Flags of the Confederate States of America

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The flags of the Confederate States of America have a history of three successive designs during the American CivilScript error: No such module "String".War. The flags were known as the "Stars and Bars", used from 1861 toScript error: No such module "String".1863; the "Stainless Banner", used from 1863 toScript error: No such module "String".1865; and the "Template:Nowr Banner", used inScript error: No such module "String".1865 shortly before the Confederacy's dissolution. A rejected national flag design was also used as a battleScript error: No such module "String".flag by the ConfederateScript error: No such module "String".Army and featured in the "Stainless Banner" and "Template:Nowr Banner" designs. Although this design was never a Template:Nowr, it is the most commonly-recognized symbol of the Confederacy.

Since the end of the Civil War, private and officialScript error: No such module "String".use of the ConfederateScript error: No such module "String".flags, particularly the battleScript error: No such module "String".flag, has continued amid philosophical, political, cultural, and racial controversy in the UnitedScript error: No such module "String".States. These include flags displayed in states; cities, towns and counties; schools, colleges and universities; private organizations and associations; and individuals. The battleScript error: No such module "String".flag was also featured in the stateScript error: No such module "String".flags of Georgia and Mississippi, although it was removed by Georgia inScript error: No such module "String".2003 and Mississippi inScript error: No such module "String".2020. However, the new design of the GeorgiaScript error: No such module "String".flag still references the original "Stars and Bars" iteration of the GeorgiaScript error: No such module "String".flag. After the GeorgiaScript error: No such module "String".flag was changed inScript error: No such module "String".2001, the city of Trenton, Georgia, has used a flag design nearly identical to the previous version with the battleScript error: No such module "String".flag.

It is estimated that 500–544 flags were captured during the war by the Union. The flags were sent to the WarScript error: No such module "String".Department in Washington.[1][2]

First flag: the "Stars and Bars" (1861–1863)

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File:Fort Sumter, April 15, 1861.jpg
The "Stars and Bars" flies at Template:Nowr, AprilScript error: No such module "String".15, 1861.

The Confederacy's first official national flag, often called the Template:Vanchor, flew from MarchScript error: No such module "String".4, 1861, to MayScript error: No such module "String".1, 1863. TwoScript error: No such module "String".men claim to have designed the flag. While it has been traditionally attributed to Prussian-American artist Nicola Marschall from Marion, Alabama, evidence now shows that OrenScript error: No such module "String".Randolph from Louisburg, NorthScript error: No such module "String".Carolina likely also designed a similar flag at the same time. Alabama and NorthScript error: No such module "String".Carolina both certified that theirs was the first design, but an investigation into both men's claims has revealed evidence that supports both men.[3]

The flag is very similar to the flag of the United States, and is said to resemble the flag of Austria, with which Nicola Marschall would have been familiar.[4]Template:Efn The original version of the flag featured a circle of seven white stars in the Template:Nowr canton, representing the seven states of the South that originally composed the Confederacy: SouthScript error: No such module "String".Carolina, Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas. The "Stars and Bars" flag was adopted on MarchScript error: No such module "String".4, 1861, in the first temporary national capital of Montgomery, Alabama, and raised over the dome of that first Confederate capitol. Marschall also designed the ConfederateScript error: No such module "String".army uniform.[5]

One of the first acts of the Provisional Confederate Congress was to create the CommitteeScript error: No such module "String".of the Flag andScript error: No such module "String".Seal, chaired by WilliamScript error: No such module "String".Porcher Miles, a Democratic congressman and "[[Fire-Eaters|Template:Nowr]]" from Template:Nowr. The committee asked the public to submit thoughts and ideas on the topic and was, as historian JohnScript error: No such module "String".M. Coski puts it, "overwhelmed by requests not to abandon the 'oldScript error: No such module "String".flag' of the UnitedScript error: No such module "String".States." Miles had already designed a flag that later became known as the Confederate BattleScript error: No such module "String".Flag, and he favored his flag over the "Stars and Bars" proposal. But given the popular support for a flag similar to the U.S.Script error: No such module "String".flag ("the Stars and Stripes"), the "Stars and Bars" design was approved by the committee.[6]

As the Confederacy grew, so did the numbers of stars: two were added for Virginia and Arkansas in MayScript error: No such module "String".1861, followed by two more representing Tennessee and NorthScript error: No such module "String".Carolina inScript error: No such module "String".July, and finally twoScript error: No such module "String".more for Missouri and Kentucky.

