Flag Day
People across the United States
celebrate Flag Day on June 14 each year to honor the United States flag and to
commemorate the flag’s adoption. On the same day, the United States Army
celebrates its birthday.
Is Flag Day a Public Holiday?
Flag Day is not a public holiday.
Businesses have normal opening hours.
What Do People Do?
Flag Day falls within National
Flag Week, a time when Americans reflect on the foundations of the nation’s
freedom. The flag of the United States represents freedom and has been an
enduring symbol of the country’s ideals since its early days. During both
events, Americans also remember their loyalty to the nation, reaffirm their
belief in liberty and justice, and observe the nation’s unity.
Many people in the United States
honor this day by displaying the American flag at homes and public buildings.
Other popular ways of observing this holiday include: flag-raising ceremonies;
Flag Day services; school quizzes and essay competitions about the American
flag; musical salutes; street parades; and awards for special recognition.
Organizations such as The
National Flag Day Foundation are actively involved in coordinating activities
centered on the event and keeping the flag’s traditions alive. Following Flag
Day is Honor America Days, a 21-day period through to Independence Day (July 4)
to honor America. During this period, people hold public gatherings and
activities to celebrate and honor the nation.
Public Life
Although Flag Day is a nationwide
observance, it is not a public holiday in many parts of the United States. It
is a legal holiday in a few areas in the USA, such as Montour County in
Pennsylvania.
Background
On June 14, 1777, the Continental
Congress replaced the British symbols of the Grand Union flag with a new design
featuring 13 white stars in a circle on a field of blue and 13 red and white
stripes – one for each state. Although it is not certain, this flag may have
been made by the Philadelphia seamstress Betsy Ross, who was an official flag
maker for the Pennsylvania Navy. The number of stars increased as the new
states entered the Union, but the number of stripes stopped at 15 and was later
returned to 13.
In June 1886 Bernard Cigrand made
his first public proposal for the annual observance of the birth of the flag
when he wrote an article titled “The Fourteenth of June” in the old Chicago
Argus newspaper. Cigrand’s effort to ensure national observance of Flag Day
finally came when President Woodrow Wilson issued a proclamation calling for a
nationwide observance of the event on June 14, 1916. However, Flag Day did not
become official until August 1949, when President Harry Truman signed the
legislation and proclaimed June 14 as Flag Day. In 1966, Congress also
requested that the President issue annually a proclamation designating the week
in which June 14 occurs as National Flag Week.
The President is requested to
issue each year a proclamation to: call on government officials in the USA to
display the flag of the United States on all government buildings on Flag Day;
and to urge US residents to observe Flag Day as the anniversary of the adoption
on June 14, 1777, by the Continental Congress of the Stars and Stripes as the
official flag of the United States.
Symbols
The American flag, also nicknamed
as “Old Glory” or “star-spangled banner”, has changed designs over the
centuries. It consists of 13 equal horizontal stripes of red (top and bottom)
alternating with white, with a blue rectangle in the canton bearing 50 small,
white, five-pointed stars. Each of the 50 stars represents one of the 50 states
in the United States and the 13 stripes represent the original 13 colonies that
became the first states in the Union.
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