What started Flag Day?

memorial_25_76488786.jpg

The American majority deplores the vulgarity and meanness of President Donald Trump, but wants more than the endless grievance agenda of the far Left, writes Georgie Anne Guyer.

In honor of Flag Day, we put together a short history of the holiday. Flag Day commemorates the day when the flag’s design — complete with 13 alternating red and white stripes and 13 white stars over blue — was finalized in 1777.

Schools planted the seed

Many think Flag Day started because of a New York City public school teacher who had his kindergarten class observe the anniversary of the flag. That’s what professor George Bolch did in 1889 to help immigrant children feel more connected to the country. The move attracted the attention of the New York Department of Education, which loved the idea so much that it said the day should be observed in all public schools. Then, in 1897, New York’s governor ordered the display of the flag in all public school buildings.

Three presidents later

Two presidents issued proclamations asking for June 14 to be observed as National Flag Day: Woodrow Wilson in 1916 and Calvin Coolidge in 1927. But it wasn’t until 1949 that Congress permanently established June 14 as National Flag Day, under President Harry Truman.

It’s not a federal holiday

Flag Day still isn’t a federal holiday, though some states, like Pennsylvania, celebrate it as a state holiday.

RELATED: A liberal burns Old Glory for Flag Day

The Latest
A conversation with NBC horse racing analyst Randy Moss at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia, paved the way for the former Blackhawks analyst to join the production.
Schriffen’s call of Andrew Benintendi’s walk-off homer last Saturday was so palpable and succinct that he could’ve stopped talking sooner and let the viewer listen to the crowd before analyst Steve Stone shared his thoughts. But Schriffen continued.
Inspired by Pop-Tarts, Netflix comedy serves jokes that are just as weird and flat
More than 1,200 people have signed a petition to stop Johnson’s Chicago, a Florida-based male strip club, from opening at 954 W. Belmont Ave.