On January 2, 1952, the US Post Office Department issued a commemorative stamp honoring Betsy Ross, one day after her 200th birthday.
Elizabeth Griscom “Betsy” Ross was born on January 1, 1752, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The eighth of seventeen children, Betsy was raised in a Quaker household and learned to sew from her great-aunt.
After attending school, Betsy became an apprentice to an upholsterer, where she met and fell in love with John Ross. The couple eloped and she was expelled from the church. They then started their own upholstery business where they reportedly befriended George Washington.
When the war began, Betsy’s husband was killed, possibly in a gunpowder explosion. Betsy continued the upholstery business and was kept busy making tents and blankets and repairing uniforms. She was also the official flag maker of the Pennsylvania Navy. Betsy married twice in the following years (her second husband was imprisoned in England) and had seven children.
After the war, Betsy continued with her upholstery business in Philadelphia. She retired in 1827 and spent her final years with her children. She died on January 30, 1836.
The Betsy Ross Flag Story
The tale of the Betsy Ross flag was generally unknown prior to 1870. That was when William Canby first told the Pennsylvania Historical Society of his grandmother’s place in our flag’s creation.
According to Canby, back in 1776, General George Washington came to Ross’ upholstery shop to commission a flag based on a rough design. Ross made some adjustments (including changing the number of points on the stars) and sewed the original Stars and Stripes. It was this flag that was presented to Congress and confirmed as the nation’s emblem.
With no actual records and nothing but hearsay to go on, Canby was largely disbelieved. However, by 1873 his story was running in Harper’s Weekly. The audience grew significantly, as did belief.
Other descendants of Betsy Ross have continued the legend, and even embellished a little. Supporters are always looking for historical evidence to prove the story. Today though, it is often dismissed as a myth or considered a fable.
What was once known as the Betsy Ross flag is now called the Francis Hopkinson flag, after the member of the Continental Congress whose claims date back to the Revolutionary era and are considered more credible.
When the Betsy Ross stamp was issued in 1952, the legend of the Betsy Ross flag was still commonly accepted as history. The stamp design was based on a painting by Charles H. Weisgerber that pictures Betsy Ross showing the flag to the Flag Committee – General George Washington, Robert Morris, and George Ross.
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I grew up being taught in school that the myth behind Betsy Ross and the American Flag was true; I wonder how many people out there believe the myth to be fact?
I don’t know if the Ross story is true, but the Quakers were mostly patriotic people supporting the Revolution.
As far as I,m concerned, or proven by any eye-witness reports at that times. BETSY ROSS WAS /IS THE ONLY ONE WHO SEWED HER NAMED FLAG. Then how come there is Federal property graves that she was/is in. Original one at Mt Moria Cematry and Presently at Old Christ Church next to Ben Franklin?
100% of people who have heard the name Betsy Ross associate her with the flag. Only the most fanatically ardent historians have even heard of Francis Hopkinson. My guess is that by most he would be associated with the Star Spangled Banner rather than our flag. Call it myth or urban legend I’d rather stick with Betsy. F.H. or his descendants should have made a little noise if in fact he had done the deed.
According to the Wikipedia article on Betsy Ross, she actually made blue ensigns (naval flags) and narrow, red ship’s pennants for Pennsylvania’s navy during the Revolutionary War. After the War, Mrs. Ross and her family business made U.S. flags for 50 years. Mrs. Ross cut five-pointed stars to speed production, whereas other flag makers used two pieces of cloth for each star. Crossed triangles made a six-pointed star, and crossed squares made an eight-pointed star. According to the Wikipedia article on Francis Hopkinson, he designed two Stars and Stripes flags: (1) one for the United States with 7 white stripes and 6 red stripes and (2) one for the U.S. Navy with the reverse — 7 red stripes and 6 white stripes for better visibility at sea. Ironically, Mr. Hopkinson’s naval flag became the preferred National flag. Earl P. Williams, Jr., U.S. flag historian (paleovexillologist)