National Treasure: Saluting the Lincoln Flag
MILFORD, PA March 4, 2008 — One of American history's most remarkable
artifacts, revered through its connection to the last hours of a beloved
assassinated president, hangs in a display case in a quiet corner of The
Columns, the majestic home of the Pike County Historical Society in Milford,
Pa.
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| Pictured here discussing the donations
in front of The Lincoln Flag at The Columns, the home of the Pike
County Historical Society, in Milford, Pa. are, from left, PCL&P
community Relations Manager Barry Short; Society Vice President
and Director Emeritus Barbara Buchanan; Society Treasurer Ray
Weeks; and PCL&P Vice President of Customer Service James
O'Brien. |
The Lincoln Flag is the 36-star, blood-stained American flag that hung
from the President's Box at Ford's Theater when Abraham Lincoln was shot
on April 14, 1865. The wool flag, 153 inches by 104 inches, cushioned
the head of the mortally wounded Lincoln who died the next day from his
wounds.
"This is one of the most important flags in American history,"
Dick Daddis, the historical society's president, said. He compared The
Lincoln Flag in significance to the original flag designed by Betsy Ross,
the flag that flew over Fort Sumter at the beginning of the Civil War
and immortalized by Francis Scott Key as the "Star Spangled Banner",
and the flag raised atop Iwo Jima during World War II.
To help underwrite events planned by the society to participate in the
observance of the anniversary of Lincoln's death in April, Pike County
Light & Power Co. (PCL&P) has awarded $5,000 to the Pike County
Historical Society.
PCL&P Vice President — Customer Service James O'Brien said, "PCL&P
is proud to join with the Pike County Historical Society in presenting
this ambitious, thoughtful program. In its own unique way, this program
developed by our neighbors helps us understand more clearly how we live
Lincoln's Legacy in our own lives each and every day."
How did the flag come to Milford?
Thomas Gourlay, actor and part-time manager at Ford's Theater, and his
daughter, Jeannie Gourlay Struthers, who later became a resident of Milford,
were both performing in the play, "Our American Cousin", on
the evening that Lincoln was shot.
Thomas Gourlay helped attend to the mortally wounded president, at one
point putting the flag under Lincoln's head as he lay dying on the floor.
Gourlay kept the flag for many years and, prior to his death in the 1880s,
gave it to his daughter, Jeannie, who bequeathed the flag to her only
son, Vivian Paul Struthers.
The flag was donated to the Pike County Historical Society by Struthers
in 1954. The flag's provenance has been authenticated by Lincoln scholars
and is recognized as a national treasure. The flag has undergone restoration
and conservation treatment to help protect it from the wear of aging.
The Pike County Historical Society has developed an ambitious weekend-long
program April 11- April 13 designed to educate and entertain students,
parents and even grandparents by presenting reenactments of historical
events surrounding Lincoln's presidency. The event will feature a re-enactment
of Lincoln's funeral procession, complete with horse-drawn hearse, a replica
of the original coffin and a Union Soldier Honor Guard.
Additional events include re-enactor Darren Fause, re-counting the thoughts
of Lincoln on the last day of his life; a round-table discussion of Lincoln
scholars discussing the assassination's impact on American history and
a Civil War encampment re-enactment on the grounds of the museum.
This donation is made through the Community Investment Committee (CIC)
of PCL&P's parent company, Orange and Rockland Utilities, Inc. The
CIC donated nearly $100,000 in 2007 to 88 different civic efforts that
make its communities better places to live through educational, cultural
and environmental projects, through employee volunteer participation or
through holiday outreach to the needy.
PCL&P provides electric service in Pike County, Pa. to approximately
4,500 customers in the Townships of Westfall, Milford and the northern
part of Dingman and in the Boroughs of Milford and Matamoras. PCL&P
also serves 1,200 gas customers in Westfall Township and the Borough of
Matamoras.
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