April is the month to fly your flags in 2026!

April 14, 2026

Is April the cruelest month?

It’s cruel to people who want to fly U.S. flags often, but only on designated flag-flying dates. (April is also National Poetry Month, so it’s a good time to look up poetry references we should have committed to heart; April is also Jazz Appreciation Month).

For 2026, these are the three dates for flying the U.S. flag; Easter is a national date, the other two are dates suggested for residents of the states involved.

One date, nationally, to fly the flag. That beats March, which has none (in a year with Easter in April and not March). But March has five statehood days, to April’s two.

Take heart! You may fly your U.S. flag any day you choose, or everyday as many people do in Texas (though, too many do not retire their flags every evening . . .).

Three dates to fly Old Glory in April, by the Flag Code and other laws on memorials and commemorations.

  • Easter, April 5 (already passed, if you’re counting)
  • Maryland, April 28, 1788, 7th state
  • Louisiana, April 30, 1812 – 18th state

Some people have abused the flag in April.

Caption from The Guardian: Ted Landsmark (centre): ‘I had a sense that something really significant had happened.’ Boston, April 5, 1976. Photograph: stanleyformanphotos.com

Caption from The Guardian: Ted Landsmark (centre): ‘I had a sense that something really significant had happened.’ Boston, April 5, 1976. Photograph: stanleyformanphotos.com

See “That’s me in the picture: Ted Landsmark is assaulted in Boston, at an ‘anti-bussing’ protest, 5 April 1976,” Abigail Radnor, The Guardian, April 17, 2015; and “The U.S. Flag in the 20th Century (Part 2),” The Portland Flag Association.

More:

Save

Save

Save

Save


1935, polio scare shut down National Scout Jamboree

April 13, 2026

It’s difficult to tell people just how frightened was America of polio.

In 1935 Boy Scouts of America (now Scouting USA) planned a National Jamboree in Washington, D.C. Polio outbreaks became epidemic by mid-summer, and authorities decided to postpone the Jamboree.

This photo is an aerial shot from the Goodyear Airship Enterprise, showing the planned campsites on the west side of the Potomac River, on August 9, 1935, when the Jamboree would have been in full swing. Photo now with the digital archives of the Library of Congress.

A National Jamboree was held at the site in 1937.