Flag of the United States
The flag of the United States of America is commonly called the Stars and Stripes and less commonly "Old Glory". Because the name "Old Glory" is technically the name of the 48-star version used from 1912 to 1959, this usage connotes the history of the flag. It has gone through many changes since the original 13 English colonies created it.
To Americans, their flag is a symbol of many things. It has been held to represent all of the freedoms and rights guaranteed in the United States Constitution and its Bill of Rights such as freedom of speech, freedom of religion (including freedom from religion), freedom of the press, the right to bear arms and the right to a fair and impartial trial before a jury of your peers. Perhaps most of all it is seen as a symbol of individual, personal liberty.
The current version of the flag has fifty stars which represent the fifty states of the United States.
The original American flag had thirteen stars. As further states have been admitted to the union, extra stars have been added, but the number of stripes has remained at the original thirteen. The exception was the 15-star flag, which also had 15 stripes. It was this 15-star flag which inspired Francis Scott Key to write The Star-Spangled Banner.
When the flag is changed, the change always takes place on July 4, as a consequence of the Flag Act of 1818. July 4 is United States Independence Day, commemorating the founding of the nation. The most recent change, from forty-nine stars to fifty, occurred in 1960, after Hawaii was granted statehood.
Old flags preferably are destroyed through burning in a simple ceremony. Of course, flag burnings have been used to protest actions by the United States government also.
External links
- A page in flag etiquette: http://www.ushistory.org/betsy/flagetiq.html
- ... for those wondering how to fly the flag properly