- January 9, 2025
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With 436 people holding hundreds of American flags, Flagler County has established a record for the largest number of people waving an American flag in one place.
The American Flag Project, a 501(c)3 nonprofit, was established in November 2014 by Palm Coast residents Nikki and Larry White, with the mission “to hand out one million flags a year in America,” Larry White said.
The couple brainstormed the idea for the record-establishing event about a year ago, and after a lot of planning and cooperation with the city and county, their vision came true on Sunday, Nov. 5, at the Flagler County Executive Airport.
“We wanted to find some way to have a massive showing of patriotism in Flagler County,” Larry White said.
Many officials attended the event, including: Flagler County Sheriff Rick Staly; Palm Coast Mayor Milissa Holland; Flagler County Commissioners Charles Ericksen Jr., Gregory Hansen, David Sullivan and Nate McLaughlin; Flagler School Board member Maria Barbosa; and Fred Costello, who serves Ormond Beach in the Florida House of Representatives.
Nikki White said she would have liked to have seen a larger turnout, but she thinks the incoming rain and other events happening in the county may have affected the gathering.
“It really is a passion of love and patriotism.”
- Larry White, one of the founders of The American Flag Project
“But I’m not disappointed because everyone who was there is proud to be an American,” she said.
Flags were available to be purchased for $1 at the event. The profits will go back to the nonprofit for the cost of the flags themselves, and they will also help Larry and Nikki continue passing out free flags around the county periodically each year.
Larry White said they’ve handed out more than 20,000 American flags in Palm Coast and the rest of the county over the last two years. In addition to passing out the flags at events, the nonprofit has volunteers distribute them in neighborhoods.
“It really is a passion of love and patriotism,” said Larry White, a veteran of the U.S. Air Force.
Larry White said they began this nonprofit in part because of a study by a University of Chicago sociologist that said exposure to American flags helps people’s attitudes about patriotism and voting.
“We said, ‘Son of a gun, all we need to do is gather up flags,'” he said. “So, that’s what really got us going.”
The event was held at the conclusion of the Freedom Fest, a two-day event at the airport.
For more information, visit theamericanflagproject.org.