September 2019 Gallup Journey Magazine

Page 46

History of the Flag: Part 4 By Martin Link The Second Flag Act, January 13, 1794 — “Be it enacted that the flag of the United States be fifteen stripes alternate red and white. The Union be fifteen stars, white in a blue field.” This brought more standardization to the flag, at least in the colors of the stripes and position of the stars. It was generally agreed that both a stripe and a star would be added for each state that was brought into the Union, but that concept wasn’t adhered to.

THE GREAT STAR FLAG By the spring of 1846, when war was officially declared against the Republic of Mexico, the United States had twenty-six states. Prior to that date, in 1835, the unique design for the twenty-five stars was a great star. In 1837 with the admission of Michigan, a twenty-sixth star was simply placed in the center.

With the outbreak of the Mexican War, this flag accompanied Gen. John C. Fremont as his army invaded northern California, and also Commodore Robert Stockton when he landed his marines at the port of Los Angeles. This flag also accompanied Gen. Stephen W. Kearny and a detachment of Missouri Volunteers under Col. Alexander Doniphan, as he led the Army of the West from Ft. 46

September 2019

Leavenworth, Kansas, along the Santa Fe Trail in July and August 1846, with orders to subdue the Territory of New Mexico. He raised this flag over the town of Las Vegas on August 15th, when he read his proclamation of annexation, and again on August 18th in Santa Fe, when he replaced the Mexican government and the Mexican flag on the Palace of the Governors with the Stars and Stripes. Gen. Kearny and his Army of the West soon left for California, but Col. Doniphan stayed behind for a while to help the new government deal with the various Indian tribes. Doniphan, with the Great Star flag fluttering in the autumn breeze, met the Navajo leaders at Shush bi’ Toh (Bear Springs), the future site of Fort Wingate, and signed a treaty of mutual peace on November 22, 1846.

When the fifteen-starred, fifteenstriped flag flew over Ft. McHenry on that fateful morning of September 14, 1814, it was already outdated. Tennessee (1796), Ohio (1803), and Louisiana (1812) had brought the number of states to eighteen. It wasn’t until 1815, when the war with England was over, that Congress started thinking about making a change in the design, by reducing the number of stripes to the original thirteen; but a definite decision was never made during its perennial debates in Congress. During this time Indiana became the nineteenth state in 1816, and on December 10, 1817, Mississippi became the twentieth state. At that point, under the encouragement of Rep. Peter H. Wendover of New York, Congress took the flag dilemma seriously, and on April 4, 1818, passed the third and final Flag Act. Thus, the first flag created under this Act has always been considered as the first official American flag.


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