Note: This exhibit closed January 6, 2007
this is for reference only.

Without question, one of the most unique and important artifacts in the collection of the Historical Society of Delaware is the Dansey Flag. Acquired in 1927, this rare relic of the American Revolution survives to tell a variety of stories about Delaware, its people, and about the important role that organizations like ours play in our community.

On October 1, we will open a very special exhibition featuring the Dansey Flag and four distinct stories that can be told through this one object. The flag is named for Captain William Dansey of the British Army who captured it from the Delaware Militia a few days before the Battle of the Brandywine in September of 1777. Dansey took the flag home to England as a war trophy, where it stayed until 1927 when the Historical Society of Delaware bought it from the Dansey family and brought it back to Delaware. Since that time, the flag has been one of the most requested items in our collection and has been reproduced in numerous publications. When the flag returned to Delaware it went on display for an extended period of time (about 50 years). However, given the fragile nature of the flag, it has been off display now for almost 20 years. Thanks to generous contributions from the Colonial Dames in Delaware, the Sons of the Colonial Wars, and the Delaware Heritage Commission, the flag has recently undergone conservation treatment and is ready for public display once again.

The exhibition will tell four stories related to the flag—that of the Delaware Militia who originally owned the flag, of William Dansey and what happened to the flag in England, of the Historical Society of Delaware’s successful effort to bring the flag home again, and that of the conservation and care of such an  important historical artifact. This exhibition and a special school program on the American Revolution have been generously supported by a grant from the Delaware Humanities Forum, a state program of the National Endowment for the Humanities. It is being presented in conjunction with the statewide celebration marking the Washington-Rochambeau Revolutionary Route in Delaware.

Delaware History Museum
504 Market Street - Wilmington, Delaware 19801
(302) 656-0637
Tuesday-Friday, 11 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Saturday 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.


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