Star-Spangled Banner Back on Display
After a decade’s conservation, the flag that inspired the National Anthem returns to its place of honor on the National Mall
- By Robert M. Poole
- Smithsonian magazine, November 2008, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
The 1873 photograph reveals another telling detail: the presence of a prominent red chevron stitched into the sixth stripe from the bottom. The voluble Georgiana Appleton never explained it. But historians have suggested it might have been a monogram—in the form of the letter "A" from which the cross-bar has been dropped or was never pieced in, placed there to signify the Armisteads' strong sense of ownership.
That familial pride burned bright in Georgiana Appleton, who fretted over the banner's well-being even as she lent it out, snipped pieces from it and grew old along with a family relic that had come into being only four years before she did. She lamented that it was "just fading away." So was she. When she died at age 60 in 1878, she left the flag to a son, Eben Appleton.
Like family members before him, Eben Appleton—33 at the time he took possession of the flag—felt a keen responsibility to safeguard what, by then, had become a national treasure, much in demand for patriotic celebrations. Aware of its fragile state, he was reluctant to part with it. Indeed, it would appear that he lent it out only once, when the flag made its last public appearance of the 19th century, appropriately enough in Baltimore.
The occasion was the city's sesquicentennial, celebrated October 13, 1880. The parade that day included nine men in top hats and black suits—the last of those who had fought under the banner in 1814. The flag itself, bundled into the lap of a local historian named William W. Carter, rode in a carriage, drawing cheers, a newspaper reported, "as the tattered old relic was seen by the crowds." When the festivities ended, Appleton packed it up and returned to his home in New York City.
There he continued to field requests from civic leaders and patriotic groups, who grew exasperated when he turned them down. When a committee of Baltimoreans publicly questioned whether the Armisteads legally owned the banner, Appleton was infuriated. He locked it in a bank vault, declined to disclose its location, kept his address secret and refused to discuss the flag with anyone, "having been much annoyed about his heirloom all his life," according to a sister.
"People were banging on his door, bothering him all the time to borrow the flag," says Anna Van Lunz, curator at the Fort McHenry historical monument. "He became kind of a recluse."
Eben Appleton shipped the flag to Washington in July 1907, relieved to entrust his family's inheritance—and its attendant responsibility—to the Smithsonian Institution. Initially a loan, Appleton made the transaction permanent in 1912. At that point, his family's flag became the nation's.
The Smithsonian has kept the flag on almost continuous public view even while fretting about its condition. "This sacred relic is but a frail piece of bunting, worn, frayed, pierced and largely in tatters," Assistant Secretary Richard Rathbun said in 1913.
In 1914, the Institution engaged restorer Amelia Fowler to shore up its most prized possession. Commandeering space in the Smithsonian Castle, she set ten needle-women to work removing the heavy canvas backing that had been attached to the flag in 1873 and, with some 1.7 million stitches, painstakingly attaching a new backing of Irish linen. Her work kept the flag from falling apart for nearly a century, as it was displayed in the Arts and Industries Building until 1964, then in the Museum of History and Technology, later renamed the National Museum of American History.
The song the banner inspired had become a regular feature at ballgames and patriotic events by the early 20th century. Around the same time, veterans groups launched a campaign to have Key's composition formally designated as the national anthem. By 1930, five million citizens had signed a petition in support of the idea, and after veterans recruited a pair of sopranos to sing the song before the House Judiciary Committee, Congress adopted "The Star-Spangled Banner" as the national anthem the next year.
When war threatened Washington in 1942, Smithsonian officials quietly whisked the flag and other treasures to a warehouse in Luray, Virginia, to protect them. Returned to the capital in 1944, the flag provided a backdrop for inaugural balls, presidential speeches and countless public events. But constant exposure to light and ambient pollution took their toll, and the flag was removed from exhibit in the National Museum of American History in 1998 for a thorough conservation treatment, aimed at extending the flag's life for another century.
