Betsy Ross 250 Flags
Independence Day Flag, 250 Years of Freedom Betsy Ross American Flag
250 Years of Freedom Flag, 1776 2026 Eagle Betsy Ross Fence Banner
250 Years of Freedom Betsy Ross 1776 2026 Engraved Whiskey Glass
We the People T-Shirt, 250 Years of Freedom Betsy Ross Flag Shirt
250 Years Heritage Decor with Betsy Ross Bennington 76 American Flag, God Bless America The Land I love 1776 2026 Flag Decor
Betsy Ross 250 Years of Freedom 1776 2026 Engraved Whiskey Glass
250 Years of America Flag, Patriotic Liberty Betsy Ross Vintage Solar Led Fan Flag
Flagwix Patriotic Maine Coon Cat Garden Flag - 250th Anniversary Patriotic Paw Prints Betsy Ross Flag Decor
Patriotic Welcome Dog Garden Flag, 250 Years Dachshund Betsy Ross Flag Decor
California State Betsy Ross Flag, 250 Years Strong Grizzly Bear Grommet Flag
250th Anniversary Fence Banner One Nation Under God Betsy Ross Flag
Betsy Ross Flag, 250 Years of Freedom Patriotic Eagle Grommet US Flag
Betsy Ross US Flag, 250th Anniversary 1776 We The People Patriotic Decor
250th Anniversary Betsy Ross Celebrating 250 Years of Independence Car Magnet
250 Years of Freedom Independence Day Betsy Ross American Handheld Flag
Happy 250th Birthday America Betsy Ross Semiquincentennial US Flag
Betsy Ross 250 Flags: Heritage Designs for 1776–2026
Before there were 50 stars, there were 13. Arranged in a circle. Sewn (according to enduring American tradition) by a Philadelphia upholsterer named Betsy Ross in the summer of 1776, then formally adopted by the Continental Congress on June 14, 1777.
That original flag — 13 white stars in a circle on a blue canton, 13 red and white stripes representing the 13 colonies — became the foundation of every American flag that has flown since. Specifically, it's the only flag pattern in U.S. history whose 250th birthday America commemorates specifically as part of the Semiquincentennial.
Our Betsy Ross 250 flags collection honors that original design with 1776–2026 framing. Each flag pairs the historic 13-star canton with Semiquincentennial commemorative elements — letting Americans who care about heritage authenticity celebrate the 250th with the original American flag, not just a modern one.
These designs belong to our broader America 250th Anniversary collection and pair particularly well with Eagle 250 emblem flags (where the eagle and the 13 stars share Great Seal heraldry), We The People Constitutional flags, and 250 Years of Freedom flags. For households building complete heritage-themed displays, browse grommet-format flagpole flags across themes, or pair with patriotic bunting and state-specific 250 anniversary flags — particularly meaningful for households in the original 13 colonies.
The Betsy Ross Story (And What History Actually Confirms)
Every American knows the legend: in May or June 1776, George Washington, Robert Morris, and Colonel George Ross visited a Philadelphia upholstery shop owned by a young widow named Elizabeth "Betsy" Griscom Ross. They showed her a sketch of a flag with 13 six-pointed stars. Specifically, Betsy suggested the stars should be five-pointed instead — and demonstrated, with one snip of scissors, how to fold fabric to cut a perfect five-pointed star in a single motion. She then sewed the first American flag.
What the Historical Record Confirms
Importantly, the historical record verifies several facts:
- Betsy Ross was real. Born Elizabeth Griscom on January 1, 1752 in Philadelphia, she worked as an upholsterer and flag maker. She lived at 239 Arch Street, Philadelphia (the house still stands as a museum).
- She did make flags for the Pennsylvania State Navy and other early American military units.
- Her grandson, William Canby, presented the story to the Historical Society of Pennsylvania in 1870, with sworn affidavits from family members about the Washington meeting.
What History Cannot Confirm
On the other hand, no contemporary written record exists of the Washington-Ross meeting. Furthermore, the Continental Congress didn't officially adopt the flag until June 14, 1777 — almost a year after Betsy supposedly sewed it. Specifically, historians debate whether the meeting happened exactly as Canby described it.
Why the Story Endures
Yet the Betsy Ross legend has endured for 150+ years for a reason. Notably, the story humanizes the American founding — connecting the abstract revolutionary moment to a real Philadelphia woman, working with her hands, making something that became sacred. Specifically, it acknowledges that the American founding wasn't only generals and statesmen — it was also craftspeople, women, and ordinary citizens who built the visible symbols of nationhood.
When you fly a Betsy Ross 250 flag, you're honoring both the documented history (the June 14, 1777 Flag Resolution) and the enduring American tradition that ordinary people built this country.
The 13-Star Circle: Iconic American Design
The defining visual element of every Betsy Ross flag: 13 white stars arranged in a circle on a blue canton. Specifically, this circular arrangement is what distinguishes the Betsy Ross design from later 13-star variations.
Why a Circle?
Importantly, the circular star arrangement symbolizes equality among the 13 colonies — no colony positioned higher or more prominent than another. Furthermore, the circle implies unity and perpetuity (no beginning, no end), reinforcing the message that the new nation's bonds were unbreakable.
