logo
‘Once in a lifetime opportunity': Spartanburg revolutionary war flag acquired by library

‘Once in a lifetime opportunity': Spartanburg revolutionary war flag acquired by library

Yahoo23-04-2025

SPARTANBURG COUNTY, S.C. (WSPA) – A significant piece of local and American history – one no one knew existed for over 200 years – will soon return home to Spartanburg County.
During Monday's Spartanburg County Council Meeting, Todd Stephens, Spartanburg County librarian, and Brent Cobb, county director of veterans affairs, told county council about a recent effort to bring a piece of Revolutionary War history back to the county.
In 2023 Stephens said a friend informed him a never-before-seen regiment flag had been placed on exhibit at the Museum of the American Revolution in Philadelphia. The regiment, Stephens said, hailed from what would become Spartanburg County.
Stephens asked a county employee who was in Pennsylvania for work to stop by the museum to see the exhibit. After learning more about it, Stephens reached out to the family who owned the flag and other artifacts in the exhibit.
'One thing leads to another and I find myself in Rhode Island,' said Stephens.
At the end of a roughly three-hour visit with the owners of the flag, Stephens asked what the plans for the flag beyond being put on exhibition were.
'In the end, it's Spartanburg's flag. They were real proud of the fact they had it in their possession and they were good stewards of it,' he said.
After 18 months of discussion, and with the help of some generous private donors, Stephens said the Spartanburg County Library system was able to enter into an agreement for the flag.
The total cost of the flag has not been disclosed, but Stephens said the family offered it at a significant discount compared to the cost of similar artifacts.
'We did not know this thing existed,' said Stephens. 'Nobody did. We saw this as a once in a lifetime opportunity.'
The county sent a vexillologist – someone who studies flags – to Philadelphia to examine the flag.
The flag itself is a blue cloth with13 gold bars, representing each of the original 13 colonies, and gold ribbons bear the name of the South Carolina colony, and features an image of a dog and a snake. The significance of the animals on the flag is unclear, though an article on the museum website claims the dog is a representation of the bloodthirsty man from Shakespeare's 'Othello,' and a snake represents defense and resistance.
The image appears on both sides of the flag, and some of the stitching suggests the original color of the cloth was an indigo blue similar to the one used on the state flag today.
It is made of silk, and likely was created in Charleston. It is one of about 26 flags from an estimated 500 used during the Revolutionary War era, and one of just six still in existence from a colonial southern militia.
Southern relics from the revolutionary era, Stephens said, have become increasingly hard to find. Many were destroyed in the American Civil War, specifically when Gen. William Sherman marched his troops across the south, burning large amounts of property and land in the process.
'Relics are few and far between because of the fact Atlanta burned, Columbia burned,' said Stephens. 'Anything families may have had or museums or government entities had were most likely destroyed. The south's participation in the revolution was erased.'
The Spartan Regiment flag came to be in the possession of Col. Thomas Brandon, who passed it down to down to his children, and it remained in the family for more than 200 years. It was kept in a small wooden trunk, and the names of the family members who inherited it are carved inside, according to the museum.
'(The vexillologist) said this is a national treasure and probably one of the most significant finds of an American Revolutionary Relic in the last 20 years. Those are some very big words,' said Stephens.
According to Cobb, the flag was the standard for the Spartan Regiment, which was formed in by Col. John Thomas at Wofford's Iron Mill. The unit later split into two regiments, and Spartanburg is named for them.
'Spartanburg County is very deeply rooted in the Revolutionary War,' said Cobb.
To mark the acquisition of the battle flag, the veteran's affairs office printed replica flags and matching challenge coins to give to local officials.
The Spartan Regiment flag is not the first historical relic the library system has brought back to Spartanburg County. Years ago the county was able to locate and return the Spartanburg Freedom Flag, which had been sewn by the wife of a Black pastor at the end of the Civil War, when news of the emancipation of slaves reached the Upstate.
That flag was flown in a parade celebrating the end of the war and the end of slavery. It eventually ended up in California before the county was able to bring it home.
A self-described 'community nut,' Stephens said bringing historical relics like the Freedom flag and the Spartan Regiment standard are an important part of helping to shape the narrative of local history.
'For me, I'm a kid of Spartanburg, I grew up in Spartanburg, I think it's important for communities to be able to share their story and participate in defining who they are. Sometimes we spend a lot of time focused on wars or battles or military actions that overshadows what the Upstate's participation was in the American Revolution,' he said.
Stephens said the battle flag will remain on display at the Museum of the American Revolution for another four or five months. When it is able to be safely transported it will be returned to Spartanburg County and kept on display.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Should boys start kindergarten a year later than girls?
Should boys start kindergarten a year later than girls?

