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while we are on flags


The Gadsden Flag: Don't Tread On Me

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Gadsden Flag Don't Tread On MeIts hard to miss the Gadsden Flag these days. Although it sprung back into popular American consciousness when the Tea Party first got its legs, this is a flag with a long and storied history. In fact, the flag is older than the United States itself.

Back in 1751, Benjamin Franklin designed and published Americas first political cartoon. Called Join Or Die, it featured a generic snake cut into 13 parts. The imagery was clear: join together or be destroyed by British power. But why a snake? Around this time, Great Britain was sending criminals over to the colonies. Franklin once quipped that the colonists should thank them by sending over shipments of rattlesnakes. As American identity grew, so did an affinity for American (as opposed to British) symbols. Bald eagles, Native Americans and the American timber rattlesnake the snake depicted on the flag.

By the time 1775 rolled around, the rattlesnake was an immensely popular symbol of America. It could be found throughout the 13 colonies on everything from buttons and badges to paper money and flags. No longer was the snake cut into pieces. It was now recognizably the American timber rattlesnake, coiled into an attack position with 13 rattles on its tail.

The flag takes on a special historical significance at the Battle of Bunker Hill. This battle, still celebrated in Boston, is where Colonel William Prescott famously gave the order not to fire until you see the whites of their eyes. One thing the battle underscored was that the Continental forces were woefully low on ammunition. In October of that year, the Continentals learned that two ships filled with weapons and gunpowder were headed for Boston. Four ships were commissioned into the Continental Navy, led by Commodore Esek Hopkins, ordered to get those cargo ships as their first mission.

In addition to sailors, the ships carried marines, enlisted in Philadelphia. Their drummers had drums featuring the yellow of the Gadsden Flag with the now well-known snake emblazoned on top. It included the words Dont Tread On Me a now-famous motto with an uncertain origin.

In December of 1775, An Anonymous Guesser wrote a letter to the Pennsylvania Journal. While the letter is anonymous, most scholars now agree that it was written by Benjamin Franklin. This letter suggested, As I know it is the custom to have some device on the arms of every country, I supposed this may have been intended for the arms of America."

Anonymous Franklins reasons for such were as follows:

  • The rattlesnake is only found in North America.
  • The creature has sharp eyes and "may therefore be esteemed an emblem of vigilance.
  • The snake isnt known for unprovoked attacks. However, once it does attack, it doesnt stop until it wins.
  • Whats more, even before attacking, the rattlesnake gives ample warning in the form of its rattle.
  • Franklin claimed in the letter that the snakes tail had 13 rattles, none of which would work independently of one another.

While Franklin didnt get his wish, the Gadsden Flag did find a place as the personal standard of Commodore Hopkins. No one is sure if his flag inspired the drums or if the drums inspired Hopkins. However, one thing is certain: the Gadsden Flag, by virtue of being Hopkins standard, was effectively the first flag of the American Navy and Marines. He later presented another copy of the flag to the South Carolina legislature.

But what of the man himself? Who was Gadsden? Christopher Gadsden was the designer of the flag. Hes known as the Sam Adams of the South. Both a soldier and a statesman, Gadsden was a founding member of South Carolinas Sons of Liberty chapter. He served as a delegate to both the First and Second Continental Congresses. He left the Continental Congress in 1776 to serve as commander of the 1st South Carolina Regiment of the Continental Army. His legislative service continued in the Provincial Congress of South Carolina. And during the war, he was captured and served 42 weeks in solitary confinement after refusing to cut a deal with British expeditionary forces.

After the war, his health was in poor shape, primarily due to his time spent in an old Spanish prison. Gadsden was elected to the position of governor for South Carolina, but declined the position due to his health. He remained in the state legislature until 1788 and voted to ratify the United States Constitution. He died in 1805 and is buried in Charlestown. The Gadsden Purchase in Arizona is named for his grandson, who was a diplomat.

Today you can find the Gadsden Flag and its variations throughout the conservative, libertarian and patriotic movements. The Tea Party waved itduring their Obamacare protests in 2009. This is what caught the governments attention. A 2009 report from Missouri law enforcement called the Gadsden Flag the most common symbol displayed by right-wing terrorist organizations. That same year in Louisiana, a man was detained by policesimply for having a Dont Tread on Me bumper sticker on his vehicle. Christopher Cantwell and other libertarians have added the rattlesnake and Dont Tread On Me legend to the distinctive black-and-yellow anarcho-capitalist flag.

Over 250 years after its creation, the Gadsden Flag resonates because of its stark imagery and simple message. Dont Tread On Me with a rattlesnake poised to attack says all that needs to be said. It is not an aggressive posture, but rather a defensive one. It says to anyone who would tread on the liberties of free people to think twice. While free people are peaceful, their patience is not endless. Next time you hoist this flag up, don a hat with its image or throw a Gadsden Flag sticker on your car remember that youre standing in a fine tradition that includes the first American Navy and Marines and the patriot after whom the flag is named.

