SELECTIONSINDEX
- Albany, reached by the Dutch, [2].
- "Albany Plan," [18]-[19].
- Alexandria, [61].
- Alfred, the, the first American man-of-war, [35]-[38].
- Algiers, the Dey of, yields to America, [58].
- America, [3], [18], [25], [34],
[46], [52];
- overpowers the Dey of Algiers, [58].
- "Ancient flag," the, [3].
- Anderson, General, carries the flag from Fort Sumter, raises it again in 1865, [72]-[73];
- Andrea, Dona, saluted at one of the West Indian Islands, [45].
- Arch Street, home of Betsy Ross, [40], [42].
- Arizona, admitted to the Union, [66];
- men from, at Santiago, [75].
- Asia, sought by Henry Hudson, [1]-[2].
- Atlantic Ocean, crossed by Henry Hudson, [1.]
- Bainbridge, Captain, carries Algerian ambassador to Constantinople, [57]-[58].
- Baltimore, [50], [61].
- Bedford, the flag of, [20]-[21].
- Beecher, Henry Ward, speech of, at Fort Sumter, [73].
- Bethlehem, [50].
- Bon Homme Richard, sinking of the, [45]-[47].
- Boston, arrival of stamps at, [15]-[16];
- Boston Harbor, [5];
- Brest Roads, [44].
- Britain, [34].
- British, besiege Fort Stanwix, [48].
- Broadway, [53].
- Brooklyn Navy Yard, flags for the navy made in the, [67].
- Bunker Hill, flags at battle of, [21]; [28], [29],
[30], [32].
- Bunting, not made in America until 1866, [66]-[67].
- Cambridge, Indian volunteers come to, [29]; [34], [39].
- Carleton, Sir Guy, delayed in New York, [53].
- Castle Island, ship made to strike her colors at, [5]-[6].
- Chapultepec, taken by Americans, [70]-[71].
- Charles II, and the New England coinage, [11].
- Charleston, the flag of, [11]-[12];
- stamped paper in, [15];
- liberty flag in, [16];
- flag of, after Bunker Hill, [22];
- Liberty Tree of, [30];
- cut down by Sir Henry Clinton, [31]; [72].
- China, the American flag in, [79].
- Christina, becomes queen of Sweden, [2].
- Civil War, the beginning of the, [71].
- Clinton, Sir Henry, cuts down the Liberty Tree in Charleston, [31].
- Columbus, [58].
- Concord, [20].
- Congress, [19];
- sends a committee to Cambridge, [32];
- orders building of cruisers, [35];
- orders a flag, [41]; [42]; [43];
- celebrates the anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, [51];
- decrees the star-spangled banner, [63]-[64].
- See also Continental Congress.
- Connecticut, regimental colors of, [22];
- Constantinople, Algerian ambassador carried to, [58].
- Constitution, frigate, [57].
- Continental Congress, [27];
- weakness of the statement issued by the, [29];
- Washington a member of the, [33]; [37];
- declares the colonies to be independent and decrees a flag, [39]-[40].
- Cook, Captain, to be aided by all American cruisers, [38].
- Copley, paints in the flag, [52].
- Cotton, Dr. John, advises concerning the King's Flag, [6]-[7];
- Indian chief resembles, [59].
- Cuba, given up to the Cubans, [81]-[82].
- Culpeper Minute Men, [25].
- Daiquiri, landing place of the Rough Riders, [75].
- Declaration of Independence, [32], [40];
- flag made before the, [42];
- first anniversary celebrated on the Delaware River, [51].
- Delaware River, Swedes settle on the, [2];
- pine tree flag on the, [35];
- stars and stripes on the, [42];
- celebration on the, [51].
- Digby, Admiral, licenses a Nantucket skipper to go to London, [52].
- Dix, General, [81].
- Driver, Captain William, originates the name "Old Glory," [68].
- Dutch, establish trading posts on the Hudson River, [2];
- overpowered by the English, [2];
- opposed by New Englanders, [9]-[10];
- government of, inquires concerning the American flag, [65].
- Dutch East India Company, Hudson sails in the employ of the,
[1]-[2].
- Elliot, Major, wife of, presents silken colors, [24].
- Endicott, John, cuts the cross from the English flag, [4]-[5]; [87].
- England, flag of, brought to Jamestown, [2]-[3]; [6];
[18]; [33];
- flag of, pulled down in New York, [54]; [66];
- honors the Stars and Stripes, [84].
- English East India Company, flag of the, [34].
- Essex (county), [9].
- Essex Institute, "Old Glory" sent to the, [69].