Boston Globe

timean hour ago

  • Boston Globe

Should boys start kindergarten a year later than girls?

Some districts, including New York City, have banned this practice (with exceptions), in part because these children already tend to be ahead in school, so it could contribute to a long-existing achievement gap by race and family income. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up But a different way to address that issue, supporters of redshirting say, is to make it the national policy for all boys. That would make it accessible to more Black and Hispanic boys and those from low-income families -- the children least likely to be redshirted now but most likely to benefit, says Richard Reeves, president of the American Institute for Boys and Men. Advertisement Such a policy might sound far-fetched. The data is not clear that it helps in the long run. Children develop at different rates, and a universal policy is unlikely to serve them all. Crucially, kindergarten is usually the first year that parents have free child care, and without universal pre-K, this would force many parents of boys to pay for another year of private care. Advertisement But research shows that being a year older benefits children, especially boys, in one crucial way involving self-control -- and helps illuminate why many young children are struggling in the American school system. Redshirting has been happening in small numbers for decades. Malcolm Gladwell popularized it in his 2008 book 'Outliers,' noting that professional athletes were often old for their grade. The idea to redshirt all boys was proposed in 2022 by Reeves in his book, 'Of Boys and Men: Why the Modern Male Is Struggling, Why It Matters, and What to Do About It.' It gained momentum because of two changes to education. First, parents have become more competitive about educating their children, and redshirting has been a way to give them an edge in academics or athletics. Also, school has become more academic earlier -- meaning more time spent preparing for tests and less time learning through play. That has been particularly difficult for boys, who on the whole mature later than girls. The result is a gender gap in kindergarten readiness that continues through high school, with boys going to college at lower rates. Shrinking the gap early on could help in adolescence, too. Girls go through puberty about a year and a half before boys do and tend to develop the executive function skills crucial to school, like time management and self-control, earlier. 'I think the main reason for giving more flexibility is not because of kindergarten; it's because of those later years,' Reeves said. 'I actually think adolescence is when the gaps are biggest, or at least the most consequential.' Advertisement Joe Strickland, who taught middle school outside Savannah, Georgia, for 25 years, said he thought the policy would be 'the smartest thing the schools ever did,' because in his experience, boys and girls at that age 'are completely different.' The girls, he said, tend to be focused and interested in school. Many boys? 'Just general silliness, horse playing with each other, anything but focusing and concentrating on their work,' he said. Nicole Appell started her son in kindergarten at age 6, after his preschool teacher suggested it. At first, Appell, also a preschool teacher, was taken aback. He was already reading, but he wasn't emotionally ready, becoming easily overwhelmed and crying a lot at school. 'In hindsight, I'm so glad she did that,' said Appell, who lives in Seattle. 'It was really important. Being a little more mature means being able to handle the situations that happen at school.' Studies of redshirting have found pros and cons. Some research has found that any boost in achievement fades away as children get older. Redshirting could increase high school dropout rates because older students would reach the legal age for quitting school earlier. It could also disadvantage men by delaying their entry into the job market. Yet several large studies -- of nearly all kindergartners in three states -- show clear benefits to being older. In Florida, where children start kindergarten if they have turned 5 by Sept. 1, researchers compared those with September birthdays, who were relatively old for their grade, and those with August birthdays, who were almost a year younger. The older students consistently scored higher on tests in third grade and, to a lesser extent, eighth grade. They were more likely to attend college and less likely to go to jail as juveniles. The findings were true for children of all backgrounds, but especially for boys and for children from low-income families. Advertisement Researchers in Tennessee and North Carolina found similar results, including that redshirting reduced the male-female achievement gap. Studies in other countries have also found that older children score higher and have more self-confidence in school. One line of research provides a clue as to what exactly is benefiting older children. They stood out in a key skill: their ability to sit still, concentrate, think before acting and see tasks through to the end, a study of Danish children found. These traits, which girls tend to develop earlier, have been shown to be crucial to academic success. Thomas Dee, a professor at Stanford University's Graduate School of Education and an author of the study, said children develop this kind of self-control through pretend play, and older children probably spent more time doing that in high-quality, play-based Danish preschools. (He cautioned that the potential benefits of redshirting might not be realized if the extra year were spent in a less enriching environment.) This idea -- that these attention skills are driving the differences between older and younger students -- is backed by studies showing that the youngest students in a grade are more likely to be diagnosed with attention disorders. A study of 400,000 children in every state found that those with birthdays just before the kindergarten cutoff were significantly likelier to be diagnosed with attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder than those with birthdays just after the cutoff. A study of 1 million children in Britain found a similar pattern. Advertisement 'Age really matters,' said David Figlio, professor of education and economics at the University of Rochester and an author of the Florida study. Yet he also didn't think universal redshirting for boys was the answer. A better alternative to redshirting all boys, some researchers said, would be to make it optional for any student so that parents could choose whether it was right for their child, with advice from teachers and the option to attend an extra year of public pre-K. An easier change, some said, would be to make the cutoff date for kindergarten earlier, so all children would turn 5 at least a few months before they start. Teachers could group classes by birth month, with the older kindergartners together in one class and the younger ones in another. Also, schools could restore more of the play-based learning -- like dress-up, art and nature exploration -- that was much more common in kindergarten before 2000. 'Boys are half the population, so if we're doing all these things in school that we think are disadvantaging them, the answer isn't to redshirt,' said Diane Whitmore Schanzenbach, professor of education and social policy at Northwestern. 'We can do something cheaper and better, like not overintellectualizing kindergarten -- more circle time, fewer worksheets about circles.' This article originally appeared in

