Vane
Scott:
Wrapped Up in Old Glory
by
Vivian A. Wagner
American
Profile:
May 20, 2001 -
Vane
Scott’s a flagman.
He grew up around them, manufactured them, and now he makes
his living entertaining people with stories about them.
And when Scott, wearing a white tunic and a purple sash
around his waist, sweeps onto stage to stand in front of a
pile of carefully folded flags, it’s clear he isn’t going to
give your average civics lesson.
“The people you’re going to hear about, and the incredible
things they did, are all based on truth,” Scott says, early
in his show The Many Faces of Old Glory. “They not only gave
us our flags, they gave us our country.”
For the last 30 years, Scott, 76, of Newcomerstown, Ohio,
(pop. 4,039) has been taking flag history out of the
textbooks and bringing it to life for elementary schools,
Boy Scout troops, social clubs, and civic organizations.
He’s presented more than 2,000 shows nationally and averages
about 50 a year.
Scott tells the story of America through the many
incarnations of its flag, explaining that the nation has had
27 official flags and many more unofficial ones—some with
seven-pointed stars, some with blue stripes, and even one
with a snake—since the days of the American Revolution.
Scott
first got interested in flags when he returned from World
War II and worked with his father’s business, Great Scott
Displays, putting on victory celebrations for returning
soldiers. “My dad was patriotic, and we decorated with a lot
of flags,” Scott says. “So I started studying about them.”
When Scott’s parents died in the late 1950s, he and his
wife, Barbara, took over the business, and in 1968 they
started their own flag manufacturing company in Coshocton,
Ohio. “We started with two ladies and six old beat-up sewing
machines,” Scott recalls. “And we learned how to make the
flag.”
Soon, they were turning out thousands of flags a year,
including some large-scale banners that flew over the
nation’s Capitol in Washington, D.C., and at Super Bowl
games.
In addition to his interest in flags, Scott always has had
an affinity for the stage. When he was a boy, he met many
famous vaudeville performers through his parents, and while
in the Navy he entertained other soldiers by singing Frank
Sinatra tunes on the deck of the USS Radford. In 1970, Scott
began performing The Many Faces of Old Glory show, and the
rest, as they say, is history.
“He’s both entertaining and educational,” says David L.
Zartman, a professor at Ohio State University in Columbus.
“It’s information that very few of us actually get, at least
not so well packaged.”
Zartman was so inspired by a Scott performance a few years
ago that he renovated a flagpole outside his office and
adorned it with an American flag, which he now raises and
lowers each day.
Scott is used to that kind of response; the flag man hears
similar stories everywhere he goes. “The audience reaction
convinces me that there are still a lot of people out there
who love America,” he says.
And, it appears, plenty who adore the Stars and Stripes. |
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