When the American Civil War broke out, the "Stars and Bars" confused the battlefield at the [[First Battle of Bull Run|Template:Nowr Template:Nowr]] because of its similarity to the U.S. (orScript error: No such module "String".Union) flag, especially when it was hanging limply on its flagstaff.[7] The "Stars and Bars" was also criticized on ideological grounds for its resemblance to the U.S.Script error: No such module "String".flag. Many Confederates disliked the Stars and Bars, seeing it as symbolic of a centralized federal power against which the Confederate states claimed to be seceding.[8] As early as AprilScript error: No such module "String".1861, a month after the flag's adoption, some were already criticizing the flag, calling it a "servile imitation" and a "detested parody" of the U.S.Script error: No such module "String".flag.[9] In JanuaryScript error: No such module "String".1862, GeorgeScript error: No such module "String".William Bagby, writing for the Southern Literary Messenger, wrote that many Confederates disliked the flag. "Everybody wants a new ConfederateScript error: No such module "String".flag," Bagby wrote. "The present one is universally hated. It resembles the YankeeScript error: No such module "String".flag, and that is enough to make it unutterably detestable." The editor of the Template:Nowr expressed a similarScript error: No such module "String".view: "It seems to be generally agreed that the 'Stars and Bars' will never do for us. They resemble too closely the dishonored 'FlagScript error: No such module "String".of Template:Nowr' ...Script error: No such module "String".we imagine that the 'BattleScript error: No such module "String".Flag' will become the SouthernScript error: No such module "String".Flag by popular acclaim." WilliamScript error: No such module "String".T. Thompson, the editor of the Template:Nowr [[Savannah Morning News|Template:Nowr]], also objected to the flag,[10] due to its aesthetic similarity to the U.S.Script error: No such module "String".flag, which for some Confederates had negative associations with emancipation and abolitionism. Thompson stated in AprilScript error: No such module "String".1863 that he disliked the adoptedScript error: No such module "String".flag "on account of its resemblance to that of the abolition despotism against which we are fighting."[11][12][13][14]

Over the course of the flag's use by the CSA, additional stars were added to the canton, eventually bringing the total number to thirteen-a reflection of the Confederacy's claims of having admitted the borderScript error: No such module "String".states of Kentucky and Missouri, where slavery was still widely practiced.Template:Efn[15] The first showing of the Template:Nowr flag was outside the BenScript error: No such module "String".Johnson House in Bardstown, Kentucky; the Template:Nowr design was also in use as the ConfederateScript error: No such module "String".navy's battle ensign. The Template:Nowr design uses the same starScript error: No such module "String".formation as the Template:Nowr.

Second flag: the "Stainless Banner" (1863–1865)

File:Flag of the Confederate States of America (1863-1865).svg File:Confederate States Naval Ensign after May 26 1863.svg File:Stainless Banner (Mobile, Alabama variant).svg File:Stainless Banner (Battle of Painesville variant).svg File:Stainless Banner (Fort Fisher variant).svg
Second national flag (MayScript error: No such module "String".1, 1863Template:Snd MarchScript error: No such module "String".4, 1865), 2:1Script error: No such module "String".ratio Second national flag (MayScript error: No such module "String".1, 1863Template:Snd MarchScript error: No such module "String".4, 1865) as commonly manufactured, with a 3:2Script error: No such module "String".ratio A 12-star variant of the "Stainless Banner" produced in Mobile, Alabama Variant captured following the BattleScript error: No such module "String".of Painesville, 1865 Garrison flag of Template:Nowr, the "Southern Gibraltar"

Many different designs were proposed during the solicitation for a second Confederate nationalScript error: No such module "String".flag, nearly all based on the Battle Flag. ByScript error: No such module "String".1863, it had become well-known and popular among those living in the Confederacy. The Confederate Congress specified that the new design be a white field "...with the union (now used as the battleScript error: No such module "String".flag) to be a square of Template:Nowr the width of the flag, having the groundScript error: No such module "String".red; thereupon a broad saltire of blue, bordered with white, and emblazoned with mullets or Template:Nowr stars, corresponding in number to that of the ConfederateScript error: No such module "String".States."[16]

File:Stainless banner grave flag 2.jpg
Stainless Banner grave flag at Magnolia Cemetery in Charleston, South Carolina