- "Father of his Country," [33].
- Fifteen stripes and fifteen stars, the flag of, [56]-[62].
- Fillmore, President, sends letter to Japan, [77].
- First Regiment of the United States Volunteer Cavalry, [74].
- Flag anniversaries, [90]-[92].
- "Flag Day," [87].
- Flag etiquette, [85]-[89].
- "Flower flag," the, [79].
- Flamborough Head, [45].
- Fort George, [53].
- Fort McHenry, attacked by the British, [60].
- Fort Moultrie, [23].
- Fort Schuyler.
- Fort Stanwix, flag made at, [48]-[49].
- Fort Sumter, firing upon, begins the Civil War, [71]-[72];
- Fourth of July, Declaration of Independence on the, [39]-[40];
- first anniversary of the, [51];
- new stars to be added to the flag on the, [64];
- honored in Sweden, [81].
- France, war with, [57];
- sells the Louisiana Territory to the United States, [58].
- Franklin, Benjamin, proposes the "Albany Plan," [18]-[19]; [24],
[25], [26];
- sent to Cambridge by Congress, [32]; [34];
- issues letters of marque, [37].
- Frederick, burial place of Francis Scott Key, [61].
- French, opposed by the New Englanders, [9]-[10];
- meet the New Englanders at Louisburg, [12]-[13].
- Gadsden, Christopher, speaks of possible independence, [30].
- Gage, General, [21].
- Gansevoort, Colonel Peter, commands Fort Stanwix, [49].
- George III, proclamation of, [54].
- "God Save the King," sung in St. Paul's Cathedral, [84].
- Grand Army of the Republic, [74], [86].
- Grand Council, part of the "Albany Plan," [18]-[19].
- "Grand Union Flag," made in Cambridge, [33];
- Great Britain, second war with, [57], [84].
- Gustavus Adolphus, plans a settlement in America, [2]; [80].
- Hall, Lieutenant, rescues the flag at Fort Sumter, [72].
- Hancock, John, presents a flag to General Putnam, [30].
- Harrison, Benjamin, sent to Cambridge by Congress, [32].
- Hart, Sergeant Peter, fastens the flag up on the ramparts at Fort Sumter, [72];
- presents it to be raised, [73].
- Harvard College, used by troops, [28].
- Havana, [82].
- Hawthorne, tells the story of Endicott and the flag, [4]-[5];
- of "The Pine-Tree Shillings," [11].
- Hemisphere, on a flag, [11].
- Henry, Patrick, [25].
- Hessians, [51].
- Holland, Hudson's vessel sailed from, the flag of, [1]; [44].
- Holmes, "Old Ironsides," poem of, [56].
- House of Representatives, hoists the Star-Spangled Banner, [65].
- Hudson, carries the Dutch flag into the Hudson River, [1]-[2].
- Indian, enters embrasure at Louisburg, [13].
- Indiana, [63].
- Indians, Hudson welcomed by the, [1];
- method of warfare, [8];
- given flags, [12];
- volunteer at Cambridge, [29];
- fought by Washington, [33];
- besiege Fort Schuyler, [48];
- raise the American flag, [59].
- Island of Knights, [80].
- James I, changes the flag of England, [3].
- James II, sends a flag to New England, leaves England, [10].
- Jamestown, founded, [2].
- Japan, opened by Perry, [77]-[79];
- embassy from visits the United States, [78];
- the friend of the United States, [79].
- Jasper, William, rescues the flag at Fort Moultrie, [23]-[24].
- Jersey City, [65].
- Jones, John Paul, hoists a flag on the Alfred, [35]-[37];
- forbidden to burn defenseless towns, [37];
- put in command of the Ranger, [43];
- receives a flag in Portsmouth and a salute in France, [43]-[45];
- in command of the Bon Homme Richard, [45]-[47].
- Journal, of Congress, [32].
- Kansas, first raising of the United States flag in, [59].
- Kentucky, admitted as a State, [56].
- Kettle Hill, battle of, [76].
- Key, Francis Scott, writes the "Star-Spangled Banner,"
[60]-[61].
- King Philip's War, flag used in, [9].
- "King's Flag," [3];
- displayed at Castle Island, [6]-[7].
- Lafayette visited by Pulaski, welcomed to Baltimore, [49], [50].
- Las Guasimas, [75].
- "Last battle of the Revolution," [53].
- Lexington, [31];
- Liberty, the demand for, [14].
- "Liberty Elm," Massachusetts history associated with the, [30].
- "Liberty Hall," [16].
- Liberty Pole, cut down in New York, [31].
