National Country Flags Homepage Image
BizRate Customer Certified (GOLD) Site
National Country Flags Paypal Solution Graphics
Home > Historical Flags
SEARCH:  
Advanced Search 


Flags of the week
3'x5' Polyester Betsy Ross Flag
$19.99
Now $7.99

3'x5' Polyester Union Civil War Flag
$19.99
Now $7.99

There are 36 results
Sort By: 
Results Page:
1
2

11" x 16" American USA Car Flag

Just like home baked apple pie, these beautiful American made patriotic flags represent the best of liberty and democracy. Perfect for showing support for your favorite American athletes and teams, American soldiers both home and abroad, and displaying your everyday patriotism!
From: $3.99

1'x1.5' American USA Boat Flag

Just like home baked apple pie, these beautiful American made patriotic flags represent the best of liberty democracy. Perfect for showing support for your favorite American athletes and teams, American soldiers both home and abroad, and displaying your everyday patriotism!
Your choice of standard sizes!
From: $6.99 Out of Stock

Polyester American Flag

Just like home baked apple pie, these beautiful patriotic flags represent the best of liberty and democracy. Perfect for showing support for your favorite American athletes and teams, American soldiers both home and abroad, and displaying your everyday patriotism!
Your choice of standard sizes!
From: $4.99

Polyester Betsy Ross First Stars and Stripes Flag

According to family members after her death, Betsy Ross received a visit from George Washington, George Ross and Robert Morris of the Continental Congress. She had met Washington through their mutual worship at Christ Church and she had sewn buttons for him previously. The 3 showed her a suggested design that was drawn up by Washington in pencil. The design had six-pointed stars, and Betsy suggested five-pointed stars instead because she could make a five-pointed star in one snip. The flag was sewn by Betsy in her parlor and flown when the Declaration of Independence was read aloud at Independence Hall on July 8, 1776.
From: $4.99

Polyester Black Beard Pirate Flag

The JOLLY ROGER is the traditional flag of American and European pirates. Through history clans have distinguished themselves with many variations, often including swords, scimitars and skeletons, the skull and crossbones was common to most as a symbol to instill fear in merchantmen. If the pirates could cause enough fear and panic from afar, they didn't have to risk the physical danger of combat!
From: $4.99

Polyester Colonial Red Ensign (Cromwell) Flag

In 1497 John Cabot flew the first English flag used in North America, St. Georges Cross. The Mayflower arrived in 1620, and a new flag was needed for the colonies. King James I took the cross and super-imposed it on the Scottish flag to create the Kings Colors in 1620. In 1707 Queen Ann adopted a new flag, placing the Kings Colors on a field of red to create the Colonial Red Ensign, also called the British Red Ensign or the Cromwell Flag.
From: $4.99

Polyester Confederate Battle Flag

The Confederate Navy Jack, also called "The Southern Cross," is a rectangular precursor of the Battle Flag, usually about 5×3 feet. The blue color in the saltire (the diagonal cross) is much lighter than in the Battle Flag, and it was flown only on Confederate ships from 1863 to 1865. The design was originally made by South Carolina Congressman William Porcher Miles with the intent to be the first national flag, but it was rejected by the Confederate government.
From: $4.99

Polyester Confederate Battle Flag of Alabama State

This Confederate Battle Flag of Alabama design combines the classical attributes of the Confederate Battle and Alabama State flags in homage to the central role Alabama played in the Confederacy. It was in Montgomery, Alabama - Then the capital of the Confederate States - that the Southern leaders met to write the Confederate States Constitution revealing much about the motivations for secession.
From: $4.99

Polyester Confederate Battle Flag of Missouri State

The Confederate Battle Flag of Missouri (The "Sterling Price Flag") was sewn by the ladies of New Orleans and presented to the Missouri regiments that were exiled from their native State. Most of these flags were captured after the fall of Vicksburg Mississippi. It features a white Roman Cross, blue field, and deep red trim. More than 60,000 Confederate Missouri men served under this flag including Pindall's 9th Battalion Of Missouri Sharpshooters.
From: $7.99

Polyester Confederate National 11 Stars & Bars Flag

The original flag of the Confederate States of America commonly known as the "STARS AND BARS" was hoisted on the afternoon of the 4th day of March, 1861. There were 7 stars from 4 March 1861 until 7 May 1861, Virginia became the 8th, Tennessee became the 11th State on 2 July 1861, and the number remained 11 through the summer until Missouri and Kentucky were admitted on November 28 and 10 December 1861 respectively.
From: $19.99 Out of Stock

Polyester Continental Colors (Grand Union) Flag

The Grand Union (or Cambridge) Flag was adopted in 1776 and was raised in Cambridge by General George Washington. It has 13 stripes representing the 13 colonies, and kept the Kings Colors in the Canton, illustrating both their allegiance to England, and willingness to fight for their rights and justice.
From: $4.99

Polyester Cuban Flag

The Cuban flag's origins date from 1849 when movements to liberate Cuba from Spanish rule emerged. Anti-Spanish Cuban exiles under the leadership of Narciso López adopted a flag suggested by the poet Miguel Teurbe Tolón. His design incorporates three blue stripes for the sea that surrounds the island of Cuba, two white stripes for the purity of the patriotic cause, one red triangle for the blood shed to free the nation, and one white star for independence.
From: $4.99

