AN EARLY STARS AND STRIPES

During the Revolutionary War, several patriots made flags
for our new Nation. Among them were Cornelia Bridges, Elizabeth Betsy Ross, and
Rebecca Young, all of Pennsylvania, and John Shaw of Annapolis, Maryland.
Although Betsy Ross, the best known of these persons, made flags for 50 years,
there is no proof that she made the first Stars and Stripes. It is known that
she made flags for the Pennsylvania State Navy in 1777. The flag popularly known
as the "Betsy Ross flag," which arranged the stars in a circle, did not appear
until the early 1790's.
The claims of Betsy Ross were first brought to the
attention of the public in 1870 by one of her grandsons, William J. Canby. In a
paper he read before the meeting of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania,
Canby stated:
"It is not tradition, it is report from the lips of the
principal participator in the transaction, directly told not to one or two, but
a dozen or more living witnesses, of which I myself am one, though but a little
boy when I heard it. . . . Colonel Ross with Robert Morris and General
Washington, called on Mrs. Ross and told her they were a committee of Congress,
and wanted her to make a flag from the drawing, a rough one, which, upon her
suggestions, was redrawn by General Washington in pencil in her back parlor.
This was prior to the Declaration of Independence. I fix the date to be during
Washington's visit to Congress from New York in June, 1776 when he came to
confer upon the affairs of the Army, the flag being no doubt, one of these
affairs."