[PW] Re: U.S. flag never at half-mast

Kee Malesky KMalesky at npr.org
Thu Jan 4 07:44:26 PST 2007


Your question is about locations where the flag is not lowered, but I
wanted to point out that (as I understand it), in the US,  the term
should be "half-staff" except on naval vessels or at naval
installations.

Kee Malesky
NPR Library

-----Original Message-----
From: project-wombat-open-bounces at lists.project-wombat.org
[mailto:project-wombat-open-bounces at lists.project-wombat.org] On Behalf
Of Michelle Hawk
Sent: Thursday, January 04, 2007 10:11 AM
To: Stumpers List
Subject: [PW] U.S. flag never at half-mast

I've found some sources that say this is an urban legend, but I wanted
to check with Stumpers just to make sure.

 

My patron asked what locations never fly the flag at half-mast. She had
heard of two: the USS Arizona memorial (Pearl Harbor) and the Tomb of
the Unknown Soldier. She thinks there are two more.

 

USHistory.org's FAQ says common answers are the Betsy Ross House (which
they say is not true), The Alamo, USS Arizona, Tomb of the Unknown
Soldier, and the moon (my favorite). Other websites say that all of
these are untrue, except the moon. 

 

What I'm looking for is an authoritative source, such as a government
website or publication, but I can't find one. Does anyone know the
answer to this? One thing I'm curious about is: if the flag isn't on a
flagpole/unable to be lowered (like on the moon), does it count?

 

Thanks for your help!

~Michelle

 

 

Michelle Hawk

Head of Reference

Lebanon Community Library

125 North 7th Street

Lebanon, PA 17046

717-273-7624 x3

refdesk at lclibs.org

 

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