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- OLD
GLORY: AMERICA'S FLAG AND HOW TO FLY IT
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Whether you call it Old Glory
or the Stars and Stripes, the flag of the United States is indeed
grand and old. Its shape and general configuration were adopted
by Congress on June 14, 1777, a day that is now known as Flag
Day. Even in this age of hair-trigger political sensibilities,
it's fair to say that our flag is still regarded with a high
degree of respect and affection. And although it's unlikely
that anybody will raise a fuss about how you fly the flag, its
display and even your conduct regarding it is codified in national
law. If you want to read the specifics, see U.S. Code, Title
36, Patriotic Societies and Observances, Chapter 10, Patriotic
Customs.
So if you're flying the flag this Memorial Day, rather, if you're
displaying it, that's the proper term, it couldn't hurt to display
by the rules. Here, then, follows a brief summary of the U.S.
Flag Code. |
Flag
Holidays
- Memorial Day is
a flag holiday, one of 17 days specifically designated in the code on
which citizens are encouraged to display the flag, if they're not in
the habit of doing so daily.
- Flag holidays are
as follows:
1. New Year's Day - Jan. 1
2. Inauguration Day - Jan. 20
3. Lincoln's Birthday - Feb. 12
4. Washington's Birthday - third Monday in February
5. Easter Sunday - (variable)
6. Mother's Day - second Sunday in May
7. Armed Forces Day - third Saturday in May
8. Memorial Day (half-staff until noon) - last Monday in May
9. Flag Day - June 14
10. Independence Day - July 4
11. Labor Day - first Monday in September
12. Constitution Day - Sept. 17
13. Columbus Day - second Monday in October
14. Navy Day - Oct. 27
15. Veterans Day - Nov. 11
16. Thanksgiving Day - fourth Thursday in November
17. Christmas Day - Dec. 25
- The code also urges
citizens to display the flag on additional days that are proclaimed
by the president of the United States, on days that commemorate the
date in which their state was admitted to the union and on specific
state holidays.
- Manner
of Display
- The flag should
be hoisted briskly at dawn and lowered ceremoniously at dusk. The flag
should be displayed at night only if it is lighted dramatically, as
from below. To fly the flag at half-staff, raise it briskly to the top
of the pole, keep it there for a moment and then lower it to half-staff.
Before taking the flag down for the day, return it briefly to the top
of the pole.
- The flag should
not be displayed on days when the weather is inclement, except when
an all-weather flag is used.
- When the flag is
displayed from a staff projecting horizontally or at an angle, the union
(the blue rectangle on which stars are embroidered or fastened) should
be at the staff's peak, unless the flag is being flown at half-staff.
- When displayed
horizontally against a wall the union should be to the left of the observer,
looking from the street or in the audience. The same holds when a flag
is displayed horizontally in a window. When the flag is displayed vertically
against a wall, the union is also to the observer's left. Likewise,
when a flag is hung vertically in a window.
- When displayed
directly over a street, the flag is hung vertically, and it is centered
in the street with the union aligned with the north or east. In a north/south
street, this means the flag is hung across the street with the union
on the east side of the street. Conversely, on an east/west street,
the union is on the north side of the street.
- For visual reference
on all of this, visit the American Legion Web site.
- Prohibitions
- Never use the flag
for advertising purposes, as drapery, linens or as clothing, or print
it on items soon to be discarded--napkins and paper plates, for example.
It should not be used as part of a uniform--athletic or otherwise, unless
you are a member of the military, a patriotic organization, police force,
fire department or rescue/ambulance squad.
- Never attach a
flag directly to a vehicle or drape it over a vehicle. Instead, the
flag should be attached to a staff secured to a vehicle's chassis or
to the right front fender. The flag should be displayed on floats in
a similar manner. When bunting is used for patriotic display instead
of a flag, the colors are arranged from top to bottom: blue, white and
red.
- Never display the
flag in a manner in which it is easily damaged or with it touching the
ground.
- Never display the
flag upside down--as this is a distress signal.
- In Patriotic
Observance
- In unabashedly
old-fashioned and refreshingly blunt language the code calls on all
those present to recognize the flag when it passes as part of a holiday
parade:
- Stand.
- Place your right
hand over your heart. And in particular, the code says: "Men not in
uniform should remove their headdress with their right hand and hold
it at the left shoulder, the hand being over the heart." Military personnel
in uniform should "render the military salute."
- Flowers and
Other Patriotic Facts
- Suppose you were
to give someone flowers, and you wanted to be patriotic about it. Which
flower should you choose? The rose is designated as the National Floral
Emblem. Although no color is specified in the code, our choice would
be a dark red type, such as the hybrid tea rose, Mr. Lincoln.
- If you were to
utter our national motto, what would you say? It would be, "In God we
trust."
- And if the heat
weren't too great, and you were roused to march, what tune should you
march to? The National March is "Stars And Stripes Forever," by John
Philip Sousa.
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