The flag is also known as the Stainless Banner, and the matter of the person behind its design remains a point of contention. On AprilScript error: No such module "String".23, 1863, the Savannah MorningScript error: No such module "String".News editor WilliamScript error: No such module "String".Tappan Thompson, with assistance from WilliamScript error: No such module "String".Ross Postell, a Confederate blockade runner, published an editorial championing a design featuring the battleScript error: No such module "String".flag on a white background he referred to later as "The WhiteScript error: No such module "String".Man's Flag", a name which never caught on.[10] In explaining the white background of his design, Thompson wrote, "As a people, we are fighting to maintain the Heaven-ordained supremacyScript error: No such module "String".of the whiteScript error: No such module "String".man over the inferior or coloredScript error: No such module "String".race; a whiteScript error: No such module "String".flag would thus be emblematical of our cause."[9][17] In a letter to Confederate Congressman Template:Nowr, dated AprilScript error: No such module "String".24, 1863, a design similar to the flag which was eventually created was proposed by General Template:Nowr, "whose earlier penchant for practicality had established the precedent for visual distinctiveness on the battlefield, propos[ing] that 'a good design for the nationalScript error: No such module "String".flag would be the present Template:Nowr as UnionScript error: No such module "String".Jack, and the rest all white or all blue'... The final version of the second nationalScript error: No such module "String".flag, adopted MayScript error: No such module "String".1, 1863, did just this: it set the St.Script error: No such module "String".Andrew's Cross of stars in the UnionScript error: No such module "String".Jack with the rest of the civilian banner entirely white."[18][19][20][21] Most contemporaryScript error: No such module "Unsubst". interpretations of the white area on the flag hold that it represented the purity of the secessionist cause.[22]Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

The Confederate Congress debated whether the white field should have a blue stripe and whether it should be bordered in red. William Miles delivered a speech supporting the simple white design that was eventually approved. He argued that the battleScript error: No such module "String".flag must be used, but it was necessary to emblazon it for a nationalScript error: No such module "String".flag, but as simply as possible, with a plain white field.[23] When Thompson received word the Congress had adopted the design with a blue stripe, he published an editorial on AprilScript error: No such module "String".28 in opposition, writing that "the blue bar running up the center of the white field and joining with the right lower arm of the blue cross, is in bad taste, and utterly destructive of the symmetry and harmony of the design."[11][13] Confederate Congressman PeterScript error: No such module "String".W. Gray proposed the amendment that gave the flag its white field.[24] Gray stated that the white field represented "purity, truth, and freedom."[25]

Regardless of who truly originated the Stainless Banner's design, whether by heeding Thompson's editorials or Beauregard's letter, the Confederate Congress officially adopted the Stainless Banner on MayScript error: No such module "String".1, 1863. The flags that were actually produced by the Richmond Clothing Depot used the Template:Nowr adopted for the ConfederateScript error: No such module "String".navy's battle ensign, rather than the official Template:Nowr.[16]

Initial reaction to the second national flag was favorable, but over time it became criticized for being "too white." Military officers also voiced complaints about the flag being too white, for various reasons, such as the danger of being mistaken for a flagScript error: No such module "String".of truce, especially on naval ships where it was too easily soiled.[26] The Template:Nowr Template:Nowr observed that it was essentially a battle flag upon a flagScript error: No such module "String".of truce and might send a mixed message. Due to the flag's resemblance to one of truce, some Confederate soldiers cut off the flag's white portion, leaving only the canton.[27]

The first official use of the "Stainless Banner" was to drape the coffin of General ThomasScript error: No such module "String".J. "Stonewall" Jackson as it layScript error: No such module "String".in state in the Template:Nowr, MayScript error: No such module "String".12, 1863.[28][29] As a result of this first usage, the flag received the alternate nickname of the "JacksonScript error: No such module "String".Flag".

Third flag: the "Blood-Stained Banner" (1865)

File:Flag of the Confederate States of America (1865).svg File:Flag of the Confederate States (1865, variant).svg File:Flag of the Confederate States (1865, variant 2).png File:Confederate National Flag since Mar 4 1865 (Mobile version).svg
Third national flag (after MarchScript error: No such module "String".4, 1865) Third national flag as commonly manufactured, with a square canton Third national flag variant produced from an example of the second national flag A 12-star variant of the "Template:Nowr Banner" produced in Mobile, Alabama

Rogers lobbied successfully to have this alteration introduced in the Confederate Senate. Rogers defended his redesign as symbolizing the primary origins of the people of the Confederacy, with the saltire of the ScottishScript error: No such module "String".flag and the red bar from the flagScript error: No such module "String".of France, and having "as little as possible of the YankeeScript error: No such module "String".blue"Template:Snd the UnionScript error: No such module "String".Army wore blue, the ConfederatesScript error: No such module "String".gray.[26]

The Flag Act of 1865, passed by the Confederate Congress near the very end of the war, describes the flag in the following language:

