Description: Elongated 39 Star United States Parade Flag Banner Bolt. Alternating vertical star pattern 7,6,7,6,7,6. Very rare 1876 Centennial Celebration Circa likely used in a parade or political speech. 24” x 66” with stitching throughout, I am guessing to hold shape for corner decoration. Never seen anything like this! Has tears, stains, and fading consistent with a stored material this age. This was an attic find… Will be shipped rolled in a cardboard tube to reduce folding. In 1876 it was anticipated that two new states would be added to the union, Colorado and North Dakota. On August 1, 1876 only Colorado was added bringing the star count to 38, not 39. Some flag manufacturers had already made 39 star flags, many of them preparing for the Centennial Celebration. Flag makers did not care what was official and often tried to get a step ahead of their completion by getting there flag version out first. This was especially true before the Centennial Celebration while patriotism was at a peak. In 1876 the 39 star flags were potentially more common than 38 star flags. Some 39 star elongated flags with this pattern and size made their way into Centennial Celebration quilts, or they where placed into storage in the event that another state would be added. This implies that this flag is from 1876, not 1889, the second period in history where different 39 star flags where produced anticipating North Dakota's addition. However in 1889 four states were added, North Dakota, South Dakota, Montana, and Washington. This changed the star count from 38 to 42 stars, making the 39 star flag unofficial yet an amazing part of American history. 39 star American parade flag banner, printed on cotton bunting. This is one of only three styles known that use stars in two different sizes to make columns of equal height, all of which occur in the 39 star count.
Price: 1295 USD
Location: Littleton, Colorado
End Time: 2025-02-14T16:43:40.000Z
Shipping Cost: N/A USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Signed: No