- "Liberty Tree," in Boston, [16], [17];
- of South Carolina, [30];
- Paine's poem on the, [31].
- Lincoln, President, [72].
- "Lion of the North," [2].
- London, [52];
- honors the Stars and Stripes, [84].
- Longfellow, poem of, "Hymn of the Moravian Nuns of Bethlehem," [50].
- Louisburg, the New Englanders at, [12]-[13].
- Louisiana, admitted to the Union, [63].
- Louisiana Territory, purchased by the United States, [58].
- Lowell, quotation from, [63].
- Lowell (city), bunting made in, [66].
- Lynch, Thomas, sent to Cambridge by Congress, [32].
- Maryland, [61].
- Massachusetts, troubles concerning the cross in the flag, [4]-[7];
[8], [9];
- Mediterranean Sea, freed from Pirates, [58].
- Memorial Day, [81].
- Mexico, war with, [70].
- Mexico, the City of, captured by Americans, [70]-[71].
- Middlesex (county), [9], [20].
- Monroe, President, signs a bill decreeing the use of the Star-Spangled Banner, [64].
- Moravian Sisters, make banner for Pulaski, [50].
- Morris, Robert, [40].
- Mottoes on flags, [12], [15], [17], [18],
[21], [22], [25], [28],
[30], [36], [54].
- Moultrie, [71].
- Moultrie, Colonel, defends Fort Moultrie, [23]-[24].
- Nantucket, [52], [53].
- Nashville, [68].
- National Museum, "Star-Spangled Banner" of Francis Scott Key in, [61].
- Netherlands, flag of the, [34].
- New Amsterdam, [2].
- Newbury, flag of the militia in, [8]-[9].
- Newburyport, patrol, of, [15].
- New England, alliance of the folk of, [9]-[10]; [18].
- New Englanders, [10];
- set off to capture Louisburg, [12].
- "New England Flag," the, [21].
- New Hampshire, [15], [43].
- New Haven, peace rejoicing in, [54].
- New Mexico, admitted to the Union, [66].
- New World, [2], [58].
- New York, founded by the Dutch, [2];
- New York Sun, [82].
- North Pole, discovered by Admiral Peary, [83].
- Ohio, admitted to the Union, [63].
- "Old Glory," origin of the name and story of, [68]-[69];
- "Old Ironsides," frigate, poem by Holmes, [57].
- "Old Thirteen," [2].
- Oliver, hanged in effigy in Boston, [15]-[16].
- Oscar, king of Sweden, [81].
- Page family, as color bearers, [20].
- Paine, Thomas, poem of on the "Liberty Tree," [31].
- Pearson, Captain, yields to John Paul Jones, [45].
- Peary, Admiral Robert E., carries the flag to the North Pole, [82]-[83].
- Pennsylvania, [32], [50], [55].
- Pennsylvania Gazette, [19].
- Pennsylvania Journal, [25].
- Perry, Commodore M. C., carries the letter of President Fillmore to Japan, [77]-[79].
- Philadelphia, [18], [37], [39], [40], [55].
- Philadelphia Light Horse Troop, escorts Washington to New York, [27];
- Phœnix, [74].
- Pike, Lieut. Z. M., and the Indians, [59].
- Pilgrims, [34].
- Pine tree, on flag, [10], [11], [21], [35];
- used on the Delaware River, [35].
- "Pine-Tree Shillings, The," Hawthorne's story of, [11].
- Pope's Creek, birthplace of Washington, [61].
- Portsmouth, banner in, [15];
- Poughkeepsie, [49].
- Prospect Hill, [29];
- Pulaski, Count, the banner of, [49]-[50].
- Puritans, troubled by the cross in the flag, [4]-[7].
- Putnam, Major-General Israel, [29];
- flag presented to, by John Hancock, [30].
- Quaker City, the, [27].
- Ranger, command of, given to Jones, [43];
- Rattlesnake, on flag of Charleston, [22];
- Reid, Captain, S. C., designs the flag with stars arranged in one star, [65].
- Revere, Paul, [20].
- Revolutionary War, [21].
- Rhode Island, hoists a flag with the anchor device, [22].
- Roman Catholic Church, the cross regarded as the badge of the, [4].
- Rome, [48].
- Ross, Betsy, makes the first flag with stars and stripes, [40]-[42].
- Ross, Mrs. Elizabeth Griscom, [40], [48].
- Ross, Colonel, [40], [42].
- "Rough Riders," [74].
- St. Andrew, the cross of, [3], [18], [33].