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The Congress of the Confederate States of America do enact, That the flag of the ConfederateScript error: No such module "String".States shall be as follows: The width Template:Nowr of its length, with the union (now used as the battle flag) to be in width three-fifths of the width of the flag, and so proportioned as to leave the length of the field on the side of the union twice the width of the field below it; to have the groundScript error: No such module "String".red and a broad blue saltire thereon, bordered with white and emblazoned with mullets or fiveScript error: No such module "String".pointed stars, corresponding in number to that of the ConfederateScript error: No such module "String".States; the field to be white, except the outerScript error: No such module "String".half from the union to be a redScript error: No such module "String".bar extending the width of the flag.[30]

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Due to the timing, very few of these third national flags were actually manufactured and put into use in the field, with many Confederates never seeing the flag. Moreover, the ones made by the Richmond Clothing Depot used the square canton of the second nationalScript error: No such module "String".flag rather than the slightly rectangular one that was specified by the law.[30]

State flags

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Indian Territory

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Battle flag

File:Battle flag of the Confederate States of America (1-1).svg
Battle flag of the ConfederateScript error: No such module "String".States Template:Nowr
File:Our Heroes and Our Flags 1896.jpg
Three versions of the flag of the ConfederateScript error: No such module "String".States ofScript error: No such module "String".America and the Confederate BattleScript error: No such module "String".Flag are shown on this printed poster fromScript error: No such module "String".1896. The "Stars and Bars" can be seen in the upperScript error: No such module "String".left. Standing at the center are Stonewall Jackson, Template:Nowr, and Template:Nowr, surrounded by bust portraits of Jefferson Davis, Alexander Stephens, and various Confederate army officers, such as James Longstreet and Template:Nowr.
File:Sponsor souvenir album - history and reunion (1895) (1895) (14576050240).jpg
Drawing in the United Confederate Veterans 1895 Sponsor souvenir album
File:Cherokee Confederates Reunion.gif
Cherokee Confederates reunion in NewScript error: No such module "String".Orleans, 1903

At the First Battle of Manassas, near Manassas, Virginia, the similarity between the "Stars and Bars" and the "Stars and Stripes" caused confusion and military problems. Regiments carried flags to help commanders observe and assess battles in the warfare of the era. At a distance, the two nationalScript error: No such module "String".flags were hard to tell apart.[31] Also, Confederate regiments carried many other flags, which added to the possibility of confusion.

After the battle, General P. G. T. Beauregard wrote that he was "resolved then to have [ourScript error: No such module "String".flag] changed if possible, or to adopt for my command a 'BattleScript error: No such module "String".flag', which would be Entirely different from any State or FederalScript error: No such module "String".flag".[7] He turned to his aide, who happened to be WilliamScript error: No such module "String".Porcher Miles, the former chairman of the ConfederateScript error: No such module "String".Congress's CommitteeScript error: No such module "String".on the Flag and Seal. Miles described his rejected nationalScript error: No such module "String".flag design to Beauregard. Miles also told the CommitteeScript error: No such module "String".on the Flag and Seal about the general's complaints and request that the nationalScript error: No such module "String".flag be changed. The committee rejected the idea by a Template:Nowr-one vote, after which Beauregard proposed the idea of having twoScript error: No such module "String".flags. He described the idea in a letter to his commanding general JosephScript error: No such module "String".E. Johnston:

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I wrote to [Miles] that we should have 'two' flagsTemplate:Snd a 'peace' or paradeScript error: No such module "String".flag, and a 'war'Script error: No such module "String".flag to be used only on the field of battleTemplate:Snd but congress having adjourned no action will be taken on the matterTemplate:Snd How would it do us to address the WarScript error: No such module "String".Dept. on the subject of Regimental or badgeScript error: No such module "String".flags made of red with two blue bars crossing each other diagonally on which shall be introduced the stars, ...Script error: No such module "String".We would then on the field of battle know our friends from our Enemies.[7]

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The flag that Miles had favored when he was chairman of the "CommitteeScript error: No such module "String".on the Flag and Seal" eventually became the battleScript error: No such module "String".flag and, ultimately, the Confederacy's most popular flag.

