Top ten things to know about the American flag

3 June 2010 - by ArtfixDaily Staff
Jeff Bridgman American Antiques is the nation’s largest seller of early American Stars & Stripes.

click to enlarge

Jeff Bridgman American Antiques is the nation’s largest seller of early American Stars & Stripes.

Many people think that the flag we love so much as Americans was born alongside the Declaration of Independence on July 4th, 1776, or at least in the general vicinity of that day, but it was actually brought to life by the Flag Act of 1777, passed by Congress on June 14th of that year.

York, Penn.-based antiques dealer, Jeff Bridgman, a recognized authority on the history of American flags, divulges ten nuggets of information about the Stars & Stripes for those looking to impress on Flag Day, June 14.

1. Betsy Ross did not sew the first flag and she did not design it. It was instead designed by Francis Hopkinson of New Jersey, a signer of the Declaration of Independence.


2. Until 1905, commercial advertisements were allowed to be printed directly on the flag.


3. 13-star flags have been in use from 1777 until today, and still qualify as official American flags.


4. Before the 1920’s, flags were often huge so that they could effective serve their purpose as signals. Most were between 8 and 20 feet long. Garrison flags were nothing short of gigantic, at 35 to 45 feet.


5. Small printed flags that can be hand-held on sticks are called parade flags or “hand-wavers”. In the 19th century they were made in a never-ending variety of whimsical designs.


6. There was no official way to place the stars on the American flag until 1912, one hundred and thirty-five years after Congress approved its basic attributes.


7. Many old flags have rows or columns of stars, but more interesting patterns include stars placed in consecutive circular wreaths and something known as the "Great Star", which placed the individual stars in the form of one big star.

8. The flag had no official shape until 1912. Before then it might be square, or it might be exaggeratedly long and skinny.


9. Modern flag ethics didn't emerge until the 1890's. Before that time it was certainly admired, but it wasn’t the idolized object that it is today.


10. Because old flags came in so many designs, it has become popular to frame and display them as a combination of art and history.

 




More News Feed Headlines
  • Julien Hudson, 1811-1844 American.  Creole Boy With A Moth, 1835, oil on canvas, courtesy of a private collection; photo courtesy of Fodera Fine Art Conservation, Ltd.
    A groundbreaking exhibition opened Dec. 9 at the Worcester Art Museum entitled “In Search of Julien Hudson: Free Artist of Color in Pre-Civil War New Orleans.” Julien Hudson (1811-1844) is the second-earliest documented portrait painter of African descent to work in the United States. Little-known today, Hudson died an untimely, somewhat mysterious death, and only fragments of his oeuvre survive to tell his story.
  • 'May,' by Alexander Motyl, $25/month to rent ($550 to buy), artsicle.com.
    A bevy of new online ventures are helping to streamline the process of buying art for both beginners and established collectors, facilitating keyboard-click access to information and galleries.
  • An installation view of the new Tuscaloosa Museum of Art: Home of the Westervelt Collection.
    Last week, the Tuscaloosa Museum of Art opened its doors, finally giving a home to the art collection assembled by Jack Warner. Earlier this year, the Jack Warner Foundation and Westervelt Company separated, leaving the fate undetermined as to where their respective collections would be housed. Several key works were sold by the Westervelt Co. at auction and privately. Now, more than 800 pieces...
  • Portrait of a Man and Woman in an Interior, painted about 1666, by Eglon van der Neer (Dutch, 1634–1703).  Oil on panel.  Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.  Seth K.  Sweetser Fund.
    At the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Victoria Reed is the first and only endowed curator of provenance at an American museum. Since 2010, her role has been to research objects in the museum's collections, and new acquisitions, in order to determine the right of ownership. At times, Reed's findings have led to restitution...

Enter e-mail address to receive art news daily.
Subscribe

ArtfixDaily Blogs