ExhibitsTitle information is available upon specific request. Additional information available upon request to researchers, writers and others demonstrating special circumstances. In some situations, information may not be available. |
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Exhibition Copy | Exhibition History - Private Showing Night of Flags In celebration of George Washington's Birthday The National Society of The Colonial Dames of America in California Patriotic Services Committee Presents James Ferrigan, Curator, Flag Center Ben Zaricor, Director, Flag Center Thursday, February 26, 2009 Octagon House, San Francisco 5:30 pm - 7:30 pm This was a power point slide presentation on the period 13 star flag and Presidential flags in the Flag Center/Zaricor Flag Collection and comments by Ben Zaricor wherein the image of this flag was displayed. University of California - Santa Cruz Board of Councilors Meeting, 7 June 2012 Rare Flags Exhibit Santa Cruz, CA, June 7, 2012: The Zaricor Flag Collection exhibited 34 flags and artifacts at the University of California Santa Cruz Campus for the Board of Councilors Meeting. U.S. Presidential Color, President Franklin D. Roosevelt Date: circa 1936 Media: Hand embroidered silk, with silver and gold bullion twisted wire fringe. Comment: This gold and silver fringed model 1916 US Presidential Flag was used in the White House by President Franklin D. Roosevelt, whose use was longer than any other president, and is often associated with his administrations. The design was created when President Woodrow Wilson signed Executive Order 2390 on 29 May 1916, that established the first exclusive presidential flag. This pattern came after a succession of different designs, which both the US Navy and US Army had promulgated and used for their own purposes. The President as Commander-in-Chief now had a single design. In 1945 this pattern was altered, when it was redesigned to give the president more stars at a time when some admirals and generals flags had more stars than the President's. The eagle was made to face the olive branches, which symbolize the power of peace. The four corner stars were dropped and a single ring of stars that changed with the admission of more states. This remains the design for the modern US Presidential flag we see today. This flag was handloom embroidered, with silk yarns, by skilled embroideresses, at the Philadelphia Quartermaster Depot, the nation's official supplier of Presidential colors and flags. Silken colors like this one would also have been used to indicate the President's office as both the Chief Executive and the Commander-in-Chief of the United States. Provenance: Acquired at auction by the Zaricor Flag Collection (ZFC2502) in 2006 from the Cowan's Auctions, Inc., Cincinnati, Ohio. www.FlagCollection.com |