and her nieces sewing the flag at
Brown's Brewery. Artist's rendition by Robert McGill Mackall, 1962. In Baltimore's preparation for an expected attack on the city, Fort McHenry was made ready to defend the city's harbor. When Major
George Armistead, the fort's commander, expressed the desire for a very large flag to fly over the fort, General John S. Stricker and
Commodore Joshua Barney placed an order for two oversized American flags. The larger of the two flags would be the Great Garrison Flag, the largest battle flag ever flown at the time. The smaller of the two flags would be the Storm Flag, to be more durable and less prone to fouling in inclement weather. The flag was sewn by prominent Baltimorean flagmaker
Mary Young Pickersgill under a government commission in 1813 at a cost of $405.90 (). Armistead specified "a flag so large that the British would have no difficulty seeing it from a distance". Pickersgill made the flag with assistance from her daughter, two nieces, and an African American
indentured servant, Grace Wisher.
Battle observing the flag on the morning after the battle. Artist's rendition by
Edward Percy Moran, 1913. On September 12, 1814, 5,000
British soldiers and a fleet of 19 ships attacked Baltimore. The bombardment turned to Fort McHenry on the morning of September 13, and continuous shelling occurred for 25 hours under heavy rain. When the British ships were unable to pass the fort and penetrate the harbor, the attack was ended. There is conflicting evidence as to which flag, the larger garrison flag or the smaller storm flag, flew over the fort during the battle. Historians suggest that the storm flag flew through the night, and the garrison flag was hoisted in the morning, after the British retreated. On the morning of September 14, when the flag was seen flying above the ramparts, it was clear that Fort McHenry remained in American hands. This revelation was famously captured in poetry by
Francis Scott Key, an American lawyer and amateur poet. Being held by the British on a truce ship in the
Patapsco River, Key observed the battle from afar. When he saw the garrison flag flying in the morning, he composed a poem he originally titled "Defence of Fort McHenry." The poem would be put to the music of a common tune, retitled "
The Star-Spangled Banner", and a portion of it would later be adopted as the national anthem of the United States.
Armistead family After the battle, the flag came into the possession of Major Armistead. How and when this occurred is unclear. Upon his death in 1818, the flag passed to his widow, Louisa Hughes Armistead. Louisa occasionally allowed the flag to be used for civic occasions. Some years, it was flown at Baltimore's celebration of
Defenders Day, the anniversary of the battle. It reportedly decorated the hall of the Baltimore Athenaeum during a memorial service for Lafayette in 1834. It was displayed outside Armistead's son's home for the
1844 Whig National Convention. The Armisteads' daughter, Georgiana Armistead Appleton, inherited the flag upon her mother's death in 1861. In 1873, Appleton lent the flag to
George Henry Preble, a naval officer who had written a popular history of the American flag. Preble had the flag quilted to a canvas sail, and unfurled it at the
Boston Navy Yard to take the first known photograph of it. He then put the flag on display at the headquarters of the
New England Historic Genealogical Society for several weeks. It was then kept in the Society's vault until 1876, when it was taken to the vault of the
Historical Society of Pennsylvania. In 1877, the flag was exhibited at the
Old South Church in Boston for the nation's first
Flag Day celebration. Georgiana Appleton died in 1878 and left the flag to her son, Eben Appleton. Eben Appleton was highly protective of the flag and disliked the attention it brought him. For the next 29 years, he allowed it to be displayed only once, in 1880, when it was paraded through the streets of Baltimore for the city's sesquicentennial celebration. The Armistead family occasionally gave away pieces of the flag as souvenirs and gifts. ==Smithsonian National Museum of American History==