FAQ’S

     

The question at hand

 
 

Q. Will the Battle Flag project include restoration of the flags?
The goal of the project is to ensure long-term preservation of the physical and chemical condition and research potential of the collection. Restoration is a treatment procedure(s) intended to visually return cultural property to a known state, often through the addition of non-original material. Restoration does not support the project goals.

Q. What does collections care involve?
For this project, the following principles of collection care are utilized: 1) Use reversible procedures and stable, non-reactive materials; 2) Each staff person and volunteer must have an appreciation and respect for the significance of the flags and their role in military history; 3) Document all activities that affect the collection; 4) Provide overall support for each flag taking the weight off of the flag itself; and 5) Retain the association of objects to their documentation.

Q. Who has responsibility for the flags?
Until April 2001, responsibility for the care of the capitol flag collection was never assigned, leaving the flags neglected and deteriorating. Now the flags are assigned to the Iowa State Historical Society Museum, Des Moines.

Q. What will happen to the collection after the project is done?
Part of the project recommendation to the Governor and the 78th General Assembly included additional funding for the State Historical Society of Iowa, Des Moines, for the administration and maintenance of the flag collection. The amount included $50,000 for staff and $50,000 for operations annually. Additional staff will be required to maintain an exhibition of limited number of flags per year, on a rotating basis (every 3 to 6 months) after rehabilitation of the existing capitol cases and the creation of a new flag exhibit hall at the Museum. The flags will be available to researchers and available to the public through the web site.

 

 

Q. What is Stabilization?
Treatment procedures intended to preserve the original integrity of cultural property while minimizing or reducing the rate of deterioration.

Q. How will the flags be prepared for exhibition?
Further stabilization and mounting for display will be necessary. The recommended technique is a pressure mounting system that will support the flags between an archival, soft-padded panel and a protective plexiglas glazing. This type of system will require minimum intervention into the historic fabric of the flag yet enable the flags to have full support while on vertical display.

Q. When did efforts begin to protect Iowa's battle flag collection?
In 1998, a grass roots committee made up of members of the Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War, various veterans' organizations, and interested citizens was formed. The Iowa Battle Flag Preservation Committee was instrumental in gaining legislative support to fund a study. In 1999, efforts began to stabilize the Battle Flag collection of the State of Iowa. The Iowa Department of Cultural Affairs was appropriated funds to conduct a study to stabilize the flag collection. The study was conducted between the State Historical Society and Conservator Fonda G. Thomsen of the Textile Preservation Associates, Inc. The purpose of the study was to evaluate the present condition of the flag collection and provide long-term preservation recommendations for the collection. In 2000, funding from the Iowa General Assembly was appropriated to begin stabilization of 85 flags in the collection of the State Historical Society of Iowa.

Q. What materials are the flags made from? Are they machine or hand sewn?
Materials of construction tend to be wool, wild silk, cultivated silk, flax, hemp and cotton. Decorations can be constructed of the above materials or painted. Pendant ornaments are formed from wood forms wrapped in one or more of the above fibers.

 

Q. Why do the flags in the capitol cases need stabilization work?
The cases were intended to display and preserve the flags. The flags have hung in the cases for over a hundred years. During this time, they have accumulated dust and environmental pollutants while excessive lighting and the stress of hanging have gradually weakened the fabrics so that they no longer can support their own weight. The conservation treatments of the 1880s and 1904 were intended to aid in the preservation of the flags but have hastened their deterioration. The conservation treatments included hand repairs, removal of materials and machine sewing bleach cotton gauze onto each side of the flags for support. The gauze held debris and pollutants against the surface of the flag, gauze abraided the field, the stitches created holes, the bleach reacted with the fabrics and the deteriorated gauze is brittle and fractured adding weight to the flags. Today's stabilization plan calls for the use of inert materials only and all treatments to be reversible. Some of the flags remain relatively intact, while others are severely fractured with large areas of loss as seen the case photograph shown below.