Ammo.com's Resistance Library: Flags



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FAR BEYOND DRIVEN

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Ammo.com's Resistance Library: Flags



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Great article Shawnee! Some very interesting information, some of which I am hearing for the first time!

I suppose liberals have already stigmatized this flag to represent racism, or their favorite "Tea-Baggers" - but no one can deny it's most extreme and profound lineage to the founding of our nation and our independence from Great Britain. Very historically significant, just as the confederate flag is! Liberals really do want to erase and re-write history. It requires people with a distorted perception of reality and they certainly aren't the majority of this nation but many are the most crooked of people really deep down inside, sorry liberals!  



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Glad you liked it. I always liked the Gadsen.

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The Betsy Ross Flag: 5 Things You Didnt Know About This American Icon

5 Things You Didn't Know About the Betsy Ross FlagSecond only to Old Glory itself, the Betsy Ross Flag is theAmerican icon. Its clean design is similar to our current flag, with 13 stripes and only 13 stars in a circle (representing the equal status of what were then the 13 united individual sovereign nations). This simplicity is perhaps the reason for its popularity among American Patriots and Constitutionalists, as it hearkens back to an earlier time when America was still a place of freedom and resistance to tyranny.

But while this flag is the oldest attested flag for the American nation, many people dont know its history. Who was Betsy Ross? And how did this iconic design become one of the strongest symbols of freedom?

1. Betsy Ross was shunned by Quakers and her family.

A Quaker like many in Pennsylvania, Betsy Ross was born Elizabeth Griscom. Once her education in public school ended, her father had her apprenticed to an upholsterer. It was at this job that she met her future husband, John Ross an Episcopal and brother of George Ross, who signed the Declaration of Independence. Since the Quaker community frowned upon inter-denominational marriage, the two eloped when Betsy was 21 years old.

After the elopement, Betsy was estranged from her family and expelled from her Quaker congregation. Her husband died a few years later during the Revolution. (Some have speculated that Betsy was the beautiful young widow who caught Carl von Donops eye after the Battle of Iron Works Hill.) It was after John Ross death that Betsy rejoined the Quakers this time the Free Quakers, fighters who supported the war effort.

Joseph Ashburn, her second husband with whom she had two daughters, was arrested at sea and died in a British jail awaiting trial for treason. She married a third time and had five daughters, four of whom survived to adulthood.

2. Betsy Ross (probably) didnt design the flag.

While Betsy Ross may not have designed the flag, legend around her supposed creation will live forever as part of American folklore. The story first started to circulate in popular consciousness around the 1876 centennial. Allegedly passed down through the Ross family, Betsy Ross was said to have made the flag at the personal request of George Ross and Americas first president George Washington. An example for patriotic young girls around the time of the centennial, Betsy was given the design by Washington, Ross and another man named Robert Morris. (Morris was an early United States Senator and held a pre-Constitutional office roughly analogous to Secretary of the Treasury.)

Other than the say-so of her distant relatives, there is no evidence supporting Ross design and creation of the first American flag. However, much circumstantial evidence against her role includes no records of a flag design committee, no evidence that George Washington even knew who Betsy Ross was, and no mention in letters or diaries that have surfaced from the period. Betsy Ross was paid a significant sum by the Pennsylvania State Navy Board to make flags, but theres no details about what those flags were.

Continue reading The Betsy Ross Flag: 5 Things You Didnt Know About This American Icon at Ammo.com.



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The Sons of Liberty Flag: How a Group of American Patriots Led the Colonies to Rebellion

The Sons of Liberty Flag
The Sons of Liberty flag is very meaningful to Ammo.com, as its the flag that inspired the backdrop of our logo. Its origins go back to 1765, when a secretive group of patriots known as the Loyal Nine was formed the group behind the original Boston Tea Party. The flag was then known as the Rebellious Stripes and it was banned by the British king, the highest endorsement the Crown could give.

The Sons of Liberty: No Taxation Without Representation

The Sons of Liberty were perhaps the most radical group of American patriots during the pre-Revolutionary period, but the true Sons of Liberty had a relatively short lifespan. They were formed in response to the Stamp Act of 1765 and disbanded when the Act was repealed. Still, the name lived on as a popular brand name for the biggest firebrands of the American Revolution.

Many of the members of the true Sons of Liberty are American legends who need no introduction. Samuel AdamsJohn HancockPatrick HenryPaul Revere. Even Benedict Arnold counted himself among their number. Its unclear whether the original Sons of Liberty were a clandestine organization with an official membership or just a rallying point for anyone who opposed the Stamp Act. Ultimately, it doesnt matter. The unified identity of opposition to the Crown was the organization, whether it was official or not.

The motto of the Sons of Liberty was a simple phrase known to virtually every American: No taxation without representation. While its origins are largely shrouded in mystery and lacking firm documentation, many experts agree that, to the extent that it was an organization with members, it was founded by none other than famous rabble rouser Samuel Adams.

Continue reading The Sons of Liberty Flag: How a Group of American Patriots Led the Colonies to Rebellion at Ammo.com.



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