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The History of the First United States Flag / and the Patriotism of Betsy Ross, the Immortal Heroine That Originated the First Flag of the Union cover

The History of the First United States Flag / and the Patriotism of Betsy Ross, the Immortal Heroine That Originated the First Flag of the Union

Chapter 15: WASHINGTON, THE IDOL OF AMERICA.
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About This Book

The author provides an anecdotal history that attributes the creation of the first national flag to a Philadelphia needleworker, drawing on family recollections, personal visits, and contemporary testimonies to reconstruct her life and craft. The narrative combines biographical detail about her sewing trade and clientele with accounts of patriotic activities, songs, and the distribution of flags to volunteers, while emphasizing domestic workmanship, color and design choices, and civic devotion. Much of the argument rests on oral tradition and local records, and the work foregrounds the interplay of private industry, symbolic ornamentation, and public memory in the flag’s early story.

WASHINGTON, THE IDOL OF AMERICA.

“My lads, I would speak a few words of the General and his Army, now encamped on the banks of the Schuylkill, enduring all the hardships of their homely situation with cheerful patience; and what is it think you blunts the keen edge of the northern winds, and makes content smile on the tops of frozen hills? I will tell you, it is the love of that “Liberty” I have sat before you, it is the consciousness of the justice of our cause. I suppose when you think of our incomparable General Washington, you figure to yourselves a stout, bulky man, of a terrible countenance, covered with gold lace, living in a magnificent house and having a great train of attendants around him. You are quite mistaken; he neither has nor needs any external ornaments. Would you hang farthing candles around the Sun to increase his lustre? His glory will admit of no addition. Your General is a plain man, plain in his dress and frugal at his board; yet a native dignity will command your respect, and the affability of his manners win your love. He is brave without ostentation; magnificent without pomp; and accomplished without pride. He is an honor to the human race and the Idol of America. And so God save General Washington and his Army.”