Who is this person?
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10-09-2015, 04:47 PM
(This post was last modified: 10-09-2015 04:49 PM by Eva Elisabeth.)
Post: #899
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RE: Who is this person?
Great the prize meets your taste and a multi-purpose use®, Laurie!
(10-09-2015 11:15 AM)Eva Elisabeth Wrote: (Happy re-inacting!)Forgot - don't forget to raise the flag again in the end: All kidding aside, I was wondering if at the re-raising on April 14,1865, the stars for the two states that meanwhile had gained admission to the Union (West Virginia and Nevada) had somehow been added. Nope - and it hadn't been up-to-date on April 14, 1861 either, showing 33 stars only while Kansas had become #34 on January 29 of that year. Also I had never known (nor wondered about) where the flag had hibernated during the war years. In (the unlikely) case I am not only one, the trivial tidbit is - here, there, and everywhere: "Anderson brought the flag to New York City for an April 20, 1861 patriotic rally, where it was flown from the equestrian statue of George Washington. More than 100,000 people thronged Manhattan's Union Square in what was, by some accounts, the largest public gathering in the country up to that time. The flag was then taken from town to town, city to city throughout the North, where it was frequently 'auctioned' to raise funds for the war effort. Any patriotic citizen who won the flag at auction was expected to immediately donate it back to the nation, and it would promptly be taken to the next rally to repeat its fundraising magic." https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Sumter_Flag The site also reads: "The Fort Sumter Flag is still on display at National Park Service." Where is that now??? Does that refer to the NPS headquarters in DC? |
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