
Last modified: 2026-07-18 by rick wyatt
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image by Clay Moss, 1 February 2007
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In 1959, one star was added, representing Alaska, bringing the total number of stars to 49. There were thirteen stripes representing the thirteen original colonies.
Rick Wyatt, 5 April 1998
This flag flew from 4 July, 1959, to 3 July, 1960. The 49 star series became official when Alaska was admitted to the Union.
Clay Moss, 1 February 2007
Although the 49 star flag first became valid at 4 July 1959, it apparently was prepared beforehand, in 1958, and was made public as soon as the proclamation was signed on 2 January 1959:
image located by William Garrison, 13 June 2026
Source:
https://historical.ha.com/itm/political
Caption from ad: "Measuring
approximately 31-3/4" x 58", this 49-star American flag represents the single
year between Alaska's and Hawaii's admissions to the Union, with the canton
displaying a precise arrangement of seven rows of seven stars in a clean in-line
configuration, a pattern rarely encountered from this transitional period, as
some makers "jumped the gun" by producing flags with seven justified rows
instead of the staggered rows that were ultimately adopted as official;
machine-sewn construction is typical of mid-20th-century manufacture."
William Garrison, 13 April 2026
image by Clay Moss, 1 February 2007
image by Clay Moss, 27 February 2007
A 4x6 foot version of us~49-2 hung on the wall in the church room where my Boy Scout troop met. Over the years, I stared and stared at this flag knowing something wasn't quite right with it. It looked like every other "48" star flag
that was out there, but I just couldn't put my finger on the problem. Then one day during a very dull meeting, I looked away from the speaker and stared at the flag in boredom. "EUREKA! There it is! 49 stars and all!" I thought to myself. I was so absorbed in the moment, that I started laughing out loud. This got me in a bit of trouble as the speaker was talking on the subject of respect.
I have always wondered what happened to that flag, and have also wondered who made it and when. I suspect that they were anticipating the admission of Alaska to the union and made the flag before the "official" version was introduced.
Clay Moss, 27 February 2007