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Flag of Tennessee
U.S. state flag From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The flag of Tennessee is the official flag of the U.S. state of Tennessee. The flag displays an emblem on a field of red, with a strip of blue bordered by white on the fly. The emblem in the middle consists of three white stars on a blue circle also with a white border. The central emblem portion of the flag has been adopted as the state's unofficial logo, and appears in the logos of some Tennessee-based companies and sports teams. Examples include the First Horizon Bank and the Tennessee Titans.
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History
In 1897, Tennessee adopted a red, white, and blue tricolor.[2] The three bars were deliberately slanted in an effort to represent the geographically distinct regions of Tennessee. The flag included the number "16", Tennessee having been admitted as the 16th state of the Union, and the words "The Volunteer State", the state's official nickname. Besides a proposed, though unadopted, Civil War era flag in 1861 for when Tennessee seceded and joined the Confederacy, this was the first state flag officially adopted for Tennessee.
The current flag was designed by Colonel Le Roy Reeves,[3] a Johnson City attorney who was then serving in the Tennessee National Guard.[4] The Tennessee General Assembly officially adopted the flag on April 17, 1905.[5]
In 2001, the North American Vexillological Association surveyed its members on the designs of the 72 U.S. state, territorial, and Canadian provincial flags and ranked the Tennessee flag 14th.[6]
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Description
Symbolism

The stars represent the three geographically and legally distinct Grand Divisions of Tennessee (i.e. East, Middle, and West Tennessee). The blue circle around the stars represents the unity of those grand divisions. The blue bar at the edge of the flag was just a design consideration. When asked about the blue bar, Reeves stated "The final blue bar relieves the sameness of the crimson field and prevents the flag from showing too much crimson when hanging limp." In October 1917, National Geographic erroneously reported the stars represented the state as the third to enter the Union after the original thirteen.[7]
Star arrangement
State law dictates exactly how the central emblem is to be displayed on the flag.
The arrangement of the three (3) stars shall be such that the centers of no two stars shall be in a line parallel to either the side or the end of the flag, but intermediate between the same; and the highest star shall be the one nearest the upper confined corner of the flag.[7]
In 1976, the U.S. Postal Service issued a sheet of 13 cent stamps illustrating U.S. state flags. Tennessee's was illustrated upside down.[8]
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Government flags
Alongside the state flag, there are other flags used by the government of Tennessee. The flag for the governor of Tennessee has been in use since 1939. It is a scarlet flag, with four stars, one in each corner, and the state military crest, a tree with three white stars, in the center. The Tennessee General Assembly has its own flag as well that was adopted in 1978.
Other flags
- Proposed flag (Confederate State of Tennessee) (1861)
- Tennessee's Centennial flag (1896)[9]
- Flag of the governor (adopted 1939)
- Flag of the General Assembly (adopted 1978)
Gallery
- The flag of Tennessee as depicted in the 1976 bicentennial postage stamp series.
- A state flag themed hot air balloon at Jubilee Festival, Decatur, Alabama, May 2010.
- The Tennessee state flag which flew over the Capitol during the Tornado outbreak of April 15–16, 1998. The middle emblem was ripped out during the storm. This flag is on display at the Tennessee State Capitol.
- A sample Tennessee vehicle plates incorporating the flag's emblem as a logo.
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See also
References
External links
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