Program Overview

✨ How the HRW Flag Exchange Program Works

The HRW Foundation Flag Exchange Program is a grassroots civic initiative built on one timeless symbol: the American flag. Our trained volunteers go door to door, replacing worn flags with new ones — and sparking meaningful, nonpartisan conversations that rekindle civic pride in neighborhoods across the country.

Step-by-Step Process

1: Door-to-Door Community Outreach

Volunteers respectfully approach homes in areas with low civic engagement. Dressed in HRW-branded apparel, they carry official materials and offer a friendly, neighborly presence.

2: Offer of a Free American Flag

Each household receives a new American flag (usually 3'x5'), mounting hardware when possible, and a printed Flag Education & Civic Packet containing:

A summary of the U.S. Flag Code
A brief history of Hopkinson, Ross, and Wisher
A civic engagement checklist (voter info, town hall resources, etc.)

3: Civic Education and Meaningful Dialogue

Volunteers use the exchange moment to engage in respectful, nonpartisan conversation — answering questions, offering local resources, and encouraging participation in local governance.

4: Civic Intelligence and Follow-Up

With permission, we gather limited, non-identifiable info like:

Voter activity level

Interest in local civic education

Requests for follow-up materials or support

Ongoing Community Engagement

The flag exchange is just the beginning. We invite residents to:

Attend veterans’ events and civics workshops

Join cleanup days or local advisory boards

Share the mission in schools, churches, and neighborhoods

📷 Moments from the Field

Real People. Real Flags. Real Impact.

From quiet front-porch conversations to flag retirement ceremonies, these powerful snapshots show how the HRW Flag Exchange Program is reconnecting communities one visit at a time.

Why It Matters

Together, Hopkinson, Ross, and Wisher represent the diverse spirit of American patriotism:

"We name our foundation after them because they remind us that every American—regardless of race, gender, or class—can help shape the flag and the nation it represents."

Veteran-Led Teams & Local Partners

Built on Trust, Led by Veterans

Our Flag Exchange Teams are often led by U.S. military veterans who bring integrity, discipline, and lived patriotism to every interaction. Local organizations — schools, veteran groups, civic clubs — are crucial to expanding our reach and credibility.