The Story Behind the Star Spangled Banner
How the flag that flew proudly over Fort McHenry inspired an anthem and made its way to the Smithsonian
- By Cate Lineberry
- Smithsonian.com, March 01, 2007, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
While the conservators worked, the public looked on. Over the years, more than 12 million people peered into the museum's glass conservation lab, watching the progress.
"The Star-Spangled Banner resonates with people in different ways, for different reasons," says Kathleen Kendrick, curator for the Star-Spangled Banner preservation project. "It's exciting to realize that you're looking at the very same flag that Francis Scott Key saw on that September morning in 1814. But the Star-Spangled Banner is more than an artifact—it's also a national symbol. It evokes powerful emotions and ideas about what it means to be an American."
The Flag's Beginnings
The Star-Spangled Banner's history starts not with Francis Scott Key, but a year earlier with Maj. George Armistead, the commander of Fort McHenry. Knowing that his fort was a likely British target, Armistead told the commander of Baltimore defenses in July 1813 that he needed a flag—a big one. "We, sir, are ready at Fort McHenry to defend Baltimore against invading by the enemy…except that we have no suitable ensign to display over the Star Fort, and it is my desire to have a flag so large that the British will have no difficulty in seeing it from a distance."
Armistead soon hired a 29-year-old widow and professional flagmaker, Mary Young Pickersgill of Baltimore, Maryland, to make a garrison flag measuring 30 by 42 feet with 15 stars and 15 stripes (each star and stripe representing a state). A large flag, but one not unusual for the time. Over the next six weeks, Mary, her daughter, three of Mary's nieces, a 13-year-old indentured servant and possibly Mary's mother Rebecca Young worked 10-hour days sewing the flag, using 300 yards of English wool bunting. They made the stars, each measuring two feet in diameter, from cotton—a luxury item at the time. Initially they worked from Mary's home (now a private museum known as the Flag House), but as their work progressed they needed more room and had to move to Claggett's brewery across the street. On August 19, 1813, the flag was delivered to Fort McHenry.
For making the Star-Spangled Banner, Mary was paid $405.90. She received another $168.54 for sewing a smaller (17 by 25 feet) storm flag, likely using the same design. It was this storm flag—not the garrison flag now known as the Star-Spangled Banner—which actually flew during the battle. The garrison flag, according to eyewitness accounts, wasn't raised until the morning.
After the Battle of Baltimore
Armistead remained in command of Fort McHenry for the rest of his life. Historians are not sure how the Armistead family came into possession of the flag, but upon Armistead's death in 1818, his wife Louisa inherited it. It is she who is thought to have sewed the red upside-down "V" on the flag, beginning the stitches for the letter "A." She is also thought to have begun the tradition of giving pieces of the flag away to honor her husband's memory, as well as the memories of the soldiers who defended the fort under his command.
When Louisa died in 1861, she passed the flag down to their daughter Georgiana Armistead Appleton over the legal objections of their son. "Georgiana was the only child born at the fort, and she was named for her father," says Thomassen-Krauss. "Louisa wanted Georgiana to have it."
The Missing Pieces
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Comments (6)
you helped me with my history project...THANKS=)
Posted by aj on November 12,2012 | 11:07 AM
Mary Pickersgill was born on February 12, 1776, making her 37, rather than 29, at the time she completed her commission for the Star Spangled Banner. This is an incredible story, and "Family of Flagmakers," the first-ever exhibition highlighting Mary and her household's extarordinary contribution, is currently slated to open at the Star Spangled Banner Flag House, Baltimore, MD, in February 2013 for the bicentennial of the War of 1812. Stay tuned for more insight into the making of this American icon!
Posted by Jeanine Kern on May 5,2011 | 11:25 AM
wow...
Posted by patrice clark on January 28,2011 | 11:25 AM
I'm fasinated by the article. I read some of these things under glass at Fort McHenry a few tears ago and I love this story. I have a question: There once was and may still be a large flag hanging in the Maryland House rest stop on I-95. Drivers are always in a hurry but I presumed that was the Star Spngled Banner or a copy. I never slowed down enough to learn about it. Can you clarify what that flag was?
Posted by James Lovell on December 2,2008 | 08:44 PM
I read this article with interest. One other comment is about the men who served at Fort McHenry. The last survivor of the Battle in 1812's Revolutionary Pension Application shed some light on the Armistead family and how the men came to be there. John Lumberton was assigned to a Fort Southwest Point Battery serving under the Command of Capt John Armistead a brother to George Armistead according to the application. (note: Fort Southwest Point was located in whatis now Kingston, Roane County, Tennessee). His description of how he and his unit ended up at Fort McHenry is interesting. When he died in Baltimore years later, the newspaper reported that he was the last surviving soldier living in the area who fought in the famous battle. His descendant whose last name is Johnson/Johnston lived in the Glenn Berney area of Baltimore about 9 or 10 years ago. Leota
Posted by Leota Bennett on May 11,2008 | 07:31 PM
I am currently writing my next article for the Maryland Historical Magazine on the star-spangled banner that I believe will dis-prove the popular story of Captain Joshua Barney and Brig. Gen. John Stricker visiting Mary Pickersgill in the summer of 1813 and asking her to make the flag exhits little reality of what really happened. As well as the famous quote attributed to Major Armistead about wanting " a flag so large,the British will have no difficulty in seeing it from a distance." I asked Lord about this, and no such letter is known to exist. My search involved obtaining copies of all correspondence of Gen. Samuel Smith and Major Armistead from the five archival Institutions that have the originals. Nothing! As historian for Fort McHenry the past 28 years, and custodian of author Walter Lord's research for "The Dawn's Early Light(1972), as well as co-historian with Smithsonian historian Lonn Taylor on the early research on the flag, this new research should provide a new clearer light on what really happened during the summer of 1813 and 1814. I will be sharing the research with Lonn before the final submission. Scott S. Sheads Historian, Fort McHenry National Monument National Park Service Scott_Sheads@nps.gov or Scottsheads1316@comcast.net
Posted by Scott S. Sheads on February 2,2008 | 08:52 PM