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Observations of an Illinois Boy in Battle, Camp and Prisons—1861 to 1865

Chapter 24: CHAPTER XX. Birth of “OLD GLORY.”
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About This Book

A firsthand Civil War memoir recounts enlistment and service with Illinois units from 1861 to 1865, following campaigns and engagements across river operations, marches, and major battles in the Western and Southern theaters. The narrative describes camp routine, skirmishes, a wartime capture, the hardships of long prisoner transports, and brutal confinement in pens such as Belle Isle and Libby, including illness and smallpox. It also relates escapes and recapture, return to duty, personal reminiscences from comrades, and reflective chapters on the consequences of secession and war, patriotic observances about the national flag, and advice to younger readers.

CHAPTER XX.
Birth of “OLD GLORY.”

“OLD GLORY,” the stars and stripes, was born on the 14th of June, 1777, on which day Congress patriotically resolved: “That the flag of the United States be thirteen stripes, alternate red and white; the union be thirteen stars, white in a blue field, representing a new constellation.” It has never been known to what influence we were indebted for the selection of the stars and stripes in our flag. Some have thought that the stripes were of Dutch origin, for they occur in Dutch armorial bearings, while others suspect that they were introduced as a compliment to Washington, on whose coat-of-arms both the stripes and stars appear; but there is no tangible evidence that either supposition is correct.

The Father of his Country, nevertheless, had much to do with designing the first stars and stripes. It was he, assisted by a committee appointed by Congress, who directed the preparation of the first design. They called upon Mrs. Elizabeth Ross, in Philadelphia, some time between May 23 and June 7, 1777, with the request that she should prepare the flag. Her house, 239 Arch Street, is, we believe, still standing at this writing. Washington had a rough draft, in which the stars were six-pointed. Mrs. Ross proved that five-pointed ones would look better, and her suggestion was adopted. She had the flag finished by the next day, and it was received with great admiration wherever displayed. She was manufacturer of flags for the government for many years, her children afterwards succeeding to the business.