Flag/Patriotic Stories
Betsy Ross
Who designed the original "Stars and
Stripes" flag of the United States is a
point never definitely confirmed. Was it
Betsy Ross, expert Philadelphia seamstress,
or New Jersey's Congressman Francis
Hopkinson?
The traditional story that Betsy Ross
designed the original flag in 1776 has
caught the popular fancy but no official
record substantiates the story. Some
historians claim that in June 1776, Gen.
George Washington, Robert Morris and Betsy's
uncle, George Ross, went to her Philadelphia
upholstery shop. The men told her they were
members of a congressional committee. They
showed her a rough design of a stars and
stripes flag and asked her if she would make
the emblem. She said yes and recommended
making the stars five-pointed instead of
six. The change was approved.
George Washington drew another design, and
Betsy Ross sewed the emblem. On June 14,
1777, Congress adopted it as the official
U.S. flag. That is the Betsy Ross story as
it is related. However, some sources claim
there is no official record of a
congressional flag committee. The only
documented evidence naming Mrs. Ross is said
to be a voucher dated May 29, 1777, showing
that she was paid 14 pounds and some
shillings for flags she made for the
Pennsylvania Navy.
Note: Recent historic research indicates
Francis Hopkinson, a consultant to the
Second Continental Congress is responsible
for designing the original Stars and
Stripes.
Old Glory
The name "Old Glory" was first applied to
the U.S. flag by a young sea captain who
lived in Salem, Mass. On his 21st birthday,
March 17, 1824, Capt. William Driver was
presented a beautiful flag by his mother and
a group of Salem girls. Driver was delighted
with the gift and named the flag "Old
Glory." Old Glory accompanied the captain on
his many sea voyages. In 1837 he quit
sailing and settled in Nashville. On
patriotic days he displayed Old Glory
proudly from a rope extending from his house
to a tree across the street.
After Tennessee seceded from the Union in
1861, Captain Driver hid Old Glory, sewing
it inside a comforter. When the Union
soldiers entered Nashville on February 25,
1862, Driver removed Old Glory from its
hiding place. He carried the flag to the
capitol building and raised it above the
state capitol. Shortly before his death, the
old sea captain placed a small bundle into
the arms of his daughter. He said to her:
"Mary Jane, this is my ship's flag, Old
Glory. It has been my constant companion. I
love it as a mother loves her child. Cherish
it as I have cherished it."
The flag remained as a precious heirloom in
the Driver family until 1922. It was then
sent to the Smithsonian Institution in
Washington D.C., where it is carefully
preserved under glass.
Our National Anthem
For more than a century the "Star Spangled
Banner," written by Francis Scott Key in
1814, was sung as a popular patriotic air.
From time to time Army and Navy leaders
designated it as the national anthem for
official occasions. In 1916 President
Woodrow Wilson proclaimed it the national
anthem. Continuous lobbying by the Veterans
of Foreign Wars led to Congress designating
the song as the official national anthem of
the United States on March 3, 1931.
Francis Scott Key practiced law in Baltimore
during the War of 1812. In 1814 one of Key's
friends, Dr. Beanes, was held prisoner by
the British aboard the ship Minden in
Baltimore harbor. Key decided he would try
to obtain his friend's release. Carrying a
flag of truce and a letter from President
James Madison, Key rowed out to the ship.
His request for the friend's freedom was
granted, but both men were detained onboard
because the British were about to bombard
Fort McHenry.
During the bombardment, Key watched the
Stars and Stripes flying over the fort.
Darkness fell, and he no longer could see
the flag. But the fort kept on firing back
at the British, so Key knew the American
stronghold had not surrendered.
When daylight returned Key was overjoyed to
see that "the flag was still there." Taking
an old envelope from his pocket he wrote the
stirring opening words," O say, can you see
by the dawn's early light, what so proudly
we hailed at the twilight's last gleaming,
whose broad stripes and bright stars,
through the perilous fight, o'er the
ramparts we watched, were so gallantly
streaming?"
After he returned ashore, Key completed the
verse, which was later published in the
Baltimore American, September 21, 1814. It
became popular immediately. Later the words
were set to the English "Anacreon in
Heaven," which is the tune we sing today.
Pledge of Allegiance
The original draft of the pledge is said to
have been written in 1892 by James B. Upham,
a magazine publisher in Boston. The first
version was: "I pledge allegiance to my flag
and to the republic for which it stands; one
nation indivisible, with liberty and justice
for all." In 1939, the U.S. Flag Association
concluded the pledge's author was Francis
Bellamy.
At the first National Flag Conference in
1923 in Washington, D.C., delegates from
patriotic societies, civic and other
organizations substituted the words "the
flag of the United States" for "my flag."
The change was made because it was thought
that the foreign-born might have in mind the
flag of their native land when they said "my
flag." Another change was made at the second
National Flag Conference in 1924 when the
words "of America" were added.
For 30 years the version was: "I pledge
allegiance to the flag of the United States
of America and to the republic for which it
stands, one nation indivisible, with liberty
and justice for all." In 1954 Congress added
the words "under God" to the pledge.
We now recite: "I pledge allegiance to
the flag of the United States of America and
to the republic for which it stands, one
nation under God, indivisible, with liberty
and justice for all."
The pledge of allegiance should be rendered
while standing at attention facing the flag
with the right hand over the heart. When not
in uniform people should remove their
headdress with their right hand and hold it
at the left shoulder, the hand being over
the heart. Members of the armed forces in
uniform should remain silent, face the flag
and render the military salute.
Flag Day
On May 30, 1916, President Woodrow Wilson
declared June 14 Flag Day--a day all
Americans would be encouraged to fly and pay
homage to our "Stars and Stripes." Today,
our flag is recognized as the symbol of a
nation that not only honors man's continuing
struggle for freedom, but also as a country
with a unique system of government.
Image
provided by Flag-Site-USA.org, image to be
used as long as not edited.
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