Flag Day (June 14)
Incredibly, and sadly, that is how many Americans see our Flag - the entire United States, for that matter...It's important for everyone to understand, it's not just the Flag or the country that they hate - MORE THAN ANYTHING, IT'S PEOPLE LIKE YOU THAT THEY HATE!
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Luckily, most Americans not only respect our Flag, but revere what it stands for!
"I pledge allegiance to the
flag of the United States of America and to the Republic for which it stands,
one Nation under God, Indivisible, with liberty and Justice for all."
When you pledge allegiance to the flag you promise loyalty
and devotion to your nation. Each word has a deep meaning.
"I pledge allegiance" = I
promise to be true
"to the flag" =
To the sign of our country
"of the United States of
America" = A country made up of 50 states, each with certain
rights
"and to the Republic" =
A country where the people elect others to make laws for them
"for which it stands" =
The flag means the country
"one Nation under God" = A
single country whose people believe in a supreme being
"indivisible" =
The country cannot be split into parts
"with liberty and
justice" = With freedom and fairness
"for all" =
For each person in the country
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HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN FLAG
The Flag of the United States of America today has 13
stripes - 7 red and 6 white - and 50 white stars on a blue field - five rows of
6 and four rows of 5. The stripes remind us of the 13 original colonies that
gained us our liberty. The stars represent the states that are bound together
into one country.
The Flag of today grew out of many earlier flags raised in days gone by over American soil. From the time that America was discovered, different flags flew over different parts of the country; the flags of Spain, France, Holland, Sweden, and England (and Russia).
An English flag, known as the Red Ensign, waved over the 13 colonies from 1707 to the Revolution. The Red Ensign was the merchant flag of England. It was red with a union in the upper corner combining the cross of St. George (red on white), patron of England, with the diagonal cross (white on blue) of St. Andrew, patron of Scotland.
The flag that became known as the Grand Union flag was raised over George Washington's headquarters outside Boston on January 1, 1776. The Revolutionary War had started the year before and the colonies needed a flag of their own. The Grand Union flag retained the union of the English flag. Six white stripes broke the red field into seven red stripes - a total of 13 stripes.
The first official flag of the new nation was created by a resolution of the Continental Congress meeting in Philadelphia. The resolution was passed on June 14, 1777. That is the date we celebrate each year as Flag Day. The resolution specified "that the flag be 13 stripes alternate red and white; that the union be 13 stars, white in a blue field, representing a new constellation." Since the resolution did not state how the stars were to be arranged, flag makers arranged them in different ways, among them; rows, in a half circle, and in a full circle. The one adopted was made by Betsy Ross and had the stars in a full circle.
The Flag that waved over Fort McHenry when it was bombarded, September 13-14, 1814, was a 15 star and 15 stripe flag. Two stripes and stars had been added to the original 13 on May 1, 1795. It became famous as the Star Spangled Banner. It was the Flag that inspired Francis Scott Key to write our national anthem.
The Flag of 1818 had the stripes reduced to 13. Five more stars had been added, for a total of 20. When still more states joined the United States, it became evident that the flag would get to be an awkward shape if more and still more stripes were added. Therefore, on April 4, 1818, Congress passed a law that restored the design back to the original 13 stripes. It also provided that a star be added to the blue field for each new state
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Originally posted @ http://www.geocities.com/heartland/2328/flag.htm (a dead link)
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