Compared to Other 13-Star Variations
Specifically, history records several different 13-star arrangements used during the Revolutionary era:
- Betsy Ross flag — 13 stars in a circle ⭐ (Most iconic)
- Bennington flag — 13 stars with "76" arranged in the canton
- Cowpens flag — 12 stars in a circle around 1 center star
- Hopkinson flag — 13 stars in 3-2-3-2-3 staggered rows
- Star Spangled Banner flag — 15 stars (after Vermont and Kentucky joined)
Each pattern carries its own historical context. Notably, the Betsy Ross 13-star circle is the version most recognizable to modern Americans — and the one our 250th anniversary collection honors.
The Stripes
Importantly, the 13 alternating red and white stripes have remained constant since 1777. Specifically:
- Red stripes symbolize hardiness and valor
- White stripes symbolize purity and innocence
- The number 13 represents the original colonies that declared independence
Furthermore, when the U.S. flag was redesigned for additional states, Congress decided in 1818 to maintain 13 stripes permanently while adding stars for new states. The Betsy Ross design's 13 stripes are the foundation of every American flag flown since.
Featured Betsy Ross 250 Design Themes
Our Betsy Ross 250 flags collection includes several distinct design families.
Classic Betsy Ross with 1776-2026 Framing ⭐
The most historically authentic choice: the original 13-star circle on blue canton, 13 red and white stripes, with subtle "1776 — 2026" date framing along the bottom edge. Specifically, these designs honor the original flag exactly, with minimal modification.
Best for: History purists, museum donors, original 13 colonies residents, traditional households.
Betsy Ross with Eagle Center
Designs combining the 13-star Betsy Ross canton with a bald eagle in the field. Specifically, the eagle holds either the Constitution scroll or the Great Seal arrows-and-olive-branch, while the Betsy Ross heritage frames the design. Bridges naturally with our Eagle 250 flag collection.
Best for: Households wanting heritage + national emblem symbolism combined.
Betsy Ross with "250 Years of Freedom" Typography
The original 13-star canton paired with bold "250 Years of Freedom" typography. Specifically, this design family bridges between our Betsy Ross 250 collection and our 250 Years of Freedom flags collection.
Best for: Households wanting clearer 250th milestone messaging.
Heritage Vintage Betsy Ross
Aged or distressed Betsy Ross designs with weathered colors evoking 250 years of history. Furthermore, these have a strong heritage aesthetic that appeals to farmhouses, ranches, and rustic patriotic homes.
Best for: Farmhouse decor, ranch settings, rustic patriotic homes, vintage-loving households.
Betsy Ross Pet Designs
Patriotic pet flags (Golden Retriever, German Shepherd, Bulldog, Cat) on Betsy Ross 13-star backgrounds. Specifically, these bridge to our pet flag collection — particularly the "Paw Prints Betsy Ross" design family.
Best for: Pet families who want heritage-authentic patriotic display.
Betsy Ross Memorial Day Tributes
Designs combining the 13-star canton with Memorial Day-appropriate styling — slightly more solemn palette, suitable for half-staff observance. Pairs with our Veterans 250 collection for veteran households.
Best for: Memorial Day display, veteran families, military commemorative events.
Original 13 Colonies and the Betsy Ross Heritage
The Betsy Ross 250 flags have particular meaning for households in the 13 original colonies — the states whose 250th anniversary America specifically celebrates in 2026.
The 13 Original Colonies
Specifically, the 13 stars on the original flag represented these colonies:
- Connecticut — Constitution State
- Delaware — The First State (first to ratify, December 7, 1787)
- Georgia — Peach State
- Maryland — Old Line State
- Massachusetts — Bay State
- New Hampshire — Granite State
- New Jersey — Garden State
- New York — Empire State
- North Carolina — Tar Heel State
- Pennsylvania — Keystone State (where Betsy Ross actually lived and worked)
- Rhode Island — Ocean State
- South Carolina — Palmetto State
- Virginia — Old Dominion
Furthermore, households in any of these 13 states have particular claim to the Betsy Ross heritage — these were the original 13 stars on the flag Betsy supposedly sewed in 1776.
Pair with Your State Flag
Specifically, for original 13 colonies households, the most meaningful display pairs:
- Betsy Ross 250 flag representing the founding moment
- Your state's 250th anniversary flag from our State Flags collection representing your specific colony
Together, this display tells your visitors: we know which star on this original flag represented us. We're proud of our specific 250-year contribution.
Display Etiquette for Betsy Ross 250 Flags
Importantly, the Betsy Ross flag is a historic American flag, not the current official flag. Specifically, this means certain Flag Code considerations apply differently:
When Displayed with Current American Flag
Specifically, when flying a Betsy Ross 250 flag alongside the current 50-star American flag:
- Current American flag takes position of honor — at the peak of the flagpole, or to the viewer's left in wall display
- Betsy Ross flag flown below the current American flag on the same pole, or adjacent at equal/lower height on separate pole
Furthermore, the Betsy Ross flag is NOT considered a competing or superseding flag — it's a historic commemorative flag, similar to displaying a state flag or POW/MIA flag below the current American flag.
Particularly Significant Dates for Betsy Ross Flags
- Flag Day (June 14, 2026) — anniversary of 1777 Flag Resolution
- Independence Day (July 4, 2026) — peak Semiquincentennial moment
- Constitution Day (September 17, 2026) — connecting the original flag to the Constitutional founding
- Bennington Battle Day (August 16) — Revolutionary War significance in Vermont
For complete flag etiquette guidance, read our American Flag Etiquette for the 250th Anniversary