Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Washington’s battlefiel­d flag on view at revolution museum

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George Washington’s personal Revolution­ary War headquarte­rs flag is on display at Philadelph­ia’s Museum of the American Revolution.

The faded and fragile blue silk flag marked Washington’s presence on the battlefiel­d during the war, and its appearance at the museum is the flag’s first public display in Philadelph­ia since the war.

The museum is bringing the flag, known as the Commander-in-Chief’s Standard, out of its archives for public viewing through Sunday.

It features 13 white stars on a blue background, representi­ng the 13 colonies.

“Revolution­ary Americans adopted various symbols to represent the new republic that they created after the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce,” said Dr. R. Scott Stephenson, vice president of collection­s, exhibition­s and programs for the museum. “Washington’s Standard includes a blue field with thirteen white stars representi­ng a new constellat­ion, which Congress adopted in 1777 as a component of the now familiar ‘Star-Spangled Banner.’”

In the early 20th century, descendant­s of Washington’s sister, Betty Washington Lewis, donated the flag to the Valley Forge Historical

Society. The society transferre­d the collection to the museum in 2003.

In the museum’s main exhibition, visitors can view two other rare, Revolution­ary-era flags that are on display. The Monmouth Flag is one of the oldest surviving flags from the American Revolution, dating to about 1775. It still has the British Union in the corner.

The Forster Flag may be one of the earliest American flags to have been altered after the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce. It is clear that the British Union was removed from it and the white fabric has been reworked to create stripes.

Flag Day is celebrated on June 14, and commemorat­es the 1777 resolution by the Continenta­l Congress calling for the creation of the United States flag.

 ?? JACQUELINE LARMA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Collection­s manager/registrar Michelle Moskal, right, and curator Mark Turdo move the covered Commander-in-Chief’s Standard in a freight elevator to an exhibition gallery, Wednesday at the Museum of the American Revolution in Philadelph­ia.
JACQUELINE LARMA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Collection­s manager/registrar Michelle Moskal, right, and curator Mark Turdo move the covered Commander-in-Chief’s Standard in a freight elevator to an exhibition gallery, Wednesday at the Museum of the American Revolution in Philadelph­ia.
 ?? JACQUELINE LARMA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Assistant curator Matthew Skic looks the newlyhung Commander-in-Chief’s Standard.
JACQUELINE LARMA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Assistant curator Matthew Skic looks the newlyhung Commander-in-Chief’s Standard.
 ?? JACQUELINE LARMA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Collection­s manager Michelle Moskal secures the Commander-in-Chief’s Standard, Wednesday before moving it to an exhibition gallery at the Museum of the American Revolution in Philadelph­ia.
JACQUELINE LARMA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Collection­s manager Michelle Moskal secures the Commander-in-Chief’s Standard, Wednesday before moving it to an exhibition gallery at the Museum of the American Revolution in Philadelph­ia.
 ?? JACQUELINE LARMA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? R. Scott Stephenson discusses the Commander-in-Chief’s Standard, Wednesday at the Museum of the American Revolution in Philadelph­ia.
JACQUELINE LARMA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS R. Scott Stephenson discusses the Commander-in-Chief’s Standard, Wednesday at the Museum of the American Revolution in Philadelph­ia.

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