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"Old
Glory''
The name "Old Glory" was first applied to the U.S. flag by a
young sea captain who lived in Salem, Mass. On his twenty-first birthday,
March 17, 1824, Capt. William Driver was presented a beautiful flag by his
mother and a group of Salem girls. Driver was delighted with the gift. He
exclaimed, "I name her 'Old Glory.'" Then Old Glory accompanied
the captain on his many voyages.
Captain Driver quit the sea in 1837. He settled in Nashville, Tenn. On
patriotic days he displayed Old Glory proudly from a rope extending from
his house to a tree across the street. After Tennessee seceded from the
Union in 1861, Captain Driver hid Old Glory. He sewed the flag inside a
comforter. When Union soldiers entered Nashville on February 25, 1862,
Driver removed Old Glory from its hiding place. He carried the flag to the
state capitol building and raised it.
Shortly before his death, the old sea captain placed a small bundle into
the arms of his daughter. He said to her, "Mary Jane, this is my ship
flag, Old Glory. It has been my constant companion. I love it as a mother
loves her child. Cherish it as I have cherished it."
The flag remained as a precious heirloom in the Driver family until 1922.
Then it was sent to the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, where it is
carefully preserved under glass today. |