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Flag Day Origin
on 15th Feb, 2007
The Fourth of July was traditionally celebrated as
America's birthday, but the idea of an annual day specifically celebrating
the Flag is believed to have first originated in 1885. BJ Cigrand, a
schoolteacher, arranged for the pupils in the Fredonia, Wisconsin Public
School, District 6, to observe June 14 (the 108th anniversary of the
official adoption of The Stars and Stripes) as 'Flag Birthday'. In numerous
magazines and newspaper articles and public addresses over the following
years, Cigrand continued to enthusiastically advocate the observance of June
14 as 'Flag Birthday', or 'Flag Day'.
On June 14, 1889, George Balch, a kindergarten teacher in New York City,
planned appropriate ceremonies for the children of his school, and his idea
of observing Flag Day was later adopted by the State Board of Education of
New York. On June 14, 1891, the Betsy Ross House in Philadelphia held a Flag
Day celebration, and on June 14 of the following year, the New York Society
of the Sons of the Revolution, celebrated Flag Day.
Following the suggestion of Colonel J Granville Leach (at the time historian
of the Pennsylvania Society of the Sons of the Revolution), the Pennsylvania
Society of Colonial Dames of America on April 25, 1893 adopted a resolution
requesting the mayor of Philadelphia and all others in authority and all
private citizens to display the Flag on June 14th. Leach went on to
recommend that thereafter the day be known as 'Flag Day', and on that day,
school children be assembled for appropriate exercises, with each child
being given a small Flag.
Two weeks later on May 8th, the Board of Managers of the Pennsylvania
Society of Sons of the Revolution unanimously endorsed the action of the
Pennsylvania Society of Colonial Dames. As a result of the resolution, Dr.
Edward Brooks, then Superintendent of Public Schools of Philadelphia,
directed that Flag Day exercises be held on June 14, 1893 in Independence
Square. School children were assembled, each carrying a small Flag, and
patriotic songs were sung and addresses delivered.
In 1894, the governor of New York directed that on June 14 the Flag be
displayed on all public buildings. With BJ Cigrand and Leroy Van Horn as the
moving spirits, the Illinois organization, known as the American Flag Day
Association, was organized for the purpose of promoting the holding of Flag
Day exercises. On June 14th, 1894, under the auspices of this association,
the first general public school children's celebration of Flag Day in
Chicago was held in Douglas, Garfield, Humboldt, Lincoln, and Washington
Parks, with more than 300,000 children participating.
Adults, too, participated in patriotic programs. Franklin K. Lane, Secretary
if the Interior, delivered a 1914 Flag Day address in which he repeated
words he said the flag had spoken to him that morning: "I am what you make
me; nothing more. I swing before your eyes as a bright gleam of color, a
symbol of yourself."
Inspired by these three decades of state and local celebrations, Flag Day -
the anniversary of the Flag Resolution of 1777 - was officially established
by the Proclamation of President Woodrow Wilson on May 30th, 1916. While
Flag Day was celebrated in various communities for years after Wilson's
proclamation, it was not until August 3rd, 1949, that President Truman
signed an Act of Congress designating June 14th of each year as National
Flag Day.