Masons And U. S. Flag
A LAST WORD ... By:ANDREW BORACCI
Take a good look at that
American Flag, Brethren
It’s got more Masonry in it than you may know
-
Editor and Publisher Of The
AMERICAN MASON MAGAZINE
The weeks since the September 11 carnage at New York
City’s World Trade Center has seen more public exposure of our American
Flag probably than at any time since that day in 1777 when the Continental
Congress adopted the Stars and Stripes as the official flag of the United
States. We Americans have good reason to be proud of that symbol of
Freedom and of our great nation. How many Masons know the major role we’ve
had not only in shaping the destiny of this great nation, but also in
creating, guiding and bringing veneration to those stars and stripes that
comprise —”Old Glory.” Let us take a look back.
On January 1, 1776, General and Brother George Washington, after having
achieved a semblance of military order with a limited number of troops,
proclaimed the formation of the Continental Army at his headquarters on
Prospect Hill, Somerville, Massachusetts. There he hoisted the Grand Union
Flag on a 70 - foot mast in defiance of the British who were watching from
Boston. The flag too closely resembled the British flag. The enemy
sneered. An angry Bro. Washington while still in the field sketched the
idea of the stars and stripes on the back of an envelope. It was a
Mason—Bro. Francis Hopkinson, one of the signers of the Declaration of
Independence, who really designed what the legendary Betsy Ross then cut
and sewed into America’s first flag. The following year, on June 14, 1777,
the Continental Congress approved the Stars and Stripes as a symbol of our
new freedom and independence. The thirteen stars on a blue field defiantly
replaced the British flag. After that Masonic glory accompanied the stars
and stripes on America’s journey to growth and glory.
Admiral and Brother John Paul Jones, “Father of our Navy” in France
achieved international prestige for our Navy and our country during a
historic ceremony at Quiberon Bay on February 13, 1778. There the French
Fleet gave our flag our first national salute, the first time America was
acknowledged as a sovereign nation. For most of a century— Sag Harbor
whaling men—Masons all—showed the stars and stripes to the four corners of
the world for the first time. Soon followed many memorable occasions when
we were to see Masons and our flag honored around the world as well as in
outer space—at the North Pole thanks to Admiral and Brother Byrd, the
South Pole, thanks to Admiral and Brother Amundson, and Scott, and on the
moon, thanks to Brothers “Buzz” Aldrin, and John Glenn. ln 1803, Admiral
and Brother George Prebble’s Squadron was fighting against the Barbary
pirates who were then infesting the Mediterranean Sea. On February 16,
1804, Commodore and Brother Stephen Decatur took the USS Intrepid into
Tripoli Harbor under the guns of the fort and fleet, to bum the USS
Philadelphia that had been captured after having accidentally run aground
and the crew inhumanely tortured. In 1814, the nation’s Capitol was burned
by the British during the War of 1812. On Lake Erie, Commodore and Brother
O. H. Perry flew a flag that read: “Don’t Give Up The Ship,” and after the
battle reported, “We have met the enemy and they are ours.” On September
14, 1814, Brother Francis Scott Key, prisoner aboard a British man-of-war
shelling Fort McHenry, wrote on the back of an envelope what was to become
our national anthem, the Star Spangled Banner. In 1831, Captain and
Brother Thomas Driver of the SS Charles Daggett received a delegation of
ladies aboard ship who presented him with a new flag they had just made.
He immediately ordered the new colors run up the mast and as he saluted
declared, “l name thee Old Glory.” The name stuck. Bro. Driver was to
carry “Old Glory’’ twice around the world. The year 1861 saw our nation
tested as to whether it could survive as a nation united. Civil War. We
were to suffer 650,000 casualties, more than for all wars combined until
World War 11. And Brother James Gilmore wrote: “When. Johnny comes
marching’ home...” It was during those terrible times that Brother elect
(but never initiated) Abraham Lincoln described America as “a new nation
conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are
created equal...a nation under God that shall have a new birth of freedom
and that the government of the people, by the people and for the people
shall not perish from the earth....” In 1892, Brother James P. Upham,
publisher of Youths Companion Magazine, advanced the idea of a flag
raising ceremony in all schools in celebration of the 400th anniversary of
the discovery of America by Sir Knight Christopher Columbus. Patriotic
fervor swept the country. For an appropriate prayer filled with reverence,
patriotism and love of country, for occasions such as these, the Rev. and
Brother Francis J. Bellamy created America’s Pledge of Allegiance. Bro.
Bellamy’s pledge was first used on Columbus Day, October 12, 1892 and was
officially adopted on June 22, 1942, “under God” was added June 14,1954.
And all through the terrible World War One we “kept our eye on that Grand
Old Flag” as instructed by Bro. Geoge M. Cohan in his “ Grand Old Flag”
rouser.
In 1941 we were again called upon to defend our freedom and that of
weaker nations subjugated by power hungry dictators. We marched to Brother
John Philip Sousa’s Semper Fidelis March, The National Emblem March and,
of course, Stars and Stripes Forever. And, with the poetic genius of
Brother Irving Berlin, we all asked “God to Bless America “
On August 3, 1949 a Master Mason and Knight Templar 80 years old and in
failing health, came to Washington from Yeadon. Pa., to witness U.S.
President and Brother Harry S Truman sign The Flag Day Act into law. Bro.
William T. Kerr had, with other Masons, for more than a half century,
appealed to every United States President from McKinley to Truman. He lead
rallies and continually promoted the idea of a special day to honor “Old
Glory.” Kerr died in 1953 but left his brethren this legacy, now the law
of the land.
We see daily what Americans are doing to honor our flag. What are we
Masons doing to honor the flag for which our Craft has played so important
a role? We can ALL OF US honor our flag this coming June 14, 2002 in a
special, collective way. Let us make Masonry proud of our contribution to
our flag’s glory. Imagine if all America’s lodges on that memorable day
were to join together in singing Brother Irving Berlin’s very special,
musical gift to our flag, our nation and our craft of Freemasonry:
And what if every Lodge - and/or Masonic District — were to hold special PUBLIC Flag Day ceremonies that June 14 — ? What a way for brethren to ask God to Bless America and remember September 11. So mote it be. Bro.Andy Boracci
Reprinted with the permission of Brother Andy Boracci
Editor and
Publisher Of The
AMERICAN MASON
MAGAZINE
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