Hood’s Texas Brigade 2 ply Nylon Embroidered Flag 3×5 ft

$79.95

Vendor unknown Texas Flags Hoods Texas Brigade Double Nylon Embroidered Flag 3 X 5 Ft
Hood's Texas Brigade 2 ply Nylon Embroidered Flag 3x5 ft $79.95
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Outdoor 600D nylon a durable fabric to display your Texan heritage. Discounts available. Free shipping. Seven Pines. Gaines Farm.

1st Texas Infantry, Hood’s Brigade, Lone Star Flag

This is the John Bell Hood’s Texas Brigade Flag, with battle honors shown. Hood was a very aggressive commander. Lee thought highly of Hood’s Texas Brigade. In a letter to a Texas member of the Confederate Congress, urging that more troops be raised in Texas, he wrote: “I rely on those we have in tight places and fear that I have to call on them too often. They have fought grandly and nobly…With a few more, as an example of daring and bravery, I could feel more confident of the campaign.” On another occasion the Texas Brigade was passing in review to honor a visiting British colonel. The visitor noticed that the wear and tear of months in the field had taken the seat of almost every Texan’s trousers. Some had patched them, but a good many more hadn’t. “Never mind their raggedness, Colonel. The enemy never sees the back of my Texans,” said Lee.

This is a Lone Star flag inscribed with the battle honors, “Seven Pines/Gaines Farm” in the blue canton, and “Elthams Landing/Malvern Hill” in the field. This very important flag was made by Lula Wigfall, daughter of the regiment’s first colonel, Louis T. Wigfall, and was presented to the 1st Texas in the summer of 1861.

https://www.tsl.texas.gov/treasures/flagsandmaps/flags/historic-flags.html

As the battle honors attest, the 1st Texas fought under this flag throughout the Peninsula Campaign. The Texans carried it through the Second Manassas fight in August 1862 and into Maryland during Lee’s first invasion of the North. During the desperate Battle of Antietam, in Miller’s cornfield on Lee’s northern flank, the 1st Texas suffered 82.3 percent casualties — the highest endured by any unit North or South during the entire war. In the course of the battle, nine brave Texas standard bearers fell carrying this flag. When the ninth was killed, the flag was lost — picked up from among the dead bodies by a Pennsylvania private

Additional information

Weight 2 oz