According to Museum of the Confederacy Director JohnScript error: No such module "String".Coski, Miles' design was inspired by one of the many "secessionistScript error: No such module "String".flags" flown at the SouthScript error: No such module "String".Carolina secession convention in Charleston of DecemberScript error: No such module "String".1860. That flag was a blue [[St. George's Cross|Template:Nowr Cross]] (an upright or LatinScript error: No such module "String".cross) on a redScript error: No such module "String".field, with 15Script error: No such module "String".white stars on the cross, representing the slave-holding states,[32][33] and, on the redScript error: No such module "String".field, palmetto and crescent symbols. Miles received various feedback on this design, including a critique from Charles Moise, a Template:Nowr "Southerner of Jewish persuasion." Moise liked the design but asked that "...Script error: No such module "String".the symbol of a particular religion not be made the symbol of the nation." Taking this into account, Miles changed his flag, removing the palmetto and crescent, and substituting a heraldic saltireScript error: No such module "String".('X') for the upright cross. The number of stars was changed several times as well. He described these changes and his reasons for making them in earlyScript error: No such module "String".1861. The diagonal cross was preferable, he wrote, because "it avoided the religious objection about the cross (from the Jews and many Protestant sects), because it did not stand out so conspicuously as if the cross had been placed upright thus." He also argued that the diagonal cross was "more Heraldric [sic] than Ecclesiastical, it being the 'saltire' of Heraldry, and significant of strength and progress."[34]

According to Coski, the Saint Andrew's Cross (also used on the flagScript error: No such module "String".of Scotland as a white saltire on a blueScript error: No such module "String".field) had no special place in Southern iconography at the time. If Miles had not been eager to conciliate the SouthernScript error: No such module "String".Jews, his flag would have used the traditional upright "SaintScript error: No such module "String".George's Cross" (as used on the flagScript error: No such module "String".of England, a redScript error: No such module "String".cross on a white field). JamesScript error: No such module "String".B. Walton submitted a battleScript error: No such module "String".flag design essentially identical to Miles' except with an upright SaintScript error: No such module "String".George's Cross, but Beauregard chose the diagonal cross design.[35]

Miles' flag and all the flag designs up to that point were rectangular ("oblong") in shape. General Johnston suggested making it square to conserve material. Johnston also specified the various sizes to be used by different types of military units. Generals Beauregard and Johnston and Quartermaster‐General Cabell approved the Template:Nowr Confederate BattleScript error: No such module "String".Flag's design at the RatcliffeScript error: No such module "String".home, which served briefly as Beauregard's headquarters, near Fairfax CourtScript error: No such module "String".House in SeptemberScript error: No such module "String".1861. The 12thScript error: No such module "String".star represented Missouri. President JeffersonScript error: No such module "String".Davis arrived by train at FairfaxScript error: No such module "String".Station soon after and was shown the design for the new battleScript error: No such module "String".flag at the RatcliffeScript error: No such module "String".House. Template:Nowr and her sister, along with her cousin, ConstanceScript error: No such module "String".Cary Harrison, made prototypes. One such Template:Nowr flag resides in the collection of Richmond's MuseumScript error: No such module "String".of theScript error: No such module "String".Confederacy and the other is in the Confederate MemorialScript error: No such module "String".Hall Museum in Template:Nowr.

On November 28, 1861, Confederate soldiers in General Template:Nowr's newly reorganized ArmyScript error: No such module "String".of NorthernScript error: No such module "String".Virginia received the new battleScript error: No such module "String".flags in ceremonies at Centreville and Manassas, Virginia, and carried them throughout the CivilScript error: No such module "String".War. Beauregard gave a speech encouraging the soldiers to treat the new flag with honor and that it must never be surrendered. Many soldiers wrote home about the ceremony and the impression the flag had upon them, the "fighting colors" boosting morale after the confusion at FirstScript error: No such module "String".Manassas. From then on, the battleScript error: No such module "String".flag grew in its identification with the Confederacy and theScript error: No such module "String".South in general.[36] The flag's stars represented the number of states in the Confederacy. The distance between the stars decreased as the number of states increased, reaching thirteen when the secessionist factions of Kentucky and Missouri joined in lateScript error: No such module "String".1861.[37]

The Army of Northern Virginia battle flag assumed a prominent place Template:Nowr when it was adopted as the copyrighted emblem of the United Confederate Veterans. Its continued use by the SouthernScript error: No such module "String".Army's Template:Nowr veteran's groups, the United Confederate VeteransScript error: No such module "String".(U.C.V.) and the later SonsScript error: No such module "String".of Confederate VeteransScript error: No such module "String".(S.C.V.), and elements of the design by related similar female descendants organizations of the [[United Daughters of the Confederacy|Template:Nowr Template:Nowr]]Script error: No such module "String".(U.D.C.), led to the assumption that it was, as it has been termed, "the soldier's flag" or "the Confederate battleScript error: No such module "String".flag."

