Star-Spangled Banner, The
After circulating as a handbill, the lyrics were published in a Baltimore newspaper on Sept. 20, 1814. The tune was taken from the English popular song “To Anacreon in Heaven.” The original “Star-Spangled Banner,” as written by Key, had a much faster tempo than the version usually sung today, and was typically performed by a soloist rather than a massed group of people. The “Anacreontic” melody was used with lyrics adapted to a number of causes of the 19th cent, and it emerged, with Key's lyrics, as the most important American hymn during Reconstruction.
It was not until the 20th cent., however, that the melody and Key's words became inextricably connected as America's anthem. Their designation as such first became official by executive order of President Wilson in 1916, although the army and the navy had for some years regarded “The Star-Spangled Banner” as the national anthem. Wilson's order was confirmed by act of Congress in 1931. The large flag that inspired the anthem, with 15 stars and stripes and originally 30-by-42-ft (9.1-by-12.8-m), has been in the collection of the Smithsonian Institution since 1907.
See studies by V. Weybright (1935), L. Taylor and J. Brodie (2008), and M. Ferris (2014).
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