Is there something in the ball-thinging at the top of an American Flagpole?

I am listening to a local radio station.

A question came in that I have never heard of regarding the American Flag.

This caller said an immigrant friend of his who was taking his test to pass his citizenship test told him that inside the ball (that the eagle sits/lands upon) atop the flag pole there are three items:

  1. A bullet (to defend a flag)

  2. A string (to retie it incase it falls)

  3. A match ( to burn it if it touches the ground)
    No one on this morning program had ever heard this and frankly, neither had I.

Does anyone have any further info on this?

http://boards.straightdope.com/sdmb/showthread.php?threadid=67660

Thanks!

According to the Army’s Center of Military History, there has never officially been anything inside any flagpole device or buried at the base, and they are not sure where the legends ever started.

Does anybody know what the ball-thing is called?

Err… I mean: Does anyone know the proper name of that ball-thing?

In the army, I was told the ball thing was called a truck.

My MacMillan Visual Dictionary calls it a finial.

What a pervasive legend this contents-of-the-ball is. According to the retired Army dweeb who sits behind me, they asked this question about the legendary contents on the E-7 advancement exam. This is apparently an Army story, as no one in the Navy knows of it.

Navy people also immediately (well, after they stop laughing) sieze on the obvious weaknesses of the story, like how you’re supposed to get to the top of the pole to get the stuff, why only one bullet or match, etc. I know for a fact that they don’t bury or otherwise conceal stuff on Navy bases’ flagpoles. If we were concerned with such things, we’d put Marines up on the poles.

FYI, Maryland is the only state that I know of that mandates the design of the object for the top of its flagpole. While it is often mistaken for a Christian cross, it’s really a cross bottony from the “Crosslands” part of the flag (added officially in 1888). Why? It looks cool, and it’s different.

DDG’s post in the referenced thread indicates that the “truck” is the pulley assembly that the halyards run through.

I believe that finial is correct for the ball or eagle device.

Being old enough to sound like my father, allow me to say:

You could look it up…

Some of the more ludicrous variations on this legend involve a military-spec rifle being buried at the base of the flagpole–yeah, so you can defend the flag once “They” overrun us.

Methinks that if such a valuable item were hidden beneath a flag, it would be promptly stolen. Plus, why bury the thing in the dirt, especially on a military base? Why not just tell everyone “Hey, in case of invasion, don’t bother with the flagpole, go outfit yourself at the armory!”.