The square "battle flag" is also properly known as "the flag of the ArmyScript error: No such module "String".of NorthernScript error: No such module "String".Virginia". It was sometimes called "Beauregard'sScript error: No such module "String".flag" or "the Virginia battleScript error: No such module "String".flag". A [[Virginia Department of Historic Resources|Template:Nowr Template:Nowr]] marker declaring Fairfax, Virginia, as the birthplace of the Confederate battleScript error: No such module "String".flag was dedicated on AprilScript error: No such module "String".12, 2008, near the intersection of Main and OakScript error: No such module "String".Streets, in Fairfax, Virginia.[38][39][40]

Script error: No such module "anchor". To boost the morale of the Army of Tennessee, GeneralScript error: No such module "String".Johnston introduced a new battleScript error: No such module "String".flag for the entire army. This flag bore a basic design similar to the one he had contributed to creating in Virginia inScript error: No such module "String".1861 and had been commissioned in Mobile while he was in command in Mississippi inScript error: No such module "String".1863. These flags for infantry and cavalry were to measure Script error: No such module "convert".. The white edgingScript error: No such module "String".cross was about Template:CvtScript error: No such module "String".wide and was often filled with battle honors. The stars were from Template:Cvt, with a Script error: No such module "convert". cross. Flags for artillery were Template:Cvt overall.[41]

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Naval flags

The fledgling Confederate States Navy (CSN) adopted and used several types of flags, banners and pennants aboard all CSNScript error: No such module "String".ships: jacks, battleScript error: No such module "String".ensigns and smallScript error: No such module "String".boat ensigns, as well as commissioning pennants, designatingScript error: No such module "String".flags and signalScript error: No such module "String".flags.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

The first Confederate Navy jacks, in use from 1861 toScript error: No such module "String".1863, consisted of a circle of seven to fifteen Template:Nowr white stars against a field of "mediumScript error: No such module "String".blue." It was flown forward aboard all Confederate warships while they were anchored in port. One Template:Nowr jack still exists today (found aboard the captured ironclad CSSScript error: No such module "String".Atlanta) that is actually darkScript error: No such module "String".blue.[42] The first ConfederateScript error: No such module "String".Navy jack closely resembles the navyScript error: No such module "String".jack of the UnitedScript error: No such module "String".States.

The second Confederate Navy Jack was a rectangular cousin of the ConfederateScript error: No such module "String".Army's battleScript error: No such module "String".flag and was in use fromScript error: No such module "String".1863 untilScript error: No such module "String".1865. It existed in a variety of dimensions and sizes, despite the CSN's detailed naval regulations. The blueScript error: No such module "String".color of the diagonal saltire's "Template:Nowr" was much lighter than the battleScript error: No such module "String".flag's darkScript error: No such module "String".blue.[42]

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Other navy flags

The first national flag, also known as the "Stars and Bars" Template:See above, served fromScript error: No such module "String".1861 toScript error: No such module "String".1863 as the ConfederateScript error: No such module "String".Navy's first battleScript error: No such module "String".ensign. It was generally made with a 2:3Script error: No such module "String".aspect ratio, but a few veryScript error: No such module "String".wide Template:Nowr ensigns survive today in museums and private collections. As the Confederacy grew, so did the number of white stars on the ensign's darkScript error: No such module "String".blue canton: seven-, nine-, eleven-, and Template:Nowr groupings were typical. Even a few 14- and Template:Nowr ensigns were made to include states expected to secede but that never completely joined the Confederacy.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

The second national flag was later adapted as a naval ensign, using a shorter 2:3Script error: No such module "String".aspect ratio than the 1:2Script error: No such module "String".ratio adopted by the ConfederateScript error: No such module "String".Congress for the nationalScript error: No such module "String".flag. This particular battleScript error: No such module "String".ensign was the only example taken around the world, finally becoming the last ConfederateScript error: No such module "String".flag lowered in the CivilScript error: No such module "String".War; this happened aboard the commerce raider CSSScript error: No such module "String".Shenandoah in Liverpool, England on NovemberScript error: No such module "String".7, 1865.

National flag proposals

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Hundreds of proposed national flag designs were submitted to the ConfederateScript error: No such module "String".Congress during competitions to find a first Template:Nowr and second (AprilScript error: No such module "String".1862; AprilScript error: No such module "String".1863) nationalScript error: No such module "String".flag.

First national flag proposals

When the Confederate States of America was founded during the Montgomery Convention that took place on FebruaryScript error: No such module "String".4, 1861, a nationalScript error: No such module "String".flag was not selected by the convention, as no proposals had been submitted. President JeffersonScript error: No such module "String".Davis's inauguration took place under the Template:Nowr of Alabama, and the celebratory parade was led by a unit carrying the Template:Nowr of Georgia.

