Alas, the story is untrue.

There is no documentation to support the tale. Gen. Washington was desperately engaged that year repulsing the British from Boston and New York. The nation had not yet been declared nor a starred flag authorized by the Continental Congress.

Early Flags

An early American flag was that carried by the Bedford Minutemen when they faced the British Regulars at Concord. The banner consisted of a red field on which was superimposed a steel-clad arm reaching from a cloud. In the hand was a sword. Surrounding hand and sword was a golden scroll bearing the inscription "Vince Aut Morire (Conquer or Die)."

Realizing that a war was likely, the Continental Congress installed cannon on three merchant ships and commissioned a United States Navy on Dec. 3, 1775. At that time, the first "national" flag was designated which came to be known as the Congress Colors.

Washington, then commanding Continental troops besieging Boston, referred to the banner as the Grand Union flag. It consisted of 13 horizontal stripes alternate red and white with a British Union jack in the upper left corner.

Capt. John Paul Jones personally raised the first such flag on the U.S.N. Alfred that day.

The new flag was first displayed in battle a month later at Prospect Hill near Cambridge by Continental troops besieging British-Held Boston.

Two other early flags are of particular interest because either or both were carried in the fight which took place on Breed's Hill -- mistakenly recorded as nearby Bunker Hill -- on June 17, 1776. One flag was blue the other red. Both featured the British Cross of St. George and a green pine tree.

It was the Congress Colors that was raised at the Philadelphia State House where the Declaration of Independence was adopted July 2, 1776, and proclaimed from the State House steps two days later when the resolution had been transcribed on parchment by Thomas Jefferson. It also was the one saluted at French and Dutch seaports in recognition of the new republic.

Stars And Stripes

Many theories have been advanced concerning the Stars and Stripes. The two elements existed in the flag of the British East India Company, the flag of Rhode Island and the heraldic shield of Washington's ancestors in Britain.

Old Glory pretty much as we know it today, was adopted as the official flag by the Continental Congress in Philadelphia on June 14, 1877 - hence today's Flag Day: "Resolved that the Flag of the United States be 13 stripes alternate red and white, that the Union be 13 stars, white in a blue field, representing a new constellation."

Washington explained the symbolism of the United States Flag as the stars representing the colonies taken from heaven, the red from England, and the white stripes added to indicate a separation from the mother country.

Inasmuch as the resolution was reported from the Marine Committee, the flag probably represented ideas from its members. The person most likely to have shaped the design was Francis Hopkinson. He was a New Jersey delegate to the Continental Congress, a member of the Marine Committee and a signer of the Declaration of Independence.

Hopkinson in 1779 sent a letter to the U.S. Admiralty Board stating he deserved remuneration for past services. These included: "A Great Seal for the United States of America with a Reverse, a seal for the Admiralty Board, and the Flag of the United States of America."

His request was turned down because "he was not the only person consulted" in formulating the designs and therefore did not deserve full payment.

Another Legend

Another legend recounts that the first battle in which the Stars and Stripes was flown was at the British siege of Fort Stanwix in New York on Aug. 3, 1777. The American officers - upon being told of the new flag - are said to have hurriedly stitched one from a red petticoat, white shirt and blue cloak.

The defenders did sew a flag together, but the record clearly indicates it was the Congress Colors. In any event, the British were abandoned by their Indian allies and so prudently withdrew.

There was no uniformity in early versions of Old Glory. The stripes remained the same, but the resolution did not spell out the star arrangement. In most cases, all 13 stars were formed in a circle. Occasionally, though, the circle would consist of 12 stars with the 13th in the center. The stars sometimes contained five, six or eight points.

A favorite arrangement consisted of three horizontal rows of stars with four in the top and bottom rows and five in the middle.

A popular design reproduced during the U.S. Bicentennial was that of the Benington Militia of 1777. This arrangement featured a semicircle of stars around the numeral 76.

Star Spangled Banner

When Vermont and Kentucky were admitted to the union in 1794, the flag was officially altered to consist of 15 stripes and l5 stars. This is the flag Francis Scott Key saw waving over Fort McHenry during the War of 1812 - a sight that inspired him to compose "The Star Spangled Banner" song.

After five more states were admitted to the Union in 1817, Congress decided to return to the original 13 stripes and add a star for each new state.

Though Betsy Ross did not sew the first Old Glory, there was found among her papers after her death a voucher dated May 29, 1777, in the amount of 14 English pounds received for flags made for the Pennsylvania Marine guard.

Undoubtedly this was the source of her flag story - enlarged by patriotism and fond memory in her old age. Inasmuch as we don't know who did sew that first United States flag, she might as well have the credit.

Author Bio:

Lindsey Williams

Lindsey is best known as a columnist for the Sun Coast Media Group of four daily Florida newspapers and website in Charlotte County, Englewood, North Port and Arcadia. He is a member of the National Society of Newspaper Columnists.

Lin is a semi-retired newspaper publisher, having owned and operated a group of seven weekly newspapers in northeast Ohio. In addition, he wrote a syndicated column on national current events for 24 newspapers in Ohio and Kentucky.

He has been awarded Daughters of the American Revolution national medal for his “leadership, service and patriotism;” the George Washington medal of the Freedoms Foundation at Valley Forge for a series of columns “relating American history to current events;” and the Genesis Award by the University Club of Charlotte County for “community service to history and politics.”

He has written five books on history, three of them about the Charlotte Harbor area. His “Our Fascinating Past: Charlotte Harbor Later Years” in collaboration with U.S. Cleveland was chosen by the Florida Historical Society for its 1997 Golden Quill Award, the organization’s highest book honor. In addition, the society has twice awarded him its Golden Quill for his “outstanding continuing series of local history.” His book “Boldly Onward,” about early Spanish explorers in Florida, is a standard reference for scholars.

Lindsey has been writing to deadline for 64 years. He edited Flint Central High School and Mott College newspapers - - but began his professional career as a sports writer for the “Flint, Michigan, Daily Journal.”

During four years with the U.S. Navy in World War II, he served as Specialist Writer-Public Relations at Detroit, and as a First Class Petty Officer and ship’s photographer aboard South Atlantic destroyer and-sonar trainer Eagle Class ships.

He resumed his journalism career as a reporter for the “Detroit Free Press,” followed by positions as editorial director for Michigan Bell Telephone Co. at Detroit and public relations assistant for AT&T at New York City.

Lin returned to his first love, journalism, in 1959 and “semi-retired” 23 years ago to Punta Gorda where he was persuaded to continue writing.

You can search for this article using: history of news media, history of news, history of news broadcasting, history news service
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Is Speaking in Tongues a gift from God?
 
Dissent Is Patriotic! Let Your Voice Be Heard!
 
U.S.A Presidency and the Map of Israel
 
Eliminating Toll Ways Now Before Bird Flu
 
Immortality and Mortality in the Economic Sciences
 
Planetary Alignment
 
Why Aren't You In Heaven Yet?
 
The first Gospel: Matthew
 
Did The Devil Really Make You Do It?
 
Environmentalists Say GM Seeds are Bad News
 
 
 
   Home >> Privacy >> ToS
Copyright © 2008 www.articleexposed.com All Rights Reserved.