“Furled but not Forgotten”
August 5, 2009 by Richmond
Filed under Totally Richmond

A memorial in the Hollywood Cemetery commemorating the flags of the Confederation, “Stars and Bars” and “Stainless Banner” gracing the Virginia state flag in the center.
The 12-star version of “Stars and Bars” was a transitional flag. The 12th and center star represents Missouri, which entered the Confederacy in November of 1861, the same month Jefferson Davis was sworn in as President of the Confederacy, and the same month Stonewall Jackson assumed command of the Shenandoah Valley District.
Perhaps the most notorious of the Confederate flags, the “Stainless Banner” has become a symbol of hatred and intolerance for many people. The original version of the flag had the crossed bars of stars in a field of red in a box of the corner of a pure white flag. Kind of like the American Flag is now – think the blue part with the stars – and the following incarnation was of the same layout, with the design appearing a bit larger in the upper left hand corner of the flag.
The third version of the “Stainless Banner” was the same, save the entire right hand side of the white section of the flag was red, to represent the “bloodstained banner.” The version we see stapled into the backs of pickup truck windows and on certain guys’ t-shirts, with the starred bars and red background comprising the whole design, was not an official Confederate National Flag. It was used, however, as a battle flag, which is probably why the design was so widespread.
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