George Washington Was Almost Kidnapped by the British. A Surprising Twist Saved Him
George Washington Was Almost Kidnapped by the British. A Surprising Twist Saved Him

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

George Washington Was Almost Kidnapped by the British. A Surprising Twist Saved Him

"Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links." Here's what you'll learn when you read this story: When the Continental Army formed 250 years ago at the beginning of the Revolutionary War, George Washington was appointed its commander-in-chief and major general. During the winter of 1779–1780, British forces plotted to kidnap Washington from his headquarters in Morristown, New Jersey. The kidnapping plot failed, partially due to one unlikely factor. In the 250 years since the Continental Army was formed, on June 14, 1775, many episodes that early American fighting force faced have been etched into the collective consciousness. The victories at Saratoga and Yorktown, the brutal conditions of Valley Forge, they're stories of military resilience every generation of Americans has been brought up to know. Still, more than two centuries on, there are stories about Continental Army soldiers and their leaders that are far less universally known but no less fraught than their famous fights and misfortunes. In the winter of 1779–1780, less than a year before the decisive victory at Yorktown that secured American independence from the British empire, the cause of the Continental Army seemed near-doomed from forces both outside and within its encampment at Morristown, New Jersey. The army faced the harshest winter on record to ever hit the colonies. On top of that, British forces plotted to kidnap Continental Army Commander-in-Chief George Washington to bring the revolution, and perhaps Washington himself, to a swift and permanent end. During the American Revolution, wars weren't fought year-round like they are today. Instead, combat was seasonal: When conditions permitted, men met on the battlefield, but during the winter months, they encamped on their respective sides, to meet once more when more favorable weather returned. During these harsher months, a commander's job was to strategize, ensure the men didn't slip in discipline (both in the sense of their physical fitness and their moral behavior towards the citizenry), and hope that the harshness of nature claimed more casualties from your opponent's army than your own. Although the British held control of New York City throughout the war, Washington had twice made his winter headquarters right across the Hudson River in New Jersey. Far from the easy bridge-and-tunnel commute between the Big Apple and the Garden State that exists now, the Hudson River provided a veritable moat between the Loyalist forces and the Revolutionaries, making the position advantageous both for proximity and protection. Washington's first winter stay in Morristown began in January 1777 and had been favorable and unremarkable. After this came the agony of the Valley Forge encampment of 1777–1778, and a subsequent spreading out of troops to smaller areas surrounding New York City from 1778–1779. For the winter encampment of 1779–1780, Washington was determined to return to Morristown once more. So, at the beginning of December 1779, Washington made his headquarters within the Morristown mansion of Theodosia Ford, widow of iron magnate Jacob Ford Jr. The bulk of the Continental Army made camp in the woods of Jockey Hollow, roughly 5 miles away (but within eyeshot of Henry Wick's bountiful 1,400 acre farm, whose produce the eventually starving men weren't permitted to partake of). This left the enlisted men at the mercy of the elements, while the officers held parties at the Ford mansion. It also left Washington remarkably vulnerable, save for a small unit of roughly 100 men known as his Life Guards stationed near the mansion. 'The oldest people now living in this Country do not remember so hard a Winter as the one we are now emerging from. In a word, the severity of the frost exceeded anything of the kind that had ever been experienced in this climate before.' That is how General Washington described the second winter he and his men had endured at Morristown, in a letter he wrote to Marquis de Lafayette on March 18, 1780. The winter along America's east coast from 1779–1780 would prove to be the worst on record. As described in David Ludlum's Early American Winters, 1604 – 1820, the lowest temperature recorded in nearby New York City that season was minus-16 degrees, and the 27 days of snowfall that occurred across November through March brought a total of 95 inches of snow to the coastal area. Washington had taken steps to mitigate illness and death by demanding that soldiers' huts at the encampment be built to specific dimensional standards (14 feet wide by 16 feet long). The task consumed some 600 acres of trees from the area of Henry Wick's farm alone. But the commander-in-chief couldn't have anticipated the terrible conditions that particular winter would bring. 'The winter of 1779 and '80 was very severe,' recalled J. P. Martin of the Connecticut Brigade, according to a transcript provided to by Morristown National Historical Park, '…it has been denominated 'the hard winter,' and hard it was to the army in particular, in more respects than one. The period of the Revolution has repeatedly been styled 'the times that tried men's souls,' I often found that those times not only tried men's souls, but their bodies too; I know they did mine, and that effectually.' Morale was at a low for the soldiers at Morristown. Not only had the war stretched on for years with no foreseeable end, but now their arrangements were a physical manifestation of the disparity between the classes. The enlisted men were in a frozen wood, eating shoe leather to survive as their colonist currency was unable to secure them goods from locals who would rather accept British money. Meanwhile, literal miles away the officers were warm inside mansions, having comparatively decadent celebrations. (Fans of the musical Hamilton will recollect the 'Winter's Ball' where Alexander Hamilton meets his future wife, Eliza. The meeting depicted occurred in Morristown in the winter of 1780.) The bonds of the cause were therefore fragile. The rallying cries of George Washington were seemingly all that was holding soldiers back from mutiny (indeed, a year later in January 1781, the Pennsylvania Line of the Continental Army did mutiny at Morristown to secure better wages). This was, at least, the thinking of British Lieutenant Colonel John Graves Simcoe, who felt that the successful kidnapping of General Washington would all but collapse the cause of rebellion and end the war. And the unique conditions of the hard winter offered Simcoe just such an opportunity.