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Rebecca Young (Flower)

Birthdate:
Death: February 06, 1819 (79)
Baltimore, Baltimore County, Maryland, United States
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Benjamin Flower and Ruth Flower
Wife of William Young
Mother of Hannah Fearson; Dr. Benjamin Flower Young and Mary Pickersgill
Sister of Col. Benjamin Flower

Occupation: Maker of Continental Standards - one of the first confirmed flag-makers in the United States.
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Rebecca Young

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rebecca_Young

Rebecca (Flower) Young was a flag maker during the American Revolution. Her name appears in the logs of the commissary general for making "Continental Standards" as early as 1781, making her one of the earlier verified makers of the Flag of the United States. In addition to flags, she was also paid for making blankets and drum cases between the years of 1780 and 1785.[2] In 1781, Young ran an ad in the Pennsylvania Packet advertising "all kinds of colours for the Army and Navy." She also sewed the standard for the First American Regiment under Colonel Josiah Harmar.

Young had several family connections to important figures in United States history. In 1777, her brother, Colonel Benjamin Flower, was credited with saving the famous musical icon Liberty Bell from the tower of the old Pennsylvania State House (now "Independence Hall") when British forces captured Philadelphia. Her son, Dr. Benjamin Young, learned his profession from Dr. Benjamin Rush, and her daughter Mary Young Pickersgill, (1776-1857), who sewed the flag with her daughter Caroline and household staff, beginning at her 1793 rowhouse at East Pratt and Albemarle Streets and finishing on the floor of a nearby Johnson's/Claggett's Brewery on Front Street, and delivered to Major George Armistead at the Fort in 1813, receiving a government-issued receipt for two flags, a 30 by 42 foot "garrison flag" and a smaller "storm flag" of 17 by 25 feet. Later flown at Fort McHenry outside Baltimore, Maryland that inspired Francis Scott Key, (1779-1843), to pen the words to the poem that became The Star-Spangled Banner.

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Rebecca Young's Timeline

1739
November 17, 1739
1767
August 20, 1767
Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Province of Pennsylvania
1769
July 27, 1769
Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Province of Pennsylvania
1776
February 12, 1776
Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Province of Pennsylvania
1819
February 6, 1819
Age 79
Baltimore, Baltimore County, Maryland, United States