Steven W. Hill, MA, (dupageflag@gmail.comdupagemilitaryflag.com) has been researching military flags and colors, with special focus on the regimental colors of the five major combatants in the American War for Independence—American, French, British, German, and Spanish—for over 50 years. He has worked as curator and historian at both the current Massachusetts State House and The Old State House in Boston, the Historical Society of Delaware, the Indiana War Memorials in Indianapolis, and most recently at the National Museum of Health and Medicine—formerly the Army Medical Museum. In addition to his “regular” curatorial positions, Hill is a researcher and maker of reproduction flags for museums, the military and government, reenactment groups, tv and movies, including flags of the French and British troops in the movie “Last of the Mohicans.” He is also a consultant to museums, publishers, and historical painters on the details of military flags and their histories. He recently completed the book Battle Flags of the Wars for North America, 1754-1783, Foreign Armies and Regiments, and is currently working on a companion volume on the American standards and colors of the same period. Partial list of places Steven Hill’s (DBA DuPage Military Flags) reproductions of historically significant flags can be seen: Smithsonian Institute’s Museum of American History; United States Military Academy at West Point; United States Naval Academy; Vicksburg, Chickamauga, Perryville, Wilson’s Creek, Petersburg National Battlefield Parks; National Medal of Honor Museum; Fortress of Louisbourg, Nova Scotia; Old Guard Museum in Washington DC; US Treasury Department; US Army Artillery Museum; US Army National Guard Headquarters, DC; the Pentagon; Harvard University Memorial Hall; Historical Society of Delaware; Mount Vernon; Ford’s Theatre; State capitol buildings of Maine, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, and Connecticut, reproduction French frigate l’Hermione, and the flags of the French and British troops in the movie “Last of the Mohicans.”