Flag of Ohio
Template:Short description Template:Use American English Template:Good article Template:Infobox flag
The flag of Ohio, known as the Ohio Burgee, is the official flag of the U.S. state of Ohio. It is a distinctive triangular swallowtail flag. Its red, white, and blue elements symbolize the state's natural features and order of admission into the Union. A prominent disc in the flag's triangular canton is suggestive of the state's name. The flag was adopted in 1902.
The flag was designed in 1901 by John Eisenmann for the Pan-American Exposition and adopted in 1902. Before that, for nearly a century after statehood, Ohio did not have a legally authorized state flag. One unsuccessful proposal had called for a design based on the state seal.
Ohio has adopted an official salute to the flag and the official folding procedure gives it 17 folds. The Ohio flag has influenced a number of logos and municipal flags within the state. A scarlet-colored gubernatorial flag is based on the state seal.
Design

The Ohio state flag's design is defined in the Ohio Revised Code, section 5.01:

In addition to resembling the letter O and a buckeye nut, the flag's annulus also represents "the original territory of Ohio" in the Northwest Territory.<ref name="Eisenmann design" />
Ohio's flag is the only non-rectangular U.S. state flag. It is a rare example of a non-quadrilateral civil flag. According to vexillologist Whitney Smith, it may be loosely based upon cavalry flags of the Civil War and Spanish–American War.<ref name="Purcell" /><ref>Template:Cite encyclopedia</ref> The flag has been officially defined as a "burgee" since 2002,<ref name="Profile" /><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> even though burgees are typically used as maritime flags. Its shape, lack of text, and mirror symmetry allow it to be flown or hung in various orientations without affecting legibility.<ref name="OHHist Ohio Day">Template:Cite journal</ref> On account of the flag's uncommon shape, foreign manufacturers have occasionally set the entire design against a white, rectangular field.<ref name="Purcell" />
History
For nearly a century after statehood, Ohio did not have a legally authorized state flag. The state militia carried regimental colors based on the Stars and Stripes, with the addition of "a large eagle, with the number of the regiment and the prescribed number of stars above".<ref name="Preble">Template:Cite book</ref>
Arsenal flag

By the early 1850s, Ohio expressed interest in adopting a state flag, as several other states had already done. In late 1860, Quartermaster General David L. Wood and Adjutant General Henry B. Carrington devised a flag consisting of the state seal upon a white field.<ref name="Sloane">Template:Cite conference</ref><ref name="Smith">Template:Cite book</ref> They had it flown above the Ohio State Arsenal in Columbus, in hopes that it might someday become the state flag. On January 17, 1861, at a banquet organized by the Columbus Typographical Union Local #5, future U.S. President James A. Garfield gave a speech defending the national flag as the only flag Ohio's soldiers would march to battle under. The generals, in attendance, were moved to set aside their proposal and hoist the Stars and Stripes in its place.<ref name="DAR Hodge">Template:Cite speech</ref> Later that year, Wood and Carrington joined fellow Ohioans in battle under the 34-star Union flag, which would serve as the inspiration for a state banner decades later.<ref name="Hodge">Template:Cite book</ref>
Eisenmann's guidon

In 1901, Cleveland architect John Eisenmann was commissioned to design an exhibition hall for his state at the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, New York. He developed a distinctive flag to fly over each corner of the Ohio Building.<ref name="Profile">Template:Cite book</ref> The wool flags officially represented the Ohio Pan-American Exposition Commission rather than the state. On July 18, Governor George K. Nash visited the exposition, where he was presented with one of the flags,<ref name="Purcell" /> which is now held in the Ohio History Connection collections.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Eisenmann secured a U.S. design patent for his design, which he described as "a triangular forked or swallow-tailed flag corresponding to the shape generally known as a 'cavalry-guidon' or 'broad pennant.'"<ref name="Eisenmann patent">Template:US patent reference (US D34810 S via Google Patents)</ref>

In 1902, State Representative William S. McKinnon, a member of the Ohio Pan-American Exposition Commission, introduced House Bill 213 designating Eisenmann's design as the official flag. It became law on May 9,<ref name="Huntington" /> making it the 20th U.S. state flag or banner.<ref name="Purcell">Template:Cite conference</ref> (Eisenmann had assigned his patent, which had a term of three and a half years, to the State of Ohio on April 24.<ref name="Eisenmann assignment">Template:Cite letter</ref>)

