Port Huron Tea Party

Help put your nation's feet back on the path on which our nation was founded

Silent Majority No More

Store Categories
Note: Online pricing reflects inventory and cost savings which may not be available directly through our office.
Join or Die Flag
Franklin sketched, carved, and published this “political cartoon” in his newspaper It was the image of a snake cut into eight sections. The sections represented the individual colonies and the curves of the snake suggested the coastline. New England was combined into one section as the head of the snake. South Carolina was at the tail. Beneath the snake were the ominous words "Join, or Die." It is considered the origin of the rattlesnake as a symbol of colonial resistance, which led to the rattler’s use on both the Culpepper Flag and the Gadsden Flag.
The Alamo Flag
 
 
 
When you know what you're fighting for, you never concede.
The Come and Take It Flag
 
 
During the War for Texas’ Independence from Mexico, Gen. Santa Anna moved to seize a cannon that had been issued to Texas settlers for protection against Comanche raiding parties. “Come and Take It” summed up the Texans’ response.
The Culpepper Flag
 
This flag represented a group of about one hundred minutemen from Culpeper, Virginia - part of Colonel Patrick Henry's First Virginia Regiment of 1775. Led by Colonel Stevens, about 300 of these soldiers proudly wore Patrick Henry’s famous motto, "Liberty Or Death," in large white letters on their hunting shirts.
Store Categories