Join us on an adventure in England where we trace the source
of the bunting that eventually will be used to make the Star Spangled
Banner that flew proudly over Fort McHenry. You will be staying
at great hotels, enjoying fine meals and meet historians and curators
for behind the scene tours.
A tax-deductible portion of your tour cost will assist the Flag
House to put the finishing touches on their financial campaign
for the new educational building, to be open by 2003.
So have fun while supporting the Flag House.
For a reservation form and all other details please
contact:
The Flag House; 1 410 837 1793 www.flaghouse.org
Day
1 (Thursday, April 25)
Washington to England
Our quest for the beginnings of our flag begins when we leave
Dulles for an evening flight across the pond. We arrive in London
not long after the sun has come up on the second day of our adventure.
Day
2 (Friday, April 26)
Arrival and Drive to Sudbury, Suffolk. Our Tour
Manager will meet us at the airport in the deluxe motorcoach that
will be our wheels for 9 days. Our first stop is Sudbury, in Suffolk,
the "Bunting Capital" of England. An ancient market
town, Sudbury was mentioned in the Doomsday Book of 1088. The
market is still held on Saturdays. Our home in Sudbury will be
The Mill Hotel. The hotel stands on the banks of the River Stour,
with magnificent countryside and river views. The millrace ruins
directly under the hotel, quietly turning a 100-year old wheel.
We will enjoy a welcome dinner at the hotel or another historic
Sudbury dining room.
Day
3 (Saturday, April 27)
Sudbury, The oldest continuously operating market
in England takes place every Saturday in Sudbury. It will be a
treat for those who choose to get up early in the morning and
stroll to the Market Square. We will share breakfast on our second
day in Sudbury with Mrs. Martha Brown and her daughters (Benefiting
from 21st century hindsight, we know that Mrs. Brown earned ameagre
living in the woollen industry in 18th Century Sudbury). In the
company of a local historian, we will visit the weavers' houses
that line Sudbury's back streets, and learn about the bunting
industry while standing in three hundred-year-old textile warehouses.
Though better known for his fine portraits and landscapes, Thomas
Gainsborough was descended from Sudbury merchants who must have
engaged in the textile trade. Gainsborough's House is a typical
example of Suffolk vernacular architecture, constructed from a
timber frame with wattle and daub in-fill. The
building was originally two cottages that were joined together
in about 1520. After a group lunch or afternoon tea, we will have
the rest of the day to spend with a curator of the museum that
now celebrates Gainsborough's work. The second evening in Sudbury
you will be free to choose from one of the many traditional pubs
and fine restaurants in the Suffolk area.
Day
4 (Sunday, April 28)
In and around Suffolk, including Cambridge We will
board the motorcoach this morning to visit a place in East Anglia
where the Stars and Stripes flew many later, in this case over
the command of the US Army Air Force during World War II. The
destination for the morning is the American Cemetery, near Cambridge.
The site, thirty and a half acres in extent, was donated by the
University of Cambridge. It lies on a North Slope with wide prospect.
There are 3,812 American military dead buried there. We will also
visit Long Melford, an ancient village with an impressive collection
of Elizabethan homes and a Wa rof 1812 connection. In this charming
town, Sir Richard Hyde-Parker will generously show us his fine
Tudor home. In the afternoon we have a loom demonstration back
in Lavenham, Suffolk's bunting center. We'll get together again
that evening for our last dinner in Sudbury - at a restaurant
chosen by our tour manager as one of the town's best.
Day
5 (Monday, April 29)
Sudbury to Chatham. Our destination today is Chatham.
On the way we will visit the magnificent, 1200-year old Leeds
Castle, one of England's most glorious historic sites. For the
next two nights we will enjoy the hospitality at the Royal Victoria
& Bull, a 400-year old coaching inn visited by Queen Victoria
in 1836. We will join in their fine dining room for our first
meal in Chatham.
Day
6 (Tuesday, April 29)
Chatham has a delicate mix of modern and ancient
architecture. Alongside one of the finest shopping areas in the
region is the Napoleonic era Fort Amherst, the Theatre Royal and
our principal destination, the World Naval Base. For four centuries,
all manner of Naval vessels have been built in Chatham, from the
wooden walled square-riggers that fought the Spanish Armada right
up to nuclear submarines. Lord Nelson's flagship, HMS Victory,
perhaps the most famous vessel in English naval history was the
product of Chatham shipwrights. The Sail and Colour Loft has a
fine collection of flags and ensigns, spanning two centuries.
The loft is still a flag and banner factory, and our host will
be the President of the Flag Institute, England's leading vexillogical
association. Our Tour Manager will find just the right place for
the group for lunch, and you will be on your own to choose from
Chatham's restaurants and pubs for dinner.
Day
7 (Wednesday, April 30)
Chatham to London. We will have the morning to explore
Chatham's streets before we board our motorcoach for London, where
we will spend the remaining four days in England. We will arrive
in time for a special tour of London sites; in particular those
connected to the War of 1812. Our home in central London will
be the deluxe Royal Trafalgar Hotel, near the National Gallery,
where we will enjoy dinner after our arrival.
Day
8 (Thursday, May 1)
London. After breakfast the following morning we
will board one of several Thames River barges which make the trip
from central London to nearby Greenwich, the home of the National
Maritime Museum and their spectacular collection of battle flags
and ensigns. Our host will be Mr. Timothy Wilson, author of Flags
at Sea. By the late 1600's Greenwich was a center for naval activity
in England and home to the Old Royal Navy College. In 1823 a "National
Gallery of Naval Art" was established here. Lunch will be
in Greenwich, and the barge will drop us off late in the afternoon
back in London. There are dozens of restaurants from which you
can choose for dinner within an easy walk of the hotel.

Day
9 (Friday, May 2)
London. A free day in London. Our fashion specialist
can take those interested guests on a behind-the scenes tour of
London fashion houses and exclusive shops. There's always the
National Theatre Museum, where we could schedule a special tour
by a museum curator or a West End theatre professional. Want to
see more flags? There are six War of 1812 American flags at the
Royal Chelsea Hospital that we could see. Next door, at the National
Army Museum, there are some other American standards from the
War of 1812.We could visit a textile curator at the Victoria and
Albert Museum. We'll meet at Selfridges, or another of London's
famous tea-rooms in the mid-afternoon. We could finishthe afternoon
with a visit to the Chelsea Physick Garden, where for three hundred
years medicinal herbs have been raised and studied, and a talk
by the Old Country Tours horticulturist. We'll plan a daylong
excursion to Portsmouth for those who may l like to visit Lord
Nelson's flagship the HMS Victory. That evening you may choose
from the dozens of great restaurants near the Royal Trafalgar
and perhaps head to the West End theatres.
Day
10 (Saturday, May 3)
London to Washington. We leave London for our return flight to
Washington in the late morning, for a mid afternoon arrival in
the U.S.
YOUR STAR-SPANGLED BANNER FLAG HOUSE
TRIP TO ENGLAND INCLUDES:
Round trip airfare from Baltimore to London
All airport transfers
Eight nights in some of England's most historic hostelries
Comfortable transportation on a deluxe motorcoach with
an English Tour Manager
Breakfast every morning
Lunch or English Tea or Dinner each day
Admission to all museums and historic sites
Visits with curators and historians
AN ITINERARY PERFECT FOR FLAG AFFICIONADOS AND WAR OF 1812 SCHOLARS