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A Nod to the American Flag's Naval DNA

June 12, 2015 | By Naval History and Heritage Command, Communication and Outreach Division
First Recognition of the American Flag by a Foreign Government, February 14, 1778  Painting in oils by Edward Moran, 1898. 
This image depicts the Continental Navy Ship Ranger, commanded by Captain John Paul Jones, receiving the salute of the French fleet. 
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Photo By: NHHC
VIRIN: 180608-N-ZW259-9026


June 14th is Flag Day, so as we shake out our flags to display our patriotism, let's take a moment to reflect on the role our nation's early Sailors played on our flag's history while giving a nod to the flag's naval DNA. While many may know the name John Paul Jones in reference to our Navy history, you may not know the role he played in our flag's history. True of many of our nation's first defenders, John Paul Jones was a man with many attributes. A Scotsman with an affinity for the French, who fought for liberty against the British, became part of our history on an American-built ship. John Paul Jones, a charming naval mercenary, garnered a lot of emotion: Cast as a hero by the media to landlubbers, castigated as a pirate by the British, disliked by his crew for his stern discipline, and noted by all for his propensity to self-promotion and pandering. It should come to no one's surprise the first flag saluted as the flag of the United States was by the French on Jones' Continental sloop, Ranger. But we're getting ahead of ourselves.
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Photo By: NHHC
VIRIN: 180608-N-ZW259-9027
 

Back in 1775, most of the colonists, although peeved with the motherland over unfair taxes, still considered themselves British. As tensions rose, and anger turned into revolution, a young Continental Navy lieutenant, John Paul Jones, raised a flag on the American warship Alfred on Dec. 5, 1775. It was a mash-up of the British Union Jack flag and the Navy Jack.
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Photo By: NHHC
VIRIN: 210624-N-ZZ259-9292


With the creation of a new flag on June 14, 1777, coincidentally Jones was handed a new ship: the sloop Ranger. Built in America and commanded by the Scotsman, Ranger sailed to Europe later that year to harass the British fleet and its shipping lanes. Just days later after the Treaty of Alliance was signed with France, on Feb. 14, 1778, the French fleet saluted the Stars and Stripes flown by Jones' sloop Ranger, acknowledging their acceptance of the United States of America and making the French the first to salute our country's flag.

Our Flag as We Know it Today

For the 100th anniversary of the creation of the flag, it was flown over government buildings, and thus began that tradition. The flag's proportions, however, weren't standardized into what we see today until 1912 under President William Howard Taft after New Mexico and Arizona bumped the number up to 48.  The ratio for the flag itself was determined to be 1.0 for the hoist (the width or the height of the flag) compared to 1.9 for the fly (the length, which actually seems the width). He also determined how the stars in the field of blue would look and its spacing. That has been amended twice to add stars for Alaska (1959) and Hawaii (1960). It now takes 64 separate pieces of cloth to create Old Glory. As for Flag Day, that came after decades of individuals, organizations and states beginning to recognize the flag's birthday. President Woodrow Wilson proclaimed on May 30, 1916, the official celebration of the flag resolution would be called Flag Day. President Harry S. Truman signed an Act of Congress on Aug. 3, 1949, designating National Flag Day on June 14, which has been proclaimed annually by every president since then.