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  • 2021-06-22 (xsd:date)
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  • Has the US Redesigned Its Flag Before? (en)
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  • Singer Macy Gray wrote a fiery op-ed in Marketwatch on June 19, 2021, calling for a redesign of the American flag, emphasizing that it had been done before. In the op-ed, she referenced the Jan. 6, 2021, rioting at the U.S. Capitol saying the American flag was widely visible there, and, for her, had become akin to the Confederate flag, which was crafted as a symbol of opposition to the abolishment of slavery. She continued: Gray’s suggestion included incorporating 52 stars instead of 50, to give Puerto Rico and Washington, D.C., statehood. She added: Gray's proposal for what the new flag might look like can be seen here. Some readers appeared to take Gray's criticism of Old Glory as an affront on America or its veterans. Perhaps in anticipation of that, Gray pointed to the fact that the U.S. flag was redesigned in fairly recent history to incorporate new states of Hawaii and Alaska: In 1959, 17-year-old Bob Heft designed the current flag for a school project when there were only 48 states. Hawaii and Alaska were up for statehood and Bob had a hunch they’d get the nod. He crafted a NEW flag with 50 stars for the then-future, because things had changed. This did indeed take place. The Eisenhower Library website described how starting in 1953, the administration was considering incorporating a new flag with the potential new states of Alaska and Hawaii. According to the library: StoryCorps dove into the story of Robert Bob Heft, whose 50-star flag was one of the submissions. During his junior year of high school in Ohio, he designed the new flag for an American history project in 1958. He made the flag by cutting up an old flag given to his parents as a wedding present. His teacher was unimpressed, according to Heft’s own account, and gave him a B-, and asked him if he knew how many states were in the US, and said If you don’t like the grade, get it accepted in Washington then come back and see me. Heft submitted his design and said he wrote 21 letters to the White House and made 18 phone calls about his submission. The flag was officially accepted by U.S. President Dwight Eisenhower two years after Heft first designed it. Eisenhower called Heft up and invited him to Washington, D.C., for the official ceremony adopting the 50-star flag. The flag was raised over Fort McHenry National Historic Site on July 4, 1960. Heft’s teacher even went back and changed the grade to an A. While Heft reportedly designed the flag in 1958, designs for the 50-star flag were submitted by August 1959, and it was accepted officially in 1960. The flag had been redesigned even before that, with 49-stars earlier in 1959, as Alaska was recognized as a state before Hawaii. Between 1777 and 1960, Congress passed numerous acts changing the shape, arrangement, and design of elements of the flag. We should note that previous redesigns had little to do with the meaning of the flag, were largely undertaken when states joined the union, and were not done in response to criticisms of the flag. On 30 June 2022, a Slate investigation looked into Heft's story about designing the American flag and concluded that he made it up, even though it was cited by the Smithsonian, and other outlets including our own. The investigation found that, While he did make a 50-star flag for his history class, and Pratt may even have agreed to change the grade if it were accepted by the government, everything else in the usual account is a lie that Heft embellished for nearly half a century. At the heart of the investigation were inconsistencies in Heft's account: Given that Heft's claims about being the designer of the American flag appear suspect or altogether false, but our original point about the history of the U.S. flag redesign still stands, the claim rating remains True. (en)
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