The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Some facts and history about Old Glory

Sunday was Flag Day, commemorat­ing Congress’ adoption of the red-white-and-blue flag with 13 stars June 14, 1777. President Harry S. Truman designated the day as National Flag Day in 1949.

- By KURT SNIBBE | Southern California News Group

Beginning Baltimore

Mary Pickersgil­l made two flags for Fort McHenry: a huge garrison flag and a smaller storm flag. The largest flag was so big she assembled it on the floor of a Baltimore brewery. The flag was sewed by hand with linen stitching.

The perilous fight

The English and French were at war since the early 1800s in Europe. The U.S. was brought into the war when the British refused to stop kidnapping U.S. sailors and forcing them into the British navy. The U.S. declared war on Great Britain in 1812. The British had captured and burned Washington, D.C., then sailed toward Baltimore.

The Battle of Baltimore saw the British bombard Fort McHenry for 25 hours beginning on Sept. 13, 1814. Estimates have 1,500 to 1,800 bombs being fired. Four hundred of them fell within the fort’s walls. The U.S. Army had held and stopped the British advance. There were 24 U.S. soldiers wounded and four dead.

Inspiring the poet

Francis Scott Key was a Baltimore lawyer and aboard a truce ship trying to negotiate the release of an American-held prisoner. The British detained him during the battle. The next morning, when he saw the U.S. flag still flying, he was inspired to write his poem, “The Star Spangled Banner.”

Familiar tune

Francis Scott Key intended his poem to be sung to the tune “To Anacreon in Heaven.” Key wrote a poem in 1805 to the same tune. The music originally was written in England around 1775 and played in pubs and clubs. The original song was about a sixth-century Greek poet named Anacreon who wrote about drinking and womanizing. Before “The Star-Spangled Banner” was adopted as the national anthem in 1931, “Yankee Doodle Dandy” was used as a traditiona­l ceremonial song sometimes.

Meaningful colors

There is no congressio­nal documentat­ion that states the colors of the flag have official meaning, but historians trace each color to have symbolic representa­tion.

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 ?? Sources: NASA, Nixon Presidenti­al Library & Museum, Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidenti­al Library and Boyhood Home, Smithsonia­n, National Museum of the Marine Corps ?? Perseveran­ce Valor Liberty or purity
Stars and Stripes, 1777-95
Sources: NASA, Nixon Presidenti­al Library & Museum, Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidenti­al Library and Boyhood Home, Smithsonia­n, National Museum of the Marine Corps Perseveran­ce Valor Liberty or purity Stars and Stripes, 1777-95

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