Mid-Content Public Library
  • Skip to Content
  • Skip to Navigation
  • Skip to Section Navigation
  • Return to Homepage
  • View My Library Account
  • Sign in to MyMCPL (optional)
Enter your search term here
  • Search the or search this ?

Main Navigation

  • Books, Movies, Music
  • Events
  • Kids
  • Locations
  • Catalog
  • Genealogy
  • Teens
  • About Us
  • Online Resources

You are here:

  1. Home
  2. Blogs
  3. May I Introduce You to Our Guest Blogger, Brenda
Share

May I Introduce You to Our Guest Blogger, Brenda

August 03, 2010

It must have been a muggy night in the Chesapeake;  the air thick with gunpowder that fogged the streaks and bursts of cannonfire fired from the British Royal Navy upon Fort McHenry.  Blasts and roaring booms broke taut moments of silence, and American patriot Francis Scott Key watched from a distance, not knowing if the United States had survived the day long offensive.  It was September 14, 1814, and the future of the United States was in the gravest of dangers.  How could he have felt, knowing that his country, still in its infancy, clung to the hope that the soldiers of Fort McHenry could withstand the brutal onslaught, though they were outnumbered and certainly out-manned?
 
Suddenly, amidst the defeaning booms and tendrils of thick smoke that permeated the air, he saw a tattered banner waving in the distance high over the Fort.  The 30' by 40' Old Glory rippled in the wind, proud though battle-scarred, proving that the Fort had withstood the attack, and the British were being repelled from the bay.  I cannot imagine what he felt at that moment of recognition. 
 
I do know that last week, while visiting the National Museum of American History in Washington DC, I actually got teary-eyed standing in front of the actual flag that inspired Key to pen his poem, In Defence of Fort McHenry.  Within a year, it would be set to music and renamed The Star Spangled Banner.  The flag is kept in a special room under darklight, and can be lowered into a floorsafe in case of emergency to protect it.  It's a huge flag, threadbare, tattered and worn.  It's THE flag that inspired Key to write THE song about a finest hour.  It doesn't have to be the Fourth of July to appreciate heritage, or to know gratitude to live in the land we live in now.  Sometimes it can just be a hot humid day at the museum.
 

Tags: history, flags

Comments

Post new comment

CAPTCHA
Help us stop spam! Type the characters you see in the image below.

Branch Blogs

Sectional Navigation

  • Antioch
  • Blue Ridge
  • Blue Springs North
  • Blue Springs South
  • Boardwalk
  • Buckner
  • Camden Point
  • Claycomo
  • Colbern Road
  • Dearborn
  • Edgerton
  • Excelsior Springs
  • Grain Valley
  • Grandview
  • Kearney
  • Lee's Summit
  • Liberty
  • Lone Jack
  • Midwest Genealogy Center
  • North Independence
  • North Oak
  • Oak Grove
  • Parkville
  • Platte City
  • Raytown
  • Red Bridge
  • Riverside
  • Smithville
  • South Independence
  • Weston

Related Information

  • All Blogs
  • Front Page Blog
  • RSS Feeds
  • Teens Blog
Special Event
Special Event
Get Reading Suggestions

Popular Links

Services
  • Interlibrary Loan
  • Library-By-Mail (Homebound)
  • Teacher Assistance
  • School Visits
  • Daycare Visits
  • Voter Registration
Blogs
  • All
  • Front Page
  • Teens
  • Genealogy
  • RSS Feeds
Help/FAQs
  • Locations and Hours
  • Get a Card
  • Help With My Account
  • Ask a Librarian
  • En EspaƱol
  • Genealogy Research Requests
  • Wi-Fi Access
  • Contact Us
Stay Connected
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Vimeo
  • Flickr

Customer Survey


Sharing Tools
Share Pinterest

© 1995-2013 Mid-Continent Public Library. All rights reserved.