Home | New | About Us | Categories | Policy | Links
Time Passages Nostalgia Company
Ron Toth, Jr., Proprietor
72 Charles Street
Rochester, New Hampshire 03867-3413
Phone: 1-603-335-2062
Email: ron.toth@timepassagesnostalgia.com
 
Search for:  
Select from:  
Show:  at once pictures only 
previous page
 Found 164 items 
next page
 9160 ... k411 ... o209 ... p560 p562 p571 p572 p573 ... q729
Small Jolly Roger Skull & Crossed Bones Pirate Cloth Flag
Item #p571
Sold
Click here now for this limited time offer
Check Out With PayPalSee Our Store Policy

My items on eBay

Any group of items being offered as a lot must be sold as a lot.
Nostalgic Memorabilia, Pop Culture Artifacts, Historic Items,
and "Shoe Box Toys"
Worldwide Sales
Don't forget to
bookmark this site.
You don't have to be an eight year old to enjoy having
a childhood treasure.
Unique & Fun Nostalgic Items
Quality Merchandise At Reasonable Prices
It's never too late to
have a happy childhood!
We have an extensive inventory that is not yet on our web site. If there is something you are looking for and did not find, please send us your wish list.
 
This item is already soldSmall Jolly Roger Skull & Crossed Bones Pirate Cloth Flag
United States   America   American   Americana   Advertising   Promotion   Promotional   Ship   Shipping   Boat   Boating   Transportation   Travel   Nautical   Naval   Navy   Military   War   Battle   Sailor   Sailing   Pirate   Flag   Pennant   Jolly Roger   Skull   Bone   Skeleton   Skull & Crossed Bones   Novelty   Nostalgic   History   Historic
The picture below shows a larger view of this Small Jolly Roger Skull & Crossed Bones Pirate Cloth Flag. This flag is not dated and the year that it was made is unknown. It is not marked and the maker is also unknown.This Jolly Roger flag measures about 16-1/2'' x 11-3/4''. It appears to be in mint condition as pictured.

Below here, for reference, is some additional historic information on the Jolly Roger flag:

Jolly Roger
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jolly Roger is the traditional English name for the flags flown to identify a pirate ship about to attack, during the early 18th century (the later part of the Golden Age of Piracy). The flag most commonly identified as the Jolly Roger today, the skull and crossbones symbol on a black flag, was used during the 1710s by a number of pirate captains including Black Sam Bellamy, Edward England, and John Taylor. It went on to become the most commonly used pirate flag during the 1720s, although other designs were also in use.

Name
Use of the term Jolly Roger in reference to pirate flags goes back to at least Charles Johnson’s A General History of the Pyrates, published in Britain in 1724. Johnson specifically cites two pirates as having named their flag “Jolly Roger”: Bartholomew Roberts in June 1721 and Francis Spriggs in December 1723. While Spriggs and Roberts used the same name for their flags, their flag designs were very different, suggesting that already “Jolly Roger” was a generic term for black pirate flags rather than a name for any single specific design. Neither Spriggs’ nor Roberts’ Jolly Roger consisted of a skull and crossbones. Richard Hawkins, who was captured by pirates in 1724, reported that the pirates had a black flag bearing the figure of a skeleton stabbing a heart with a spear, which they named “Jolly Roger”. This description closely resembles the infamous flag of Blackbeard (Edward Teach), who flew a similar design six years prior. It is sometimes claimed that the term derives from “Joli Rouge” (“Pretty Red”) in reference to a red flag used by French privateers. This is sometimes attributed to red blood, symbolizing violent pirates, ready to kill. Another early reference to “Old Roger” is found in a news report in the Weekly Journal or British Gazetteer (London, Saturday, October 19, 1723; Issue LVII, p. 2, col. 1):

Parts of the West Indies. Rhode Island, July 26. This Day, 26 of the Pirates taken by his Majesty Ship the Greyhound, Captain Solgard, were executed here. Some of them delivered what they had to say in writing, and most of them said something at the Place of Execution, advising all People, young ones especially, to take warning by their unhappy Fate, and to avoid the crimes that brought them to it. Their black Flag, under which they had committed abundance of Pyracies and Murders, was affix’d to one Corner of the Gallows. It had in it the Portraiture of Death, with an Hour Glass in one Hand, and a Dart in the other, striking into a Heart, and three Drops of Blood delineated as falling from it. This Flag they called Old Roger, and us’d to say, They would live and die under it.

Design
The first recorded uses of the skull and crossbones symbol on naval flags date to the 17th century. It possibly originated among the Barbary pirates of the period, which would connect the black color of the Jolly Roger to the Muslim Black Standard (black flag). But an early reference to Muslim corsairs flying a skull symbol, in the context of a 1625 slave raid on Cornwall, explicitly refers to the symbols being shown on a green flag. There are mentions of Francis Drake’s flying a black flag as early as 1585, but the historicity of this tradition has been called into question. Contemporary accounts show Peter Easton using a plain black flag in 1612; a plain black flag was also used by Captain Martel’s pirates in 1716, Blackbeard, Charles Vane, and Richard Worley in 1718, and Howell Davis in 1719. An early record of the skull and crossbones design being used on a (red) flag by pirates is found in a December 6, 1687 entry in a log book held by the Bibliothèque nationale de France. The entry describes pirates using the flag, not on a ship but on land.

17th and 18th century colonial governors usually required privateers to fly a specific version of the British flag, the 1606 Union Jack with a white crest in the middle, also distinguishing them from naval vessels. Before this time, British privateers such as Sir Henry Morgan sailed under English colors. An early use of a black flag with skull, crossbones, and hourglass is attributed to pirate captain Emanuel Wynn in 1700, according to a wide variety of secondary sources. Reportedly, these secondary sources are based on the account of Captain John Cranby of HMS Poole and are verified at the London Public Record Office.

With the end of the War of the Spanish Succession in 1714, many privateers turned to piracy. They still used red and black flags, but now they decorated them with their own designs. Edward England, for example, flew three different flags: from his mainmast the black flag depicted above; from his foremast a red version of the same; and from his ensign staff the English national flag. Just as variations on the Jolly Roger design existed, red flags sometimes incorporated yellow stripes or images symbolic of death. Colored pennants and ribbons could also be used alongside flags.

Marcus Rediker (1987) claims that most pirates active between 1716 and 1726 were part of one of two large interconnected groups sharing many similarities in organisation. He states that this accounts for the “comparatively rapid adoption of the piratical black flag among a group of men operating across thousands of miles of ocean”, suggesting that the skull-and-crossbone design became standardized at about the same time as the term Jolly Roger was adopted as its name. By 1730, the diversity of symbols in prior use had been mostly replaced by the standard design.

Click on image to zoom.
Small Jolly Roger Skull & Crossed Bones Pirate Cloth Flag


Powered by Nose The Hamster (0.06,1)
Wed, Apr 17, 2024 at 21:42:54 [ 271 0.04 0.06]
 
© 1997-2024, Time Passages Nostalgia Company / Ron Toth, Jr., All rights reserved