User Tools

Site Tools


flagpole

Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Both sides previous revisionPrevious revision
Next revision
Previous revision
flagpole [2024/01/03 21:10] bant07flagpole [2024/05/29 17:45] (current) – [Sources] bant05
Line 2: Line 2:
 ====== Flag Day ====== ====== Flag Day ======
  
-The beginnings of Flag Day were in 1893when the alumni asked of the trustees and obtained leave to erect and maintain upon the campus a flag-staff upon which should be displayed the national colors. Thirty-two years earlierin the darkness of gathering war cloudscitizens of Hartford had presented to the students of the college a flag, which for many years was floated from the top of the old Seabury Hallnow the site of the present capitol buildingSo it was natural and appropriate that the new flag of the new and better America should be offered in much the same fashion+[{{:flag_day.png?400 |Photo Credit: //Trinity Tablet//, June 24-28, 1894}}] 
 + 
 +Trinity College'Flag Day was a celebration that took place June 271894 to raise the national colors over the College on a brand-new flagpole. 
 + 
 +In 1893, alumni asked of the trustees and obtained leave "to erect and maintain upon the campus a flag-staff upon which should be displayed the national colors." ((Trinity //Ivy//1896)) 
 + 
 +On June 27, 1894, hundreds of alumnigovernment officials and notables including Senator Joseph B. Hawley and former mayor John Root, members of the Grand Army of the Republic, and Connecticut military companies including the Governor's Guards, The Putnam Phalanx, and Connecticut National Guard gathered on the main quad before the new flag pole, which was installed in front of [[northam_towers|Northam Towers]]. The first Flag Day ceremonies included parade, prayers, songs, poetry and speeches by Trinity alumni including Hon. William Hamersley, LL. D., Class of 1858 and Col. W. S. Cogswell, M. A., Class of 1861, who relayed the story of Trinity's first flagpole during the [[civil_war|Civil War]]. The local Grand Army presented the colors to Trinity.   
 + 
 +//Northam Towers were almost concealed by draped flags and buntingand immediately before them rose the 
 +chorus stand, similarly decorated, while high above all, in the center of the campus, towered the graceful staff.// ((//Trinity Tablet//, June 24-28, 1894))  
 + 
 +The flagpole, which was made of wood, stood until 1960, when [[jacobs_albert_c|President Jacobs]] reported that it "was, due to decay, in a dangerous condition." ((Trinity College Bulletin (1959-1960) President's Report)) The base, painted green, is in the College Archives. A new, aluminum flagpole was erected in front (south) of the new [[downes_clock_tower|Downes Memorial Clock Tower]] in 1961.
  
 ---- ----
  
 ===== Sources ===== ===== Sources =====
-[[http://digitalrepository.trincoll.edu/ivy/33|Trinity Ivy,]] 1896.+[[https://digitalrepository.trincoll.edu/bulletin/235|Trinity College Bulletin]] (1959-1960) Report of the President, p. 24. 
 + 
 +[[http://digitalrepository.trincoll.edu/ivy/33|Trinity Ivy]]1896
 + 
 +[[https://digitalrepository.trincoll.edu/tablets/311/|Trinity Tablet]], June 24-28, 1894.
  
 ---- ----
flagpole.1704316255.txt.gz · Last modified: 2024/01/03 21:10 by bant07