$25.69 at William Hazelgrove, author of the book Morristown: The Darkest Winter of the Revolutionary War and the Plot to Kidnap George Washington, posits that Simcoe's designs toward Washington were more than just strategic. The Continental Army had previously taken Simcoe prisoner, and he felt disrespected when he was imprisoned alongside 'common men' as opposed to being held with men he felt were of his equal class and station. Although targeted assassinations of high-ranking figures weren't common in the era, kidnappings and imprisonments like that of Simcoe were considered acceptable strategy. Some kidnappings, like the case of Reverend Charles McKnight, could be severe enough to kill their captives, effectively assassinating without technically committing the faux pas. The Hudson River had typically provided an effective defense against any attempt to capture a figure as prominent as Washington. Crossing it with anything more than a small skiff of soldiers would have been impossible without detection. Being able to transport hundreds of men, cannons, and horses across the Hudson and into Morristown would take a miracle, and General Simcoe couldn't walk on water. Until the winter of 1779–1780, when the Hudson River froze over. Some on the side of the Continental Army suspected that the river's solid state could provide an opportunity for a British incursion. In a January 31, 1780, letter, Silas Condict of the New Jersey Executive Council wrote to Washington: 'I do not pretend to know what precautions are taken to prevent a Surprise at Head Quarters, or to Secure the Commander in Chief, in case of a bold attempt to take him […] but the Importance of the Object, May induce [the British] to hozard[sic] an attempt, and will fully justify every Means to be ready to receive them.' Condict added, 'the possibility of a party of Horse coming here undiscovered I cannot doubt, the probability of the undertaking and the Success of Such an enterprize[sic] I cannot determine.' Washington responded to Condict's letter, stating that 'precautions, which I think will be effectual, have been used to guard against it.' But Condict was right to worry. Lieutenant General Wilhelm von Knyphausen, then-temporary commander of British troops in the New York City area, approved a plan for Simcoe's Queen's Rangers to march across the Hudson to capture Washington. While some British forces were to attack Morristown directly, others were to be sent from Staten Island to strike other key points in New Jersey to distract from the kidnapping attempt and to spread the Continental Army thin. Records of the kidnapping attempt exist from both sides of the conflict. In a letter to a Colonel Read on February 13, 1780, Continental Army Colonel James Abeel reports he had received intelligence from Elizabethtown 'That a Party of between 4 & 500 Horse and three thousand foot under the Command of Genl Gray crossed Powle's Hook on thursday last [10 Feb.] and marched as far as the West end of Colo. Schuylers Swamp and intended to march on to Morris Town by Way of the Notch, the light Horse were to endeavour to bring off his Excellency.' Abeel flatteringly was referring to Washington as his Excellency. From the Loyalist perspective, we have the account of Stephen Jarvis, a Loyalist Queens Rangers, who recounts: '…a plan was formed to take General Washington, who lay some distance from New York, and rather attacked from his Army so as to make the attempt practicable. The 17th Light Horse and the Cavalry of the Queen's Rangers were designed for this service, and we marched from Staten Island to New York upon the ice, and took up our quarters at the Bull's Head, which at that time was quite out of the City.' But then, Jarvis continues: 'The time arrived and we crossed over to Elizabethtown Point, and after marching some distance in the country, returned back without making any attempt, and thus the affair ended, much to my disappointment, for I had set my heart on this expedition, as I was to have taken charge of the General after he had fallen into our hands.' So what foiled the Loyalists' kidnapping plot and saved the revolutionary cause? It was not, ultimately, the intelligence Colonel Abeel had received, nor the precautions Washington wrote about. Some of the planned distraction attacks, like a raid on Elizabethtown, were foiled by militia horse patrols under the leadership of Major General Arthur St. Clair. But perhaps Washington's most unexpected aid during the assault was the very same brutal winter that was ravaging his army at Jockey Hollow. British Lieutenant General Knyphausen would later report that the roads the Loyalist forces faced as they moved from Hackensack, New Jersey, toward Morristown were 'impassable,' but one might be inclined to believe they were almost supernaturally boobytrapped in the colonists' favor. While prepared to trudge their horses through snowy roads, the Loyalists weren't prepared for what had been forming beneath the fluffy winter weather: sheets of sleet, which beneath the hoof-fall of British horses shattered into jagged spears of ice and slashed their fetlocks (a crucial joint between the hoof and what in layman's terms might be viewed as the horse's ankle area). The hard winter at Morristown ultimately saved the cause of American liberty and possibly even the life of George Washington himself. But not all of the Continental Army survived through the entirety of that brutal season. It's estimated that around 100 men died at Morristown during the winter of 1799–1780. And while we know much about the Continental Army in the 250 years since its inception, the final resting place of those 100 men remains a mystery to this day. Jockey Hollow is now part of the Morristown National Historical Park. Not far from the site where the Pennsylvania Line had their encampments, a small rock with a plaque sits declaring the area Jockey Hollow Cemetery. The memorial plaque was placed on May 30, 1932, its location based on stories from the 19th century that suggested this as the burial site for the men who didn't survive the hard winter. However, as the National Parks Service notes, 'archeological studies since the late 1930s have found no trace of human remains.' To this day, the place in Jockey Hollow where the Continental Army pierced the frozen ground to inter their fallen brethren, while miles away Washington warmed himself in Ford Mansion and Lieutenant Colonel Simcoe plotted his kidnapping scheme, remains entirely unknown. You Might Also Like Nicole Richie's Surprising Adoption Story The Story of Gypsy Rose Blanchard and Her Mother Queen Camilla's Life in Photos