Because Eisenmann's design deviated from the "seal on a bedsheet" design then nearly universal among state flags, the press looked overseas for precedents: the layout was likened to either the flag of Cuba<ref name="Galbreath">Template:Cite journal</ref> or of the Philippines,<ref name="Enquirer Smites" /> while the red and white annulus was derided for its similarity to the sun on the Japanese flag.<ref name="Huntington">Template:Cite magazine</ref>
Initially, Ohio's flag was seldom used, in part due to the prevailing opinion that the Stars and Stripes should hold a monopoly on patriotic displays. Similar sentiment hindered the adoption of municipal flags in Cleveland and Cincinnati, to the extent that both were downplayed as mere "banners" for promotional purposes.<ref name="Purcell" /><ref name="Enquirer against">Template:Cite news</ref> In 1903, it was reported that, among state politicians, only Nash displayed the guidon.<ref name="Enquirer Smites">Template:Cite news</ref>
In the century following its adoption, the guidon gained significant popularity, being flown not only by the state but frequently also by its residents and businesses.<ref name="Purcell" />
Gallery
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Unofficial state banner used by state delegates at the 1872 Republican National Convention<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
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Unofficial state banner c. 1880–1910<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
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State flag from 1911<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
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A rectangular Ohio flag flies in front of the Benetka Road Covered Bridge in Ashtabula County.
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Digital remake of a misprinted guidon with a blue disc c. 1902–1915<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
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State flag used by Grand Army of the Republic, 1925<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
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The Ohio state flag as depicted in the 1976 bicentennial postage stamp series.
Usage
Salute
In 2002, the Ohio General Assembly commemorated the 100th anniversary of the state flag's adoption by adopting a salute to the flag, to be recited after the Pledge of Allegiance:
Folding the flag

A method of folding the flag of Ohio was created by Alex Weinstock, a Boy Scout from Junction City,<ref name="Profile" /> for his Eagle Scout service project. It requires two people. The procedure was passed by the 125th Ohio General Assembly as House Bill 552 and signed into law by Governor Bob Taft on February 15, 2005:<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Ohio is not the only state that has designated a folding procedure for its flag;<ref>For example, Texas Template:Webarchive, as prescribed in Template:TX Govt Code, and Minnesota Template:Webarchive, per 2013 Minnesota Statutes 1.141 Subd. 6 Template:Webarchive.</ref> however, Ohio's procedure takes on special importance due to the flag's irregular shape. A flag vendor in Arkansas has described the procedure as "quite a challenge".<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Derivations
Ohio's flag is regularly flown during football games by Ohio State University Marching Band's "JI-Row" as the percussion section's row mascot.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The Columbus Blue Jackets logo<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> and Cincinnati Bengals fan flag<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> are both based on the state flag.
A number of municipalities and counties in Ohio have adopted pennants and swallowtails based on the state burgee. Adams County and the cities of Marysville and Mentor have flags that essentially replace the annulus with a seal and modify the pattern of stars in the triangular union.<ref name="Purcell" /><ref name="Statehouse counties">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Additionally, the city of Green uses a burgee for the city flag, altering the colors to green and white stripes, as opposed to the original red and white on the Ohio state flag.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Flag of the governor

The flag of the governor of Ohio consists of the Great Seal of Ohio encircled with 13 white stars on a scarlet field, with a five-point star in each corner. Like the state flag, it has 17 stars in total.
The adjutant general's office adopted this design in 1905 to represent the governor on official occasions.<ref name="96 HJR 49">Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name="Smith 1975" /> One such flag hangs in the Rutherford B. Hayes Center Library, a memorial to the 32nd Ohio governor and 19th U.S. president.<ref>Template:Cite book Additionally, a glimpse of the flag can be seen in a photograph of the rotunda opposite page 22.</ref> The design was officially recognized by the 96th General Assembly effective October 3, 1945:<ref name="96 HJR 49" />
Since September 30, 1963, the flag has been defined in greater detail:<ref name="Smith 1975">Template:Cite book Smith notes that the prior design had a ratio of 40×63, equivalent to the modern specification.</ref>
The Ohio Revised Code also specifies smaller versions of this design to be used as the governor's naval flag and automobile flag.
See also
- Flag of Cincinnati
- Flag of Cleveland
- Flag of Columbus
- List of Ohio state symbols
- Seal of Ohio
- Flags of the U.S. states
- Flag of Nepal
References
External links
- State Flag of Ohio Template:Webarchive – brochure by the Ohio Secretary of State's office
- Template:FOTW
- 125th General Assembly of Ohio, H.B. 552
- Ohio's State Flag (1901) – Ohio History Central
- Ohio Flag folding instructions in PDF form Template:Webarchive
- Ohio county flags – Ohio Statehouse