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ISSUE 1/2005  >  Quiz

US: National Symbols and Icons

Question 1 out of 7

1. THE US FLAG

The history goes back to the thirteen British colonies that became the first American states. Each colony had its own flag. But, during the Revolutionary War against Britain, all the colonies fought together under a common flag. It had red and white stripes, thirteen in all, one for each colony. And it had a blue square in the upper left corner. Red was for honor, white for innocence and blue for justice. Inside the blue square were the red cross and white stripes of the British flag.

The American colonists declared their independence on July 4, 1776. Then, on June 14, 1777, the Continental Congress approved the design of a national flag. Thirteen red and white stripes remained. But now thirteen white stars replaced the British Union Jack inside the blue area. The stars were meant to represent "a new constellation."

Two more stripes were added when two more states joined the Union after the Revolutionary War.

In 1818, Congress passed a law to require that the flag return to thirteen stripes, to honor the first colonies. But the number of stars increased as new states joined the Union. Today there are fifty states, and fifty stars.

A delegate to the Continental Congress, Francis Hopkinson, took credit for the flag design. And tradition says a committee led by George Washington asked a woman with expert sewing skills, Betsy Ross, who lived in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania to make the first flag.

WHAT IS THE AMERICAN FLAG CALLED?

Union Flag
Stars and Bars
Stars and Stripes




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