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ZFC0749

United States // Revenue Marine Commemorative Flag

Sub-collection: 1976 Bicentennial Commemorative Collection

United States // Revenue Service Cutter Flag // 13-star.

The Act of March 2, 1799, known as the Customs Administration Act authorized that "the cutters and boats employed in the service of the revenue shall be distinguished from other vessels by "an ensign and pendant, with such marks thereon as shall be prescribed and directed by the President of the United States."
The job of designing the distinguishing ensign eventually fell upon Oliver Wolcott, who had replaced Alexander Hamilton as Secretary of the Treasury in 1795. On June 1, 1799, Wolcott submitted his design to President John Adams for approval. Wolcotts proposal featured an ensign of sixteen vertical stripes, alternating red and white, representing the number of states that had joined the Union by 1799. In suggesting a correspondence of stripes and states, Wolcott was following the lead of Congress, which in 1794 had changed the national flag to fifteen stars and fifteen stripes, implying an adjustment at the entry of each new state. Wolcott, therefore, raised the number of stripes to sixteen, and dramatically turned their arrangement ninety degrees to differentiate the new revenue cutter ensign from the U.S. Flag.
This ensign was ultimately authorized August 1, 1799, when Secretary of the Treasury, Oliver Wolcott, issued an order announcing that in pursuance of authority from the President, the distinguishing ensign and pennant would consist of, "16 perpendicular stripes, alternate red and white, the union of the ensign to be the arms of the United States in a dark blue on a white field."
With a design in hand, each collector contracted with local flagmakers to furnish the new revenue cutter ensigns. Although originally intended as a marine ensign to be flown from revenue cutters and customs vessels, the collectors soon were flying it over their customhouses.
During the American Civil war the US Treasury Department began to issue standardized ensigns to the Revenue Marine and in 1874, Treasury Secretary William A. Richardson, required that during business hours, the customs ensign was to be hoisted by the side of the Stars and Stripes over all customhouses.

This is a modern nylon flag, made for the bicentennial observance in 1976.

ARC OF 4-5-4. FRAMED 66.5" HORIZONTAL X 46.5" VERTICAL.

ZFC Collectible Flag
Item is Framed



Hoist & Fly

Width of Hoist 39.25
Length of Fly 57.75

Union/Canton

Width of Union/Canton 20
Length of Union/Canton 28.75

Stars

Size of Stars 2.75

Stripes

Width of 1st Stripe 3.75
Width of 3rd Stripe 3.75
Width of 8th Stripe 3.5
Width of Last Stripe 3.5
Size of Hoist 2.5

Frame

Is it framed? yes
Frame Height 46.5
Frame Length 66.5

Stars

Number of Stars 13
How are the stars embeded? Painted
Are there stars on obverse? yes
Are there stars on reverse? no

Stripes

Number of Stripes 16
Color of Top Stripe Red
Color of Bottom Stripe White
Has a Blood Stripe? no
Comments on Stripes VERTICAL.

Crest/Emblem

Description of Crest/Emblem Spread eagle holding arrows and palm frond; shield with red and white vertical stripes; 13-stars in arc.

Fabric

Fabric Nylon

Stitching

Stitching Machine

Attachment

Comments on Method of Attachmen SLEEVED HEADER.
Method of Attachment Sleeve

Applica

Applique Sides Single Faced = Mirror Image Reverse

Documentation

Documents
All original documents and drawings are held in the Zaricor Flag Collection Archives.
Drawings
All original documents and drawings are held in the Zaricor Flag Collection Archives.

Condition

Condition Fair
Damage Highly fractured.

USED. STAINED, DISINTEGRATING, BOTH AND TOP FLY CORNERS MISSING.
Trending to fair
Displayable yes

Date

Date 1975