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  2. Bunting (decoration) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bunting_(decoration)

    Bunting refers to decorative flags, wide streamers, or draperies made of fabric, or of plastic, paper or cardboard in imitation of fabric. Bunting is also a collection of flags, and the fabric used to make flags. The fabric was originally a specific type of lightweight worsted wool fabric, but can also be cotton.

  3. 3rd Arkansas Infantry Regiment (Confederate States)

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/3rd_Arkansas_Infantry...

    The third flag carried by the Third Arkansas is an Army of Northern Virginia Battle Flag pattern made of bunting and cotton with canvas lead, 47 inches × 46 inches. Glenn Dedmondt [24] identifies the flag as a 3rd bunting issue flag made by the Richmond Depot. The flag was issued to the unit on September 20, 1863, on the field of Chickamauga ...

  4. Star-Spangled Banner (flag) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star-Spangled_Banner_(flag)

    The flag was stitched from a combination of cotton and dyed English wool bunting. It has fifteen horizontal red and white stripes, as well as fifteen white stars in the blue field. The two additional stars and stripes, approved by the United States Congress's Flag Act of 1794, represent Vermont and Kentucky's entrance into the Union. The stars ...

  5. Mary Young Pickersgill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Young_Pickersgill

    Mary Young was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on February 12, 1776, the youngest of the six children of William Young and Rebecca Flower. [1] Her mother, who became widowed when Mary was two years old, had a flag shop on Walnut Street in Philadelphia where she made ensigns, garrison flags and "Continental Colors" for the Continental Army.

  6. Gadsden flag - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gadsden_flag

    The flag is named after Christopher Gadsden, a South Carolinian delegate to the Continental Congress and brigadier general in the Continental Army, [4] [5] who designed the flag in 1775 during the American Revolution. [6] He gave the flag to Commodore Esek Hopkins, and it was unfurled on the main mast of Hopkins' flagship USS Alfred on December ...

  7. All-American Flag Act - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All-American_Flag_Act

    The All-American Act, Pub. L. 118-74, 138 Stat. 1505, is a U.S. federal statute enacted by the 118th United States Congress and signed into law by President Joe Biden on July 30, 2024. The act mandates that American flags purchased by the U.S. government must be produced entirely with American-made materials and manufactured in the United ...

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