EARLY AMERICAN FLAGS
Archeological digs in northern India, dating around 3,500
B.C., have uncovered a seal, used to sign documents. The seal shows a procession
of seven men carrying square standards, held aloft on poles like modem flags.
While these ancient flags were rigid, like boards, and not made of cloth as
modern flags are, they provided ample testimony that heraldry and the displaying
of banners dated to the earliest civilizations.
In American history, the Vikings carried a flag which bore
a black raven on a field of white. In 1492 Columbus sailed to our shores with
his three small ships displaying the Spanish flag bearing two red lions on two
white fields and two yellow castles on two red fields. The Dutch brought their
own striped flags when they settled in New Amsterdam, which we now call New
York, and pioneers from other nations also brought along the standards of their
countries when they settled on our shores.
It is only natural, therefore, that America should create
colonial flags as soon as the first colonists settled. Given the disparate array
of settlers, it is not surprising that a wide variety of flags was created. The
first flags adopted by our colonial forebears were symbolic of their struggles
with the wilderness of the new land. Beavers, pine trees, rattlesnakes, anchors
and various other insignia were affixed to different banners with mottoes such
as "Hope," "Liberty," "Appeal to Heaven," or "Don't Tread on Me."
In the early days of the Revolution, there were colonial
and regimental flags by the score. The Boston Liberty flag, consisting of nine
alternate red and white horizontal stripes, flew over the Liberty Tree, a fine
old elm in Hanover Square in Boston, where the Sons of Liberty met. Still
another was a white flag with a green pine tree and the inscription, "An Appeal
to Heaven." This particular flag became familiar on the seas as the ensign of
the cruisers commissioned by General Washington, and was noted by many English
newspapers of the time.
Flags with a rattlesnake theme also gained increasing
prestige with colonists. The slogan "Don't Tread on Me" almost invariably
appeared on rattlesnake flags. A flag of this type was the standard of the South
Carolina Navy. Another, the Gadsden flag, consisted of a yellow field with a
rattlesnake in a spiral coil, poised to strike, in the center. Below the snake
was the motto, "Don't Tread on Me." Similar was the Culpepper flag, banner of
the Minutemen of Culpepper (now spelled Culpeper) County, Virginia. It consisted
of a white field with -a rattlesnake in a spiral coil in the center. Above the
rattlesnake was the legend "The Culpepper Minute Men" and below, the motto,
"Liberty or Death" as well as "Don't Tread on Me."
In December of 1775, an anonymous Philadelphia
correspondent wrote to Bradford's Pennsylvania journal concerning the symbolic
use of the snake. He began the letter by saying:
"I recollected that her eye excelled in brightness
that of any other animal, and that she has no eye-lids. She may, therefore, be
esteemed an emblem of vigilance. She never begins an attack, nor, when once
engaged, ever surrenders. She is, therefore, an emblem of magnanimity and true
courage.
It was probably the deadly bite of the
rattler, however, which was foremost in the minds of its designers, and the
threatening slogan "Don't Tread on Me" added further significance to the design.
The Moultrie flag was the first distinctive
American flag displayed in the South. It flew over the ramparts of the fort on
Sullivan's Island, which lies in the channel leading to Charleston, South
Carolina, when the British fleet attacked on June 28, 1776. The British ships
bombarded the fort for 10 hours. But the garrison, consisting of some 375
regulars -and a few militia, under the command of Col. William Moultrie, put up
such a gallant defense that the British were forced to withdraw under cover of
darkness. This victory saved the southern Colonies from invasion for another two
years. The flag was blue, as were the uniforms of the men of the garrison, and
it bore a white crescent in the upper corner next to the staff, like the silver
crescents the men wore on their caps, inscribed with the words "Liberty or
Death."
The Maritime Colony of Rhode Island had its
own flag, which was carried at Brandywine, Trenton, and Yorktown. It bore an
anchor, 13 stars, and the word "Hope." Its white stars in a blue field are
believed by many to have influenced the design of our national flag.
The Army preferred its regimental flags on
the battlefield instead of the Stars and Stripes. A popular form of the U.S.
flag that was used in battle had the obverse (front) of the Great Seal in the
canton. The Army also used the Stars and Stripes with 13 stars in a circle. The
Stars and Stripes was officially used in Army artillery units in 1834, and in
infantry units in 1842.