13 star U.S. Boat Flag.
This is a 13 star U.S. 3-2-3-2-3 wool, hand sewn Boat Flag, very similar in size to U.S. Navy Size Number 12, and it is typical of the type of flags used to indicate the nationality of small boats that had been dispatched from larger vessels. In 1864 the proper compliment of stars on a United States flag would have been 35, but in the 1850s, for both economic and aesthetic reasons, the star count was lowered to thirteen.
Practically, it was less expensive if the navy did not have to alter the star count on all flags when a new state joined the Union, and aesthetically because the larger number of stars crowded the canton and made the flag difficult to distinguish from a distance (such as out at sea). This flag bears all the characteristics of a flag produced in the later stages of the American Civil Was or shortly after; hand sewing, whipped stitched grommets, and multi-directional stars.
The previous history of this 13 star flag is unknown, but it was part of the acclaimed collection of Superior Court Judge John T. Ball, of Santa Clara County, California. Because of the legal constraints imposed upon courtroom décor, Judge Ball used his collection to decorate the walls of his courtroom - there being no restrictions on the display of United States flags.
Exhibition History
Courtroom of Judge John T. Ball, Judge of the Santa Clara County Superior Court, San Jose, CA
Provenance: Acquired by the Zaricor Flag Collection (ZFC0585) in 2002 from the Judge John T. Ball Collection of San Jose, CA.
ZFC Important Flag
Item is Framed
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