| Francis Scott
Key was a respected young lawyer living in Georgetown just west of where
the modern day Key Bridge crosses the Potomac River (the house was torn
down after years of neglect in 1947). He made his home there from 1804 to
around 1833 with his wife Mary and their six sons and five daughters. At
the time, Georgetown was a thriving town of 5,000 people just a few miles
from the Capitol, the White House, and the Federal buildings of
Washington.
But, after war broke out in 1812 over
Britain's attempts to regulate American shipping and other activities
while Britain was at war with France, all was not tranquil in Georgetown.
The British had entered Chesapeake Bay on August 19th, 1814, and by the
evening of the 24th of August, the British had invaded and captured
Washington. They set fire to the Capitol and the White House, the flames
visible 40 miles away in Baltimore.
President James Madison, his wife Dolley,
and his Cabinet had already fled to a safer location. Such was their haste
to leave that they had had to rip the Stuart portrait of George Washington
from the walls without its frame!
A thunderstorm at dawn kept the fires from
spreading. The next day more buildings were burned and again a
thunderstorm dampened the fires. Having done their work the British troops
returned to their ships in and around the Chesapeake Bay.
In the days following the attack on
Washington, the American forces prepared for the assault on Baltimore
(population 40,000) that they knew would come by both land and sea. Word
soon reached Francis Scott Key that the British had carried off an elderly
and much loved town physician of Upper Marlboro, Dr. William Beanes, and
was being held on the British flagship TONNANT. The townsfolk feared that
Dr. Beanes would be hanged. They asked Francis Scott Key for his help, and
he agreed, and arranged to have Col. John Skinner, an American agent for
prisoner exchange to accompany him.
On the morning of September 3rd, he and
Col. Skinner set sail from Baltimore aboard a sloop flying a flag of truce
approved by President Madison. On the 7th they found and boarded the
TONNANT to confer with Gen. Ross and Adm. Alexander Cochrane. At first
they refused to release Dr. Beanes. But Key and Skinner produced a pouch
of letters written by wounded British prisoners praising the care they
were receiving from the Americans, among them Dr. Beanes. The British
officers relented but would not release the three Americans immediately
because they had seen and heard too much of the preparations for the
attack on Baltimore. They were placed under guard, first aboard the H.M.S.
Surprise, then onto the sloop and forced to wait out the battle behind the
British fleet.
Now let's go back to the summer of 1813
for a moment. At the star-shaped Fort McHenry, the commander, Maj. George
Armistead, asked for a flag so big that "the British would have no trouble
seeing it from a distance". Two officers, a Commodore and a General, were
sent to the Baltimore home of Mary Young Pickersgill, a "maker of colors,"
and commissioned the flag. Mary and her thirteen year old daughter
Caroline, working in an upstairs front bedroom, used 400 yards of best
quality wool bunting. They cut 15 stars that measured two feet from point
to point. Eight red and seven white stripes, each two feet wide, were cut.
Laying out the material on the malthouse floor of Claggett's Brewery, a
neighborhood establishment, the flag was sewn together. By August it was
finished. It measured 30 by 42 feet and cost $405.90. The Baltimore Flag
House, a museum, now occupies her premises, which were restored in 1953.
At 7 a.m. on the morning of September 13,
1814, the British bombardment began, and the flag was ready to meet the
enemy. The bombardment continued for 25 hours, the British firing 1,500
bombshells that weighed as much as 220 pounds and carried lighted fuses
that would supposedly cause it to explode when it reached its target. But
they weren't very dependable and often blew up in mid air. From special
small boats the British fired the new Congreve rockets that traced wobbly
arcs of red flame across the sky. The Americans had sunk 22 vessels so a
close approach by the British was not possible. That evening the
cannonading stopped, but at about 1 a.m. on the 14th, the British fleet
roared to life, lighting the rainy night sky with grotesque fireworks.
Key, Col. Skinner, and Dr. Beanes watched
the battle with apprehension. They knew that as long as the shelling
continued, Fort McHenry had not surrendered. But, long before daylight
there came a sudden and mysterious silence. What the three Americans did
not know was that the British land assault on Baltimore as well as the
naval attack, had been abandoned. Judging Baltimore as being too costly a
prize, the British officers ordered a retreat.
Waiting in the predawn darkness, Key
waited for the sight that would end his anxiety; the joyous sight of Gen.
Armistead's great flag blowing in the breeze. When at last daylight came,
the flag was still there!
Being an amateur poet and having been so
uniquely inspired, Key began to write on the back of a letter he had in
his pocket. Sailing back to Baltimore he composed more lines and in his
lodgings at the Indian Queen Hotel he finished the poem. Judge J. H.
Nicholson, his brother-in-law, took it to a printer and copies were
circulated around Baltimore under the title "Defense of Fort M'Henry". Two
of these copies survive. It was printed in a newspaper for the first time
in the Baltimore Patriot on September 20th,1814, then in papers as far
away as Georgia and New Hampshire. To the verses was added a note "Tune:
Anacreon in Heaven." In October a Baltimore actor sang Key's new song in a
public performance and called it "The Star-Spangled Banner". See "The
Patriots of Fort McHenry" website.
Immediately popular, it remained just one
of several patriotic airs until it was finally adopted as our national
anthem on March 3, 1931. But the actual words were not included in the
legal documents. Key himself had written several versions with slight
variations so discrepancies in the exact wording still occur.
The flag, our beloved Star-Spangled
Banner, went on view ,for the first time after flying over Fort McHenry,
on January 1st,1876 at the Old State House in Philadelphia for the
nations' Centennial celebration. It now resides in the Smithsonian
Institution's Museum of American History. An opaque curtain shields the
now fragile flag from light and dust. The flag is exposed for viewing for
a few moments once every hour during museum hours.
Francis Scott Key was a witness to the
last enemy fire to fall on Fort McHenry. The Fort was designed by a
Frenchman named Jean Foncin and was named for then Secretary of war James
McHenry. Fort McHenry holds the unique designation of national monument
and historic shrine.
Since May 30th, 1949 the flag has flown
continuously, by a Joint Resolution of Congress, over the monument
marking the site of Francis Scott Key's birthplace, Terra Rubra Farm,
Carroll County, Keymar, Maryland.
The copy that Key wrote in his hotel
September 14,1814, remained in the Nicholson family for 93 years. In 1907
it was sold to Henry Walters of Baltimore. In 1934 it was bought at
auction in New York from the Walters estate by the Walters Art Gallery,
Baltimore for $26,400. The Walters Gallery in 1953 sold the manuscript to
the Maryland Historical Society for the same price. Another copy that Key
made is in the Library of Congress.
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