Polyester East German Democratic Republic Flag

The flag of the German Democratic Republic (East Germany) was the same as that of the Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany) from establishment of the state in 1949 until 1959. The East German Coat of Arms was added to the national flag in 1959 to distinguish it from the West German flag. It contains a hammer (symbolizing workers), and a compass (symbolizing intellectuals) inside ears of grain (symbolizing farmers).
From: $4.99

Polyester First National Confederate Stars and Bars Flag

The first official flag of the Confederacy (Stars and Bars) was flown from March 5, 1861 to May 26, 1863. One of the first acts of the Provisional Confederate Congress was to create the Committee on the Flag and Seal, chaired by William Porcher Miles of South Carolina. The committee asked the public to submit thoughts and ideas on the topic and was, as historian John M. Coski puts it, "overwhelmed by requests not to abandon the "old flag" of the United States.
From: $4.99

Polyester Flag of Bennington (76)

The Battle of Bennington was a battle of the American Revolutionary War, taking place on August 16, 1777, not at its namesake of Bennington, Vermont, but instead a few miles over the border in Walloomsac, New York. An American force of 2,000 New Hampshire and Massachusetts militiamen, led by General John Stark with aid from Colonel Seth Warner, defeated a combined force of 1,250 Brunswick mercenaries, Canadians, Loyalists, and Native Americans led by Lieutenant Colonel Friedrich Baum.
From: $7.99

Polyester Flag of the Vatican City State

The flag of the Vatican City consists of two vertical bands of gold (hoist side) and white with the crossed keys of Saint Peter and the Papal Tiara centered in the white band. The flag was adopted on June 7, 1929. In the same year Pope Pius XI signed a treaty with Italy, ensuring that the Papal State, albeit its territory had been decreased, will continue to exist as an independent state. In previous centuries (especially in the 19th century) the Papal States used a purple and gold flag, which resembled the current one.
From: $7.99

Polyester Former South Vietnamese Heritage and Freedom Flag

The flag of former South Vietnam was the flag used by former South Vietnam until it was abolished by the communist North Vietnamese government on April 30, 1975, when the South unconditionally surrendered to the North. It is still used by some Vietnamese immigrants now living in other countries and remains highly controversial, particularly in the case of Vietnamese Americans, who call it the Vietnamese Heritage and Freedom Flag.
From: $4.99

Polyester French Fleur De Lis Flag

The fleur-de-lis has been taken to symbolize all the Christian Frankish kings, most famously Charlemagne. The first visual evidence of clearly heraldic use dates from 1211 in a seal showing the future Louis VIII and his shield strewn with the "flowers". The 3-flower design is known as France Modern, and remained the French royal standard until the French Revolution, hen it was replaced by the tricolor of modern-day France.
From: $4.99

Polyester Historical Republic of Spain Naval Ensign Flag

The Spanish Constitution officially defines the national flag as the plain 'civil' variant without the coat of arms. The coat of arms technically denotes government or royal usage, but is the most commonly used version. The government flag is similar to those used between 1785 and 1931 as the War ensign, until 1843 when the War Ensign became a national flag.
From: $4.99

Polyester Irish St. Patrick's Cross Flag

The Saint Patrick's Flag features a red saltire, a crux decussata (X-shaped cross), on a white field; representing Saint Patrick, the patron saint of Ireland. It is also known as the Saint Patrick's Cross. This flag served unofficially to represent Ireland from the foundation of the Order of Saint Patrick in 1783 until the creation of the Irish Free State in 1922.
From: $4.99

Polyester Jolly Roger Pirate Flag

The JOLLY ROGER is the traditional flag of American and European pirates. Through history clans have distinguished themselves with many variations, often including swords, scimitars and skeletons, the skull and crossbones was common to most as a symbol to instill fear in merchantmen. If the pirates could cause enough fear and panic from afar, they didn't have to risk the physical danger of combat!
From: $4.99

Polyester Nazi Germany Flag

The flag of Nazi Germany was initially the banner of the NSDAP. When Adolf Hitler became Chancellor in 1933 the flag was used jointly as the national flag of Nazi Germany along with the old black-white-red horizontal tricolour of the German Empire. After the death of President Hindenburg in 1934 the swastika flag became the sole national flag of Germany in 1935, which it remained until the end of World War II and the fall of the Third Reich.
From: $15.99

Polyester Nazi National War Flag

Die Reichskriegsflagge (Reich War Flag) was the official name of the war flag used by the Wehrmacht from 1871 to 1945. A total of six different designs were used during this period. The version used by Nazi Germany was designed personally by Adolf Hitler, and was introduced on the day that he announced universal conscription (November 7, 1935). The design fuses elements of the Nazi German Flag (swastika and red background) with that of the old Imperial Reich War Flag (four arms emanating from off-center circle and Iron Cross in the canton).
From: $15.99

Polyester North Irish Red Hand Flag

The "Ulster Banner" was the official name given to the Northern Ireland flag (a Red cross with a red hand, a six pointed star, and a crown). This flag is commonly referred to, especially by unionists, as the "Red Hand Flag" or as the "Ulster Flag" (not to be confused with the provincial Flag of Ulster). It ceased to have official government sanction when the Parliament of Northern Ireland was dissolved by the British government in 1972.
From: $4.99

Results Page:
1
2
Copyright © National Country Flags 2010

Design and e-commerce solution provided by ChannelAdvisor Corporation.