Realizing that they quickly needed a national banner to represent their sovereignty, the [[Provisional Congress of the Confederate States|Template:Nowr the Template:Nowr]] set up the CommitteeScript error: No such module "String".on Flag and Seal. The chairman was WilliamScript error: No such module "String".Porcher Miles, who was also the SouthScript error: No such module "String".Carolina representative in the Confederate HouseScript error: No such module "String".of Representatives.

The committee began a competition to find a new national flag, with an unwritten adoption deadline of MarchScript error: No such module "String".4, 1861, the date of PresidentScript error: No such module "String".Lincoln's inauguration. This would serve to show the world that theScript error: No such module "String".South was truly sovereign. Hundreds of examples were submitted from across the ConfederateScript error: No such module "String".States and from states that were not yet part of theScript error: No such module "String".Confederacy (e.g.Script error: No such module "String".Kentucky), and even from UnionScript error: No such module "String".states (such as NewScript error: No such module "String".York). Many of the proposed designs paid homage to the "Stars and Stripes", the result of a sense of nostalgia in earlyScript error: No such module "String".1861 that many of the new Confederate citizens felt toward theScript error: No such module "String".Union. Some of the homages were outright mimicry, while others were less obviously inspired by the Stars and Stripes yet were still intended to pay homage to that flag.

Those inspired by the Stars and Stripes were discounted almost immediately by the committee because they mirrored the Union'sScript error: No such module "String".flag too closely. While others were wildly different, many of which were very complex and extravagant, they were largely discounted because of the complexity and expense that would be involved in their production.

The winner of the competition was Nicola Marschall's "Stars and Bars" flag. This flag was selected by theScript error: No such module "String".Congress on MarchScript error: No such module "String".4, 1861, the day of the deadline. The firstScript error: No such module "String".flag was produced in a rush, as the date had already been selected for an official Template:Nowr ceremony; Template:Nowr credited the speedy completion of the first "Stars and Bars"Script error: No such module "String".flag to "fair and nimble fingers". This flag, made of Template:Nowr, was raised by Letitia Tyler over the Alabama State Capitol. TheScript error: No such module "String".Congress inspected two other finalist designs on MarchScript error: No such module "String".4. One was a "Blue ring or circle on a field of red", while the other consisted of alternating red and blue stripes with a blueScript error: No such module "String".canton containing stars. These two designs were lost, and their existence is known only from an 1872Script error: No such module "String".letter sent by Miles to Template:Nowr.

Miles was not pleased with any of the proposals. He did not share in the UnionScript error: No such module "String".nostalgia, believing that the South'sScript error: No such module "String".flag should be completely different from that of the North. He proposed a flag design featuring a blueScript error: No such module "String".saltire on white fimbriation with a field of red. He had originally planned to employ a blue St.Script error: No such module "String".George's Cross similar to that of the SouthScript error: No such module "String".Carolina SovereigntyScript error: No such module "String".Flag, but was dissuaded from doing so. Within the blueScript error: No such module "String".saltire were seven white stars representing the current seven states of the Confederacy, two on each of the leftScript error: No such module "String".arms, one on each of the rightScript error: No such module "String".arms and one in the middle. However, Miles'sScript error: No such module "String".flag was not Template:Nowr by the rest of theScript error: No such module "String".Congress. OneScript error: No such module "String".congressman even mocked it as looking "like a pair of suspenders". Miles'sScript error: No such module "String".flag lost to the Stars and Bars.

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Flag variants

In addition to the Confederacy's national flags, a wide variety of flags and banners were flown by Southerners during the CivilScript error: No such module "String".War. Most famously, the Template:Nowr was used as an unofficialScript error: No such module "String".flag during the earlyScript error: No such module "String".months ofScript error: No such module "String".1861. It was flying above the Confederate batteries that first opened fire on Template:Nowr in Charleston harbor, beginning the CivilScript error: No such module "String".War. The "VanScript error: No such module "String".Dorn battleScript error: No such module "String".flag" was also carried by Confederate troops fighting in the [[Trans-Mississippi Theater|Template:Nowr]] and WesternScript error: No such module "String".theaters ofScript error: No such module "String".war. Many military units also carried their own regimentalScript error: No such module "String".flags into battle. Though there are only three officialScript error: No such module "String".flags with the correct number of stars.[43]

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Controversy

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File:Battle flag of the Confederate States of America (3-5).svg
The elongated version of the battleScript error: No such module "String".flag is the most common modern variation that is often used and mistaken to be the official ConfederateScript error: No such module "String".flag.