Conservators cleaned it with a solution of water and acetone, removing contaminants and reducing acidity in the fabric. During a delicate operation that took 18 months, they removed Amelia Fowler's linen backing. Then they attached—to the other side of the flag—a new backing made of a sheer polyester fabric called Stabiltex. As a result, visitors will see a side of the flag that had been hidden from view since 1873.
These high-tech attentions have stabilized the flag and prepared it for a new display room at the heart of the renovated museum. There the flag that began life on a brewery floor is sealed in a pressurized chamber. Monitored by sensors, shielded by glass, guarded by a waterless fire-suppression system and soothed by temperature and humidity controls, it lies on a custom-built table that allows conservators to care for it without having to move it. "We really want this to be the last time it's handled," says Thomassen-Krauss. "It's getting too fragile for moving and handling."
So the old flag survives, bathed in dim light, floating out of the darkness, just as it did on that uncertain morning at Fort McHenry.
Robert M. Poole is the magazine's contributing editor. He last wrote about Winslow Homer's watercolors, in the May Issue.
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Comments (25)
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this is a good website to get info thanks
Posted by tori on February 20,2013 | 10:07 AM
Wow that is really cool because I want to learn more. About it,,,,,
Posted by Runderhill on May 10,2012 | 11:12 AM
wow it is so so so so old
Posted by on April 25,2012 | 06:50 PM
the topic was good and inpresing i enjoyed it so much thank u for the view
Posted by sheila dithate on February 24,2012 | 04:01 AM
I brought my boys to DC from Phoenix, I was thrilled to see the flag back on display today (flag day) Thank you for this great article.
Posted by Kerrykenney on June 14,2011 | 11:43 PM
I visited the museum 7 years ago and will be going back again in two weeks. I was mesmerized at what I saw, that beautiful flag looking so fragile and to know what it has gone through and what it symbolized. I'm proud to be an American.
Posted by Gloria Zielinski on July 26,2010 | 08:39 PM
it should totally have a timeline in here so we dont have to look at it
Posted by Anissa Henry on February 23,2010 | 01:09 PM
I found what appears to be very very old copy of the Star Spangled Banner. It was behind a picture frame that I bought from a very old estate in Winter Haven Florida...
It is crumbling and very fragile....Very dark....May be a lithograph copy...Many of them were printed ....but how old is it and why was it hidden behind a picture frame that owned by a Navy Admiral that was a friend of Francis Scott Key's....
HELP!!!!!
phillip.millner@earthlink.net
Posted by Phil Millner on July 24,2009 | 06:42 PM
In the late 1990's i aquired, I blieve a lithograph 1907, and a certificate from the Francis Scott Key Association.
I have alway tried to find info on them. Today, I found a one of the certificates on-line for sale, $199.95
Both, art and certificate (1908) I gave to my son when he returned from Iraq (2006). He is currently in Germany and the items are in storage; therefore I may no tbe able to get more info until he returns home July. They have the same persons name of membership on both pieces. do you have any info on the portrait.
Thank you
Posted by Sharon Staub-Minor on June 21,2009 | 09:57 AM
who took the missing piece from the flag
Posted by sarah on May 5,2009 | 04:09 PM
Does anyone know the history of or why there are eight flags behind the President when he makes speeches?
Posted by Vincent Knight on February 19,2009 | 10:26 AM
this is cool. i like the history about this pce!
Posted by tiffany on January 26,2009 | 12:23 PM
The 2 flags for Ft. McHenry were ordered in 1813. Why did the flag maker use the 15 stars and stripes version? TN had come into the Union in 1796. OH was admitted in 1803 and LA in 1812. If Congress had authorized the 15 stars and stripes flag, surely it did so prior to 1796. Did Congress not act again on the flag until after the War of 1812? So why does the Star Spangled Banner have 15 stars and stripes?
Posted by Donald White on January 11,2009 | 04:30 PM
It is truly a honor and a priviledge to stand in the presence of this piece of American History. People that don't understand what this Flag (or any other American Flag) represents need only to stand in its presence and ponder its history. Our Flag is a very expensive piece of cloth. Those that have served in the United States Military understand what I mean. "Freedom Isn't Free".
Posted by Tom Moore on November 26,2008 | 03:08 PM
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