
The story begins with a modest Dutch vessel that sailed the Atlantic in the early 1600s, its orange‑white‑blue banner the first foreign standard to flutter over the New World’s rivers and forests. As explorers like Henry Hudson claimed the land for trade, each new settlement raised its own colors—Swedish blue and gold, English red and white—marking the shifting claims of empire. These early flags become more than simple identifiers; they carry the ambitions, hopes, and identities of the peoples who first set foot on the continent.
Through vivid anecdotes, the book follows how the English Crown’s Union Jack emerged from the marriage of two older symbols, and how that fresh design rode the waves of the first Virginia fleet. On the ground, colonists wrestle with the meaning of the cross on their flags, a dispute that sparks dramatic confrontations among Puritans, royalists, and native allies. The narrative captures the tension between loyalty to a distant monarch and the desire for a distinct, local identity.
By tracing the rise and fall of these early banners, the work invites listeners to see how a piece of cloth can reflect politics, religion, and the very soul of a burgeoning nation. It offers a concise, engaging look at the symbols that flew over the first towns, forts, and ships, setting the stage for the rich tapestry of American flag history that follows.
Language
en
Duration
~2 hours (139K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Larry B. Harrison and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2010-01-08
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1854–1930
A prolific historian and educator, this American writer helped make world history accessible to young readers through lively, carefully organized books. Her work blends scholarship with a clear, readable style that still feels welcoming today.
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