Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Flag of Montana
U.S. state flag From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
The flag of the U.S. state of Montana consists of the image of the state seal above the state's name "MONTANA" centered on a blue field. Its current design was adopted on July 1, 1981.
Remove ads
History

The first state flag was made by Harry Kessler in 1895. It contained a blue field with the state seal in the center.[2] Three years later it was given to the First Montana Volunteers during the Spanish-American war, with the inscription, "1st Montana Infty U.S.A." added above the seal.[1]

The current flag was adopted in 1905. Upon adoption, it had a near identical design to the 1895 state flag. The word “MONTANA” above the seal was added in 1981. In 1985, the flag was again modified to specify the font used in “MONTANA” as Helvetica Bold.[1]
The North American Vexillological Association (NAVA) ranked the flag of Montana in 70th place, the third worst flag, out of 72 flags of provinces of Canada, U.S. states and U.S. territories. Georgia's flag was named the worst, but has since been changed, and Nebraska's flag was named second worst.[4]
Remove ads
Design
Within the seal, a plow, shovel, and pick rest in a field in front of the Great Falls of the Missouri River. The ribbon contains the state motto, ORO Y PLATA, which is Spanish for “gold and silver".[5]
Proposed changes
Summarize
Perspective
In 1974, the Montana Legislature considered adopting a new flag to replace the 1905 design. The first design submitted for proposal had a white field with three stylized mountain peaks of black in the upper hoist, and a green horizontal stripe along the bottom. The second proposal was designed by James Croft and featured a blue stripe representing Montana’s "Big Sky State" nickname, a white stripe for the state’s pure rivers, and a green stripe symbolizing forests and fields. A stylized mountain silhouette symbolized the "Land of Shining Mountains" and the Spanish word montaña (mountainous), while a copper arrowhead at the staff finial honored Montana’s Indigenous heritage.[6] However, on February 8, 1975, the Senate rejected Croft's proposal by a vote of 30-19, postponing further flag redesign considerations for at least a year.

In 1979, Edward Mooney, an undergraduate at Montana State University, along with friends, designed another alternative flag. The design featured a green bottom third to represent Montana’s productive land and a blue top two-thirds for the “Big Sky” slogan, separated by a white line that formed an "M" on the left side, symbolizing both Montana and the state’s geographic divide between the Rocky Mountains in the west and Great Plains in the east. A white five-pointed star above the “M” symbolized Montana’s statehood, while the white color also represented the snows of winter.[7] Mooney and his group presented the design to Governor Thomas Lee Judge and members of the Montana Legislature, with all parties refusing to consider the change. However, the 1981 legislature did agree to add the word “MONTANA” to the existing flag, which remains the current flag to this day.

In 2021, Democratic Rep. Moffie Funk proposed a bill to study the possibility of designing a new state flag, with an emphasis on evaluating whether the flag truly represents Montana's diversity and magnificence. Republican Rep. Caleb Hinkle then proposed an amendment to Funk's bill that would add firearms to the state flag as a tribute to Montana’s history with pioneers, soldiers, Native tribes, and hunters. His design concept suggested including semi-automatic rifles, such as the AR-15, but it faced strong criticism, including from Democratic Rep. Jonathan Windy Boy of the Chippewa Cree tribe.[8] Windy Boy pointed out the negative historical associations of firearms for Native Americans, and lawmakers ultimately voted against Hinkle’s amendment, with only 12 in favor and 88 opposed. Funk’s original proposal to create a committee to consider a new design also failed with a vote of 37-63.
Remove ads
See also
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads