Last modified: 2004-12-22 by rick wyatt
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Americans celebrated the Centennial with renewed faith in a nation stretching from Atlantic to Pacific and encouraging invention and industry. This unofficial flag, reflecting patriotic spirit, shows that Old Glory has always belonged to the people.
by Steven M. Schroeder, 18 November 2000
"Centennial" flag of 1876 - As depicted in the postage stamp. 13 red/white stripes and blue canton with 80 white 5-pointed stars arranged in the form of the dates
Dave Martucci, 17 October 1999
A flag of thirteen stripes, red and white, and a blue canton with stars forming the dates 1776 (above) and 1876 (below) was made for the first United States centennial. It was of course unofficial. Such a flag appears in _The Stars and the Stripes_, by Boleslaw and Marie-Louise d'Otrange Mastai. The illustrations are on pages 156 and 159. The date 1776 contains thirty-eight stars; Colorado was admitted to the union as the thirty-eighth state on August 1, 1876. The date 1876 contains forty-three stars, which became the official number in 1890 after South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Idaho, and Washington were admitted all in a rush the previous winter. Each of the stars on this flag has five broad points, as we expect, and five narrow rays set between them. The question now arises whether the inquirer has a flag that actually dates to the time of the