Anonymous ID: fc0b84 Sept. 18, 2022, 11:35 a.m. No.17538811   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8819 >>8837

If this be so

https://mobile.twitter.com/WallStreetSilv/status/1571368243931271173

 

it's similar to this oldie

https://8kun.top/qresearch/res/13484188.html#q13484334

 

So is sweet baby ray chandler the last end before it all falls down?

Anonymous ID: fc0b84 Sept. 18, 2022, 12:34 p.m. No.17539106   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>17539073

The 15-star, 15-stripe flag was authorized by the Flag Act of January 13, 1794, adding two stripes and two stars. The regulation went into effect on May 1, 1795. This flag was the only U.S. flag to have more than 13 stripes. It was immortalized by Francis Scott Key during the bombardment of Fort McHenry, Sept 13, 1814. The flag is now preserved in the Smithsonian Museum. You can notice the "tilt" in some of the stars just as in the original Star-Spangled Banner.

 

Where the original Star-Spangled Banner went:

 

1814: The battle occurred, and the flag won its glory. Armistead was promoted to Lt. Colonel by Madison. Armistead died in service on April 25, 1818. He acquired the flag sometime before that date, but at this point it is unknown how.

 

1818: Armistead died and "legend" says that the flag was used in his funeral. However, in all of the newspaper accounts of Armistead's funeral, there is no mention of the flag being displayed at it. At his death the flag passed to his widow, Louisa Armistead.

 

1824: The flag was used in a reception for General Lafayette.

 

1861: Louisa Armistead died on October 3, 1861, and in her will left the flag to her daughter, Georgiana Armistead Appleton. The flag was sent to England for safe keeping during the Civil War, according to one of the Armistead family members, who made this statement in a newspaper interview in the 1880's. But Georgiana said, in a letter to Admiral George Preble, that the flag was in her possession during the rebellion.

 

June 24, 1873: The flag was displayed in the Charleston Naval Yards. Canvas backing was sewn on the flag and one of the first photographs was taken of it.

 

1876: The flag was loaned to the Navy Department for the Centenial Celebration.

 

1879: Georgiana Armistead Appleton died in 1879 and left the flag to her son Eben Appleton.

 

1907: Eben Appleton loaned the flag to the Smithsonian.

 

1912: Eben Appleton converts the loan of the flag to a gift to the Smithsonian.

 

1914: Amelia Fowler was commissioned to remove the canvas backing sewn on the flag when it was photographed in 1873 and replace it with a linen backing."

 

Source: usflag.org

Anonymous ID: fc0b84 Sept. 18, 2022, 12:43 p.m. No.17539144   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>17539091

Or maybe

1LT

O2

Or

In regards to the job title of 1st Lieutenant on board Naval vessels, this is name given to a specific commissioned officer. The title is derived from the Royal Navy where the leading seaman was often given the designation by appointment. That seaman is often an expert in seamanship and placed in charge of general operations

 

Keep a tidy ship