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Home > Politics > History > Secrets Behind Old Glory ...
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Secrets Behind Old Glory Revealed Part 2
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The famous name of ‘Old Glory’ was originated in 1831 by Captain
William Driver, a shipmaster from Salem, Massachusetts. As he was
leaving on one of his many voyages aboard his ship the ‘Charles
Doggett’, his friends presented him with a beautiful flag of twenty
four stars. As the banner opened and waved in the ocean breeze for the
first time, he cried out "Old Glory!" By the time the Civil War broke
out, just about everybody in and around Nashville, where he had retired
in 1837, recognized Captain Driver's banner as "Old Glory." William
Driver's grave rests in the old Nashville City Cemetery and is one of
only three places authorized by an act of Congress where the Flag of
the United States can be flown 24 hours a day - quite an honor.
Although schools around the country had already been celebrating the
American flag’s ‘birthday’ on June 14 every year for over 30 years, it
wasn’t until August 3, 1949, that President Truman signed an Act of
Congress designating June 14th as National Flag Day.
During the War of 1812, a young lawyer and amateur poet named Francis
Scott Key wrote what later became the United State’s National Anthem.
While witnessing the final enemy attack on Fort McHenry during the War
of 1812, he became greatly inspired by the flag’s survival through the
bombings and fires. He wrote his verses on the back of a letter he had
in his pocket and after his brother had the words published, it
immediately became popular across the country. In October of that year,
a Baltimore actor sang Mr. Key’s song in a public performance calling
it "The Star-Spangled Banner". History had been made and finally, on
March 3, 1931, his song was adopted as our national anthem.
As a child growing up in the United States, you learned to pledge your
allegiance to the American flag. But did you know, that after all the
current controversy about omitting the ‘Under G-d’ part, that the
original pledge went like this: "I pledge allegiance to my Flag and the
Republic for which it stands - one nation indivisible - with liberty
and justice for all." Ironic, isn’t it? But true nonetheless. That
original Pledge of Allegiance was written by Francis Bellamy on
September 8, 1892. Bellamy was a circulation manager in Rome, New York
and printed those words on thousands of leaflets that were sent out to
public schools across the country. Then, on October 12, 1892, more than
12 million children recited the Pledge of Allegiance in their morning
classes, thereby beginning a mandatory school-day ritual.
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