Casa Italiana social club returns to Springfield, bringing Italian Feast back to city
Casa Italiana social club returns to Springfield, bringing Italian Feast back to city

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Casa Italiana social club returns to Springfield, bringing Italian Feast back to city

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (WWLP) – Reviving the Italian-American heritage in Springfield, dozens of people came together on Friday for the grand opening of the Italian social club Casa Italiana. Celebrating Italian-American heritage and spreading cheer and tradition, a ribbon-cutting took place for Casa Italiana. This social club was originally founded in 1897, the historic home known to many is recognized as the heart and soul of the local Italian community. Springfield Juneteenth Jubilee Committee hosts annual flag raising ceremony 'This is about family, faith, and food,' said Springfield Mayor Domenic Sarno. 'And now to have this Casa Italiana back to the future, and there's a lot of tradition down here. I remember sweeping the streets at 3:00 a.m. after the feast and the fireworks.' 'They've got a nice group of positive people,' said Rico Daniele, member of the Sons & Daughters of Italy. 'We have 20 members now, we're trying to bring it back like the old days and bring people together.' The club also announced that in a month, the one and only Italian Feast of Our Lady of Mount Carmel will return to the city of Springfield. This will mark the first time in 20 years that the feast will take place, bringing back the 40-foot grease pole competition and traditional food that locals won't want to miss. 'People might remember way back in the day when people went up the pole to get the prosciutto and salami to get that,' said Salvato Circosta, President of Casa Italiana. 'And we're excited to bring that back.' WWLP-22News, an NBC affiliate, began broadcasting in March 1953 to provide local news, network, syndicated, and local programming to western Massachusetts. Watch the 22News Digital Edition weekdays at 4 p.m. on Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store