Saving the Nation's Flag
After nearly two centuries of exposure, the Star-Spangled Banner gets a much needed overhaul
- By Michael Kernan
- Smithsonian magazine, October 1998, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
But help is on the way. "We're going to lay it flat to work on it," says Thomassen-Krauss, "and there will be a big moving bridge that we call a gantry, 32 feet across, so we can work on any part of the flag."
It will lie on a platform in the Flag Hall, inside a 50-by-50-foot room. There it will be examined and stabilized so that in early 1999, it can be moved to a special laboratory in the museum. In this $1 million lab, the three-year conservation process will begin. Experts will clean the flag, evaluate whether the stitches can be removed, add new support material and attach a new mounting system.
One point of interest will be that upside-down V. Conservators will be looking for traces of the crossbar that would show it had been intended for an A.
The flag comes down this month. If the linen backing is removed, it means that each of the 1,762,560 stitches will have to be snipped, at two snips per stitch. That is 3,525,560 snips. I love stats.
When finished, the flag will probably be displayed on a tilt from the vertical to ease the stress on the hanging points. It will be housed in a four-story climate-controlled display case that could cost up to $2 million. It will be the largest case ever built for a museum artifact.
While the Star-Spangled Banner is being worked on, programs are planned to give visitors an idea of what is happening to the flag. Also, the Smithsonian and the History Channel are collaborating on a documentary, scheduled to air this fall, featuring reenactments of the War of 1812 and the bombing of Fort McHenry. Complementary educational materials are in the works, too.
And with luck, we will all be able to wake up on the morning of the millennium and know with delight that, despite all that time could do to it, the flag is still there.
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Comments (1)
WOW! WOW! and WOW! I love the Star Spangled Banner! It is the lovliest of all flags! It makes me proud! If only everyone could understand that as Woodrow Wilson said, "The flag is the embodiment, not of sentiment, but of history". (Hope I got all of that correct.) History. We have a history. Everyone should know it. It progresses, and we all should be contributing to it. What other piece of history represents so much individual freedom? What represents so much sacrifice to keep that freedom alive! People of other countries recognize its value. Why are they lined up to get into America, but not to leave it to be a citizen elsewhere? Don't take freedom for granted. Respect the Star Spangled Banner, and understand what a tremendous sight that must have been for Frances Scott Key, and other Americans, so much so that his soul sang with joy. Don't say the "Star Spangled Banner" is difficult to sing. Listen and really understand the words! Be happy that it is "our" anthem!
Posted by VB Johnson on September 10,2009 | 11:44 PM