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  2. Wigwag (flag signals) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wigwag_(flag_signals)

    The black flag was used against a background of snow. [16] The two foot flags, called action flags, were used in situations where the signalman needed to stay under cover from enemy fire or wished to signal less obtrusively. [17] Each flag had a number of ties or tapes sewn along the hoist edge.

  3. Lunar Flag Assembly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lunar_Flag_Assembly

    Six of the flags (including one for Apollo 13 which was not planted on the Moon) were ordered from a government supply catalog and measured 3 by 5 feet (0.91 by 1.52 m); the last one planted on the Moon was the slightly larger, 6-foot (1.8 m)-wide flag which had hung in the MSC Mission Operations Control Room for most of the Apollo program.

  4. Jackstaff - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jackstaff

    The US naval jack (2002–2019) being raised on a jackstaff in 2002. A jack staff (also spelled as jackstaff) is a small vertical spar (pole) on the bow of a ship or smaller vessel on which a particular type of flag, known as a jack, is flown. [1]

  5. Alvin "Shipwreck" Kelly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alvin_"Shipwreck"_Kelly

    According to one account, Kelly climbed his first pole at the age of seven, and at nine he performed a "human fly" trick, climbing up the side of a building. [1]He is credited with popularizing the pole-sitting fad after sitting atop a flagpole in 1924, either in response to a dare from a friend [7] or as a publicity stunt to draw customers to a Philadelphia department store. [8]

  6. Flagpole - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flagpole

    A flagpole, flagmast, flagstaff, or staff is a pole designed to support a flag. If it is taller than can be easily reached to raise the flag, a cord is used, looping around a pulley at the top of the pole with the ends tied at the bottom. The flag is fixed to one lower end of the cord, and is then raised by pulling on the other end.

  7. Half-mast - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Half-mast

    The flag should be flown at half-mast for seven days following the death of the deputy president, the chairperson of the National Council of Provinces, the speaker of the National Assembly or the chief justice. [108] For example, the flag was flown at half-mast from 6 to 15 December 2013 during the national mourning period for Nelson Mandela. [109]

  8. Pole sitting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pole_sitting

    Pole sitting is predated by the ancient ascetic discipline of stylitism, or column-sitting. St. Simeon Stylites the Elder (c. 388 –459) of Antioch (now Turkey) was a column-sitter who sat on a small platform on a column for 36 years. [1] 14-year-old William Ruppert breaking the pole sitting record of 23 days, in 1929

  9. Flag signals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flag_signals

    In the 1850s, U.S. Army Major Albert J. Myer, a surgeon by training, developed a system using left or right movements of a flag (or torch or lantern at night). Myer's system used a single flag, waved back and forth in a binary code conceptually similar to the Morse code of dots and dashes. [4]