
Birth of Our Nation’s Flag - Harrisburg, PA
Posted by:
hykesj
N 40° 15.940 W 076° 53.146
18T E 339652 N 4458950
Monumental painting by Charles H. Weisgerber, in the PA State Museum, that was used on a 1952 U.S. postage stamp celebrating what would have been Betsy Ross’s 200th birthday.
Waymark Code: WM17BJP
Location: Pennsylvania, United States
Date Posted: 01/20/2023
Views: 3
This painting was originally displayed at the Pennsylvania exhibit of the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago. Charles H. Weisgerber won a competition to have the painting displayed. It helped fuel what many believe to be a legend: namely, that Elizabeth Ross of Philadelphia designed and/or sewed the first U. S. flag. One thing’s for sure, the painting is real and became the basis for the design of a U.S. postage stamp.
The painting shows Betsy Ross presenting the new flag to George Washington and two members of the flag committee: Robert Morris and George Ross. The setting is the parlor of Betsy Ross’s house in Philadelphia, and it’s a very accurate rendition as anyone who’s been there would know. Charles Weisgerber knew the house well as he was part of a group who purchased the house in the late nineteenth century to preserve it for posterity. In fact, Weisgerber and his family lived in the house for many years while it was being restored.
Since nobody knows what Betsy Ross looked like, Weisgerber used some of Ross’s female descendants as models for her face. The Weisgerber family donated the life-sized (9 foot x 12 foot) painting to the Pennsylvania State Museum in Harrisburg where it is displayed.
Stamp Issuing Country: United States
 Date of Issue: 2-Jan-1952
 Denomination: 3c
 Color: carmine rose
 Stamp Type: Single Stamp
 Relevant Web Site: Not listed

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