By Joseph Judge
The museum always tries to highlight a unique artifact during the annual CPO Heritage Days event in August. This year we displayed one of the highlights of the collection, recently transferred to HRNM from the (now closed) Supply Corps Museum.
Hampton Roads Naval Museum Curator
The museum always tries to highlight a unique artifact during the annual CPO Heritage Days event in August. This year we displayed one of the highlights of the collection, recently transferred to HRNM from the (now closed) Supply Corps Museum.
The artifact is a 13-star
American flag, made during the Civil War. Gunner’s Mate James Smith made this
flag while on board USS Hartford,
Admiral Farragut’s flagship. Of course, the American flag carried 33 stars at
the beginning of the war, and later more as Kansas and West Virginia joined the
Union. But the impulse to celebrate the Revolutionary generation was strong
during the crisis years of the Civil War. Both North and South looked to
America’s eighteenth century for intellectual and emotional justification for
the actions of the 1860s.
It would be tempting, but unfortunately unjustified, to claim that the USS Richmond’s James Smith is the maker of the USS Hartford 13-star flag. A future, and very thorough, archival search will be required to establish a real connection, if one exists.
We do know how the flag came into the Navy’s collection. It was donated in 1991 by the former Chief of the Navy’s Supply Corps, Rear Admiral Daniel McKinnon, Jr. Admiral McKinnon was described by “The Supply Line,” a Navy newsletter of the day, as “a history buff” who “had been holding on to some treasures.”
2 comments:
What are the dimensions of this flag, please? It was very common for small boat flags to carry only 13 stars, due to the lack of space in the canton.
Good morning, the dimensions of the flag are 24" high x 37" wide. Thanks so much for your comment!
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