- St. George's Cross, united with the cross of St. Andrew, [3];
- cut out of the flag by Endicott, [4]-[5];
- in the flag sent by James II to New England, in the pine-tree flag, [10]; [18];
[21]; [32]; [34].
- St. Paul, Cathedral of, [84].
- Salem, cross cut from the flag in, [4]-[5], [8], [68].
- San Juan Hill, the battle of, [76].
- Santiago, attacked by the Rough Riders, [75].
- Savannah, flag hoisted at, [22], [24].
- Scotland, the flag of, [3]; [33].
- Serapis, taken by Jones, [45]-[47].
- Six Nations, [18].
- Somerville, flag raised in, [34].
- Sons of Liberty, [15];
- South Carolina, [11];
- Spain, owner of the Louisiana Territory, [59];
- Spaniards, repulsed at Las Guasimas, [75].
- Spanish-American War, [81], [87].
- Stamp Act, [14];
- Stars and Stripes, first salute to, [45];
- replace the English flag in New York, [54];
- at Fort McHenry, [60];
- at Chapultepec, [71];
- fired upon at Fort Sumter, [71]-[72];
- raised again at Fort Sumter, [72]-[73];
- in Japan, [78];
- in China, [79];
- in Sweden, [81];
- honored in England, [84];
- behavior towards the, [85]-[87].
- "Star-Spangled Banner, The," written by Francis Scott Key, [60]-[61];
- played at Fort Sumter, [73];
- sung in St. Paul's Cathedral, [84].
- Stiles, President, describes the New Haven rejoicing for peace, [54].
- Stockholm, [80].
- Suffolk (county), [9].
- Swartwout, Captain Abram, cloak of, used for flag at Fort Stanwix, [48]-[49].
- Sweden, American flag raised in, [79]-[81].
- Swedes, settle on the Delaware River, are overpowered by the Dutch, [2];
- opposed by the New Englanders, [9]-[10].
- Tennessee, admitted to the Union, [63]; [68].
- Thames, the royal seal tossed into the, [10].
- "Thirteen," [51], [63].
- Thirteen stripes, first used, [28].
- Thomas, William W., raises American flag in Sweden, [79]-[81].
- Trenton, [51].
- Tripoli, war with, [57].
- Trumbull, battle of Bunker Hill painted by, [21].
- "Union Flag," [18], [22];
- made at Cambridge, [33];
- worn by the Alfred, [37].
- Union Jack, [3];
- United Colonies, [34].
- "Unite or die," motto of the "Albany Plan," [18].
- United States, [26], [51], [52];
- left by British troops, [53]; [54], [55], [58];
- buys the Louisiana Territory, [58]-[59];
- flag of, decided upon, [63]-[65];
- flag manufactured in, [67];
- opens intercourse with Japan, [78]; [80];
- flag of, hauled down in Cuba, [81]-[82]; [83],
[84], [87].
- Vermont, admitted as a State, [56].
- "Victory Tower," Star-Spangled Banner floats from, [84].
- Virginia, [2], [3], [25], [33], [61].
- Washington, [21];
- Watson, Elkanah, flag painted in portrait of, by Copley, [52].
- Wendover, Peter H., induces Congress to decree the Star-Spangled Banner, [64].
- Westminster Palace, [84].
- Westmoreland County, [61].
- West Point, burial place of General Anderson, [74].
- Wood, General Leonard, [75];
- delivers Cuba to the Cubans, [82].
- Yale, [54].
Transcriber's Note:
- Click on illustration to view the full-size version.
- Footnote moved to end of article on [Pg 114].
- Moved frontispiece illustrations to [Pg 1].
- Otherwise, archaic and inconsistent spelling and hyphenation retained.
- [Pg 16] Corrected spelling of word "processsion" to "procession" located in the phrase "and marched
in a long procession".
- [Pg 43] "whereever" and [Pg 107] "wherever" retained as printed.
- [Pg 90] Replaced semi-colon with a colon after "1783" located in "February 3, 1783".
- [Pg 92] Removed extraneous comma after "1787" located in "September 30, 1787,—August 10, 1790"
- [Pg 119] Replaced comma with a semi-colon after "30" located in the phrase "Liberty Tree of, 30".
- [Pg 119] Replaced comma with a semi-colon after "19" located in the phrase "Congress, 19".
- [Pg 120] Added period after "39" located in "designer not known, 34; 39".
- [Pg 121] Replaced period with a comma after "Jones" located in phrase "Pearson, Captain, yields
to John Paul Jones".
- [Pg 122] Replaced period with a comma after "51" located in phrase ""Thirteen," 51".