Though never having historically represented the Confederate States ofScript error: No such module "String".America as a country, nor having been officially recognized as one of its nationalScript error: No such module "String".flags, the BattleScript error: No such module "String".Flag of the ArmyScript error: No such module "String".of Tennessee and its variants are now flagScript error: No such module "String".types commonly referred to as the "ConfederateScript error: No such module "String".flag". It is also known as the "rebelScript error: No such module "String".flag", "DixieScript error: No such module "String".flag" and "Template:Nowr". It is sometimes incorrectly called the "Stars and Bars", the name of the first national ConfederateScript error: No such module "String".flag.[44]

The "rebel flag" is considered by some to be a divisive and polarizing symbol in the UnitedScript error: No such module "String".States,[45][46] while its supporters maintain that it is a symbol of regional cultural pride.[47][48]

A YouGov poll in 2020 of more than 34,000 Americans reported that 41% viewed the flag as representing racism, and 34% viewed it as symbolizing Southern heritage.[49] A JulyScript error: No such module "String".2021 PoliticoMorning ConsultScript error: No such module "String".poll of 1,996 registered voters reported that 47% viewed it as a symbol of Southern pride while 36% viewed it as a symbol of racism.[50][51] In a 2017Script error: No such module "String".scientific article about the psychology of the ConfederateScript error: No such module "String".flag's supporters, the authors found the primary reasons for the flag's support to be Southern regional patriotism, political conservatism, or White American racial biases against African-Americans. However, the authors indicated that the majority of the flag's supporters did not tend towards racial biases as the reason for their support.[52]

Gallery

Arkansas

Alabama

Florida

Georgia

Louisiana

Mississippi

Tennessee

Texas

Virginia

See also

Notes

Template:Notelist

References

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  7. a b c Script error: No such module "Footnotes".
  8. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  9. a b Cite error: Script error: No such module "Namespace detect".Script error: No such module "Namespace detect".
  10. a b Cite error: Script error: No such module "Namespace detect".Script error: No such module "Namespace detect".
  11. a b Cite error: Script error: No such module "Namespace detect".Script error: No such module "Namespace detect".
  12. Cite error: Script error: No such module "Namespace detect".Script error: No such module "Namespace detect".
  13. a b Cite error: Script error: No such module "Namespace detect".Script error: No such module "Namespace detect".
  14. Cite error: Script error: No such module "Namespace detect".Script error: No such module "Namespace detect".
  15. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  16. a b Cite error: Script error: No such module "Namespace detect".Script error: No such module "Namespace detect".
  17. Cite error: Script error: No such module "Namespace detect".Script error: No such module "Namespace detect".
  18. Bonner, Robert E., "Flag Culture and the Consolidation of Confederate Nationalism." Journal of Southern History, Vol. 68, No. 2 (May 2002), 318–319.
  19. Script error: No such module "Footnotes".. "Some congressmen and newspaper editors favored making the Army of Northern Virginia battle flag (in a rectangular shape) itself the new nationalScript error: No such module "String".flag. But Beauregard and others felt the nation needed its own distinctive symbol, and so recommended that the Southern Cross be emblazoned in the corner of a white field."
  20. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  21. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  22. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  23. Script error: No such module "Footnotes".
  24. Journal of the Confederate Congress, Volume 6, p.477
  25. Richmond Whig, May 5, 1863
  26. a b Script error: No such module "Footnotes".
  27. Script error: No such module "Footnotes".
  28. John D. Wright, The Language of the Civil War, p.284
  29. Script error: No such module "Footnotes".
  30. a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  31. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  32. Script error: No such module "Footnotes".
  33. Script error: No such module "Footnotes".
  34. Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "describes the 15 stars and the debate on religious symbolism."
  35. Script error: No such module "Footnotes".
  36. Script error: No such module "Footnotes".
  37. Script error: No such module "Footnotes".
  38. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  39. Template:Cite report
  40. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  41. [1]
  42. a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  43. North & South – The Official Magazine of the Civil War Society, Volume 11, Number 2, Page 30, Retrieved April 16, 2010, "The Stars and Bars" Template:Webarchive
  44. Script error: No such module "Footnotes".
  45. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  46. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  47. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  48. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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  50. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  51. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  52. Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
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Sources

<templatestyles src="Refbegin/styles.css" />

  • Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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"Southern Confederacy" (Atlanta, Georgia), 5 Feb 1865, pg 2. Congressional, Richmond, 4 Feb: A bill to establish the flag of the Confederate States was adopted without opposition, and the flag was displayed in the Capitol today. The only change was a substitution of a red bar for one-half of the white field of the former flag, composing the flag's outer end.

External links

Template:Sister project

Template:United States topic Script error: No such module "Navbox". Script error: No such module "Navbox". Template:Portal bar Template:Authority control