Knowing that his fort was a likely British target, Armistead told the commander of Baltimore defenses in July 1813 that he needed a flag-a big one. George Armistead, the commander of Fort McHenry. The Star-Spangled Banner's history starts not with Francis Scott Key, but a year earlier with Maj. This aerial photo shows star-shaped Fort McHenry, the location of the Battle of Baltimore on September 13-14, 1814. It evokes powerful emotions and ideas about what it means to be an American." But the Star-Spangled Banner is more than an artifact-it's also a national symbol. "It's exciting to realize that you're looking at the very same flag that Francis Scott Key saw on that September morning in 1814. "The Star-Spangled Banner resonates with people in different ways, for different reasons," says Kathleen Kendrick, curator for the Star-Spangled Banner preservation project. Over the years, more than 12 million people peered into the museum's glass conservation lab, watching the progress. While the conservators worked, the public looked on. "We didn't want to change any of the history written on the artifact by stains and soil. The intent was never to make the flag look as it did when it first flew over Fort McHenry, she says. "Our goal was to extend usable lifetime," says Suzanne Thomassen-Krauss, the conservator for the project. Finally, they added a sheer polyester backing to help support the flag. Over the next several years, they clipped 1.7 million stitches from the flag to remove a linen backing that had been added in 1914, lifted debris from the flag using dry cosmetic sponges and brushed it with an acetone-water mixture to remove soils embedded in fibers. With the construction of the conservation lab completed in 1999, conservators began their work. Started in 1996, the Star-Spangled Banner preservation project-which includes the flag's conservation and the creation of its new display in the renovated museum-was planned with the help of historians, conservators, curators, engineers and organic scientists. "The fact that it has been entrusted to the National Museum of American History is an honor." "The Star-Spangled Banner is a symbol of American history that ranks with the Statue of Liberty and the Charters of Freedom," says Brent D. And when the museum reopens in summer 2008, the Star-Spangled Banner will be its centerpiece, displayed in its own state-of-the-art gallery. To preserve this American icon, experts at the National Museum of American History recently completed an eight-year conservation treatment with funds from Polo Ralph Lauren, The Pew Charitable Trusts and the U.S. Nearly two centuries later, the flag that inspired Key still survives, though fragile and worn by the years. His brother-in-law, commander of a militia at Fort McHenry, read Key's work and had it distributed under the name "Defence of Fort M'Henry." The Baltimore Patriot newspaper soon printed it, and within weeks, Key's poem, now called "The Star-Spangled Banner," appeared in print across the country, immortalizing his words-and forever naming the flag it celebrated. Key put his thoughts on paper while still on board the ship, setting his words to the tune of a popular English song. The hours passed slowly, but in the clearing smoke of "the dawn's early light" on September 14, he saw the American flag-not the British Union Jack-flying over the fort, announcing an American victory. Given the scale of the attack, he was certain the British would win. But when darkness arrived, Key saw only red erupting in the night sky. "It seemed as though mother earth had opened and was vomiting shot and shell in a sheet of fire and brimstone," Key wrote later. Under their scrutiny, Key watched on September 13 as the barrage of Fort McHenry began eight miles away. They allowed the Americans to return to their own vessel but continued guarding them. Key's tactics were successful, but because he and his companions had gained knowledge of the impending attack on Baltimore, the British did not let them go. It was another chapter in the ongoing War of 1812.Ī week earlier, Francis Scott Key, a 35-year-old American lawyer, had boarded the flagship of the British fleet on the Chesapeake Bay in hopes of persuading the British to release a friend who had recently been arrested. The bombardment, known as the Battle of Baltimore, came only weeks after the British had attacked Washington, D.C., burning the Capitol, the Treasury and the President's house. On a rainy September 13, 1814, British warships sent a downpour of shells and rockets onto Fort McHenry in Baltimore Harbor, relentlessly pounding the American fort for 25 hours.
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