1752-1836

Who Was Betsy Ross?

Betsy Ross, best known for making the first American flag, apprenticed with an upholsterer before irrevocably splitting with her family to marry outside the Quaker religion. She and her first husband, John Ross, started their own upholstery business. Despite a lack of credible evidence to support it, legend holds that President George Washington requested that Ross make the first American flag.

Quick Facts

FULL NAME: Elizabeth “Betsy” Ross
BORN: January 1, 1752
DIED: January 30, 1836
BIRTHPLACE: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
SPOUSE: John Ross (1772-1776), Joseph Ashburn (1777-1782), and John Claypoole (1783-1817)
ASTROLOGICAL SIGN: Capricorn

Early Life

Betsy Ross, best known for making the first American flag, was born Elizabeth Griscom in Philadelphia on January 1, 1752. A fourth-generation American and the great-granddaughter of a carpenter who had arrived in New Jersey in 1680 from England, Ross was the eighth of 17 children. Like her sisters, she attended Quaker schools and learned sewing and other crafts common in her day.

After Ross completed her schooling, her father apprenticed her to a local upholsterer, where, at age 17, she met John Ross, an Anglican. The two young apprentices quickly fell for one another, but Ross was a Quaker, and the act of marrying outside of one’s religion was strictly off-limits. To the shock of their families, Betsy and John married in 1772, and she was promptly expelled from both her family and the Friends meeting house in Philadelphia that served as a place of worship for Quakers. Eventually, the couple opened their own upholstery business, drawing on Ross’ deft needlework skills.

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Flag Maker and Husbands

In 1776, at the start of the American Revolution, John was killed by a gunpowder explosion while on militia duty at the Philadelphia waterfront. Following his death, Ross acquired his property and kept up the upholstery business, working day and night to make flags for Pennsylvania.

A year later, Ross married Joseph Ashburn, a sailor. Ashburn, however, also met an unfortunate end. In 1781, the ship he was on was captured by the British, and he died in prison the next year.

In 1783, Ross married for a third and final time. The man, John Claypoole, had been in prison with her late husband Joseph and met Ross when he delivered Joseph’s farewells to her. John died 34 years later, in 1817, after a long disability.

Death and Legacy

Ross died on January 30, 1836, at the age of 84, in Philadelphia.

Nearly 50 years later, her grandson publicly shared that Ross made the first American flag. The story goes that she made the flag in June 1776 after a visit from President George Washington, Robert Morris, and George Ross, her first husband’s uncle. Her grandson’s recollections were published in Harper’s Monthly in 1873, but today, most scholars agree it’s a myth. However, Ross was without dispute a flag maker who, records show, was paid in 1777 by the Pennsylvania State Navy Board for making “ship’s colours, &c.”

Although the Betsy Ross House, where she is reputed to have made the flag, is one of the most visited tourist sites in Philadelphia, the claim that she once lived there is also matter of dispute. Despite the unlikelihood of the story for which she is known, Ross is a fine example of what many women of her time audaciously endured: widowhood, single motherhood, managing household and property independently, and quickly remarrying for economic reasons. Her story and her life are, nonetheless, stitched into the fabric of American history.

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