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  • Three Cheers for the Red, White, and Blue
  • Star-Spangled Banner
  • U.S. Flag Facts

Three Cheers for the Red, White, and Blue

Facts about the United States Flag

Until the Executive Order of June 24, 1912, neither the order of the stars nor the proportions of the flag was prescribed. Consequently, flags dating before this period sometimes show unusual arrangements of the stars and odd proportions, these features being left to the discretion of the flag maker. In general, however, straight rows of stars and proportions similar to those later adopted officially were used. The principal acts affecting the flag of the United States are the following:

  • Flag Resolution of June 14, 1777, stated, "Resolved: that the flag of the United States be made of thirteen stripes, alternate red and white; that the union be thirteen stars, white in a blue field, representing a new Constellation."
  • Act of January 13, 1794, provided for 15 stripes and 15 stars after May 1795.
  • Act of April 4, 1818, provided for 13 stripes and one star for each state, to be added to the flag on the 4th of July following the admission of each new state.
  • Executive Order of President Taft dated June 24, 1912, established proportions of the flag and provided for arrangement of the stars in six horizontal rows of eight each, a single point of each star to be upward.
  • Executive Order of President Eisenhower dated January 3, 1959, provided for the arrangement of the stars in seven rows of seven stars each, staggered horizontally and vertically.
  • Executive Order of President Eisenhower dated August 21, 1959, provided for the arrangement of the stars in nine rows of stars staggered horizontally and eleven rows of stars staggered vertically.

NUMBER OF STARS IN THE U.S. FLAG, AND ADDITIONAL STATES REPRESENTED
1777 TO PRESENT

Date of Flag

Additional states with date of entry into Union

13 stars - 1777 to 1795

Delaware (December 7, 1787)

Pennsylvania (December 12, 1787)

New Jersey (December 18, 1787)

Georgia (January 2, 1788)

Connecticut (January 9, 1788)

Massachusetts (February 6, 1788)

Maryland (April 28, 1788)

South Carolina (May 23, 1788)

New Hampshire (June 21, 1788)

Virginia (June 25, 1788)

New York (July 26, 1788)

North Carolina (November 21, 1789)

Rhode Island (May 29, 1790)

15 stars - 1795 to 1818

Vermont (March 4, 1791)

Kentucky (June 1, 1792)

20 stars - 1818 to July 3, 1819

Tennessee (June 1, 1796)

Ohio (March 1, 1803)

Louisiana (April 30, 1812)

Indiana (December 11, 1816)

Mississippi (December 10, 1817)

21 stars - July 4, 1819 to July 3, 1820

Illinois (December 3, 1818)

23 stars - July 4, 1820 to July 3, 1822

Alabama (December 14, 1819)

Maine (March 15, 1820)

24 stars - July 4, 1822 to July 3, 1836

Missouri (August 10, 1821)

25 stars - July 4, 1836 to July 3, 1837

Arkansas (June 15, 1836)

26 stars - July 4, 1837 to July 3, 1845

Michigan (Jan 26, 1837)

27 stars - July 4, 1845 to July 3, 1846

Florida (March 3, 1845)

28 stars - July 4, 1846 to July 3, 1847

Texas (December 29, 1845)

29 stars - July 4, 1847 to July 3, 1848

Iowa (December 28, 1846)

30 stars - July 4, 1848 to July 3, 1851

Wisconsin (May 29, 1848)

31 stars - July 4, 1851 to July 3, 1858

California (September 9, 1850)

32 stars - July 4, 1858 to July 3, 1859

Minnesota (May 11, 1858)

33 stars - July 4, 1859 to July 3, 1861

Oregon (February 14, 1859)

34 stars - July 4, 1861 to July 3, 1863

Kansas (January 29, 1861)

35 stars - July 4, 1863 to July 3, 1865

West Virginia (June 20, 1863)

36 stars - July 4, 1865 to July 3, 1867

Nevada (October 31, 1864)

37 stars - July 4, 1867 to July 3, 1877

Nebraska (March 1, 1867)

38 stars - July 4, 1877 to July 3, 1890

Colorado (August 1, 1876)

43 stars - July 4, 1890 to July 3, 1891

North Dakota (November 2, 1889)

South Dakota (November 2, 1889)

Montana (November 8, 1889)

Washington (November 11, 1889)

Idaho (July 3, 1890)

44 stars - July 4, 1891 to July 3, 1896

Wyoming (July 10, 1890)

45 stars - July 4, 1896 to July 3, 1908

Utah (January 4, 1896)

46 stars - July 4, 1908 to July 3, 1912

Oklahoma (November 16, 1907)

48 stars - July 4, 1912 to July 3, 1959

New Mexico (January 6, 1912)

Arizona (February 14, 1912)

49 stars - July 4, 1959 to July 3, 1960

Alaska (January 3, 1959)

50 stars - July 4, 1960 to present

Hawaii (August 21, 1959)


Prepared by the Armed Forces History Collections,
in cooperation with Public Inquiry Services,
Smithsonian Institution

Rev. 9/2001


Flag, United States, Freedom 7 Flight

1889 - 1893 Jewett Washington Curtis's Pieced Bedcover

Rocky III boxing trunks

5c Register and Vote single

Stars and Cans

Russell Means

Children Playing at Dockside

Presorted First-Class (23c) USA Flag Reflection

Washington Crossing the Delaware: American Flag, Boat, and Soldiers

Old Glory #5

Untitled, from the portfolio Photographs by Washington Photographers

Woman Suffrage Postcard, 1911

1876 - 1878 Esther Cooley's "1876 Centennial" Quilt

World War II Patriotic cover

Pin, Postage Stamp, Apollo moon landings

The Star Spangled Banner

Flag, United States of America, Apollo 11

Flag, United States, Flown on STS-1, Sally Ride

Flag, United States, 48 Star, Lt. Herbert Peters

G Postcard Rate (20c) Old Glory single

The Pride of the Ocean

American Flag

American Flag Beadwork

American flag recovered from the World Trade Center

G Rate (32c) Old Glory booklet single

Memorial poster for Martin Luther King, Jr.

"We are not afraid to entrust the American people with unpleasant facts, foreign ideas, alien philosophies, and competitive values. For a nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people."--John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962. From the series Great Ideas.

33c Stars and Stripes pane of twenty

Quilt

Flag quilt

Handkerchief

Soldiers Training

Stamp with illustration of US flag and blue and purple mountains in bottom right corner

44c Flags of our Nation IV: America single

American Flag Moccasins, 1870s

Flag, United States 48 Star, Gen. Claire Chennault Headquarters

5c Savings Bonds-Servicemen single


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