LYCOS RETRIEVER Beta Retriever Home  |  What is Lycos Retriever?   
Star Spangled Banner: Flag
built 237 days ago
This is a photo of a tactile model depicting a missing star from the Star Spangled Banner. The original Star Spangled Banner represents the history of a great nation built on diversity. The Smithsonian American History Museum has presented this historical feature in an exhibit utilizing Universal Design principles that promote equitable use. The accessibility features in this exhibit did not significantly add to the cost of the exhibit, and they are a great demonstration of how accessibility can be achieved with simple concepts. All visitors are offered the chance of experiencing the various aspects of the flag. Tactile, auditory, and visual information is available to people who have sensory impairments and are ... installed at a height accessible for people who view the display from a seated position.
Source:
The conservation of the Star-Spangled Banner began in June 1999. In the first phase, the team removed a linen support backing, attached to the flag in 1914. Over the years, this support had weakened and become soiled. The ongoing second phase includes the most comprehensive, detailed examination of the condition and construction of the Star-Spangled Banner to date. This examination provides critical baseline information for later work.
WHITNEY HOUSTON Whitney Houston's performance of "The Star-Spangled Banner" originates from the ABC Network telecast of Super Bowl XXV on January 27, 1991. In the days following the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, Arista Records and Whitney Houston responded to the President's call for all Americans to proudly fly the American flag by immediately re-releasing the patriotic anthem to radio stations across the country.
An engaging history of the United States flag known as the Star Spangled Banner, which inspired Francis Scott Key to write the 1814 poem that in 1931 became the American National Anthem. The flag was made during the summer of 1813 as a simple garrison flag, but after the British attacked Baltimore in 1814, it gained recognition as the "Star Spangled Banner"in what became a popular victory song. The author discusses the Battle of Baltimore and the circumstances leading to Key’s writing and publication of the poem. The flag became a valued keepsake for Major George Armistead, the commander of Baltimore’s Fort McHenry, and was retained by his descendants. In the emotional atmosphere following the Civil War, the song stirred a sense of patriotism in a new generation and Americans came to see the flag as a national treasure.
THE STAR SPANGLED BANNER tells the epic story of the war and, particularly, the siege of Fort McHenry in Baltimore. Historians and scholars reveal how, had the fort fallen, the consequences might have been disastrous the British had already taken the White House and burned the capital. But the commander of the fort, in an expression of confidence, commissioned a flag 32 feet high and 40 feet long. After 25 hours of bombardment, the British fleet retreated. In the smoky dawn, the giant flag was raised. Discover how the victory inspired Francis Scott Key, a local lawyer, to pen a patriotic poem in tribute. Francis Scott Key III tells how his forefather's words were soon sung around town to the tune of a popular drinking song. But it would be more than a century until it was officially adapted as the national anthem.
Source:
THE FLAG MOVES TO THE SMITHSONIAN:When it arrived at the Smithsonian in July 1907, the Star-Spangled Banner was hung on the exterior wall of the Smithsonian Institution Building (the "Castle") to be photographed. The assistant secretary of the Smithsonian wrote to Eben Appleton saying, "The newspaper men are after me, and they all want a photograph of it to publish in the various local papers . . . Its presence in the Museum has caused a wave of patriotism, which is very good to see."
SEARCH
MORE ABOUT