
Flag Day is celebrated on June 14 in memory of
the day in 1777 when the Continental Congress adopted the Stars and Stripes
as the official flag of the United States. It is not an official national
holiday, but the President proclaims a public Flag Day observance every
year.
On Flag Day, people in the United States display the flag on their homes,
businesses, and public buildings. Some schools honor the flag with special
programs that may feature discussions of the flag's origin and meaning. Many
patriotic organizations hold parades and other Flag Day demonstrations.
Flag Day was first officially observed in 1877 to celebrate the 100th
anniversary of the selection of the flag. Congress requested all public
buildings to fly the flag on June 14 of that year. Some people suggested
that Flag Day be observed each year. Early leaders of campaigns to establish
Flag Day as an annual national celebration included William T. Kerr of
Pittsburgh and Bernard J. Cigrand of Waubeka, Wis. In 1897, the governor of
New York proclaimed a Flag Day celebration for the first time as an annual
event in that state. President Woodrow Wilson established Flag Day as an
annual national celebration in his proclamation issued on May 30, 1916. In
1949, President Harry S. Truman officially recognized June 14 as Flag Day by
signing the National Flag Day Bill.

Click above to visit the Historical Flags page

|