Flag of Vermont
Template:Short description Template:Use American English Template:Use mdy datesTemplate:Infobox flag The flag of the U.S. state of Vermont displays the state's coat of arms and motto ("Freedom and Unity") on a rectangular blue background. The Vermont General Assembly adopted the flag on June 1, 1923.
Vermont has had three official state flags. Prior to a state flag, the flag of the Green Mountain Boys was used as an unofficial flag. Vermont adopted its first state flag that looked similar to the flag of the United States, with red and white stripes and a blue canton. It was later changed to be dissimilar to avoid confusion.<ref name="netstate">Template:Cite web</ref> Proposals have been considered to revert the flag to the Green Mountain Boys' design, but none have succeeded.<ref>Template:Cite web></ref>
Symbolism
The flag consists of the state's coat of arms and motto on a field of azure. While the pine needle supporters of the coat of arms are represented throughout New England and symbolizes the small pine branches worn at the Battle of Plattsburgh near the end of the War of 1812,<ref>Znamierowski, Alfred. The World Encyclopedia of Flags. Italy: Lorenz Books, 1999. 199. Print</ref> the pine tree in the middle of the coat of arms represents the Vermont forests.<ref name="thinkquest">Template:Cite web</ref> The cow and three sheaves of wheat represent the dairy and agriculture industries.<ref name="anyflag">Template:Cite web</ref> The deer head on top represents Vermont's wildlife.<ref name="thinkquest" /> The Green Mountains are in the background as well. The motto, "Freedom and Unity", is also used. The motto balances two different ideals, the freedom of the individual citizen, and the welfare of the common good.
History
There is no extant record of a design for an official Vermont flag prior to 1804, although Ira Allen's design—common to both the Great Seal of Vermont and the coat of arms of Vermont—dates to 1778.<ref name="Benedict">Template:Cite journal</ref> While an official government flag might not have existed prior to 1804, the Vermont militia—known as the Green Mountain Boys—was formed in 1770, and remaining accounts record use of the flag of the Green Mountain Boys as far back as 1777.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
On May 1, 1804, the number of U.S. states rose to seventeen, and it was expected that the U.S. flag would change to 17 stars and 17 stripes. In anticipation, Vermont adopted the expected new U.S. flag design with the addition of the name "VERMONT" embroidered along the top. The U.S. flag did not add any stripes, resulting in the Vermont flag having more stripes than the national flag.<ref name="netstate" />
On October 20, 1837, Vermont changed its flag to a design based on the 13-stripe U.S. flag, but with the multiple stars of the blue canton replaced with a single large star surrounding Vermont's coat of arms. The flags based on these specifications varied in the number of points on the star (five and eight, with eight slightly more common), and the exact details of the center of the star (with either the Great Seal or the coat of arms being used).<ref name="netstate" />
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First flag of Vermont (May 1, 1804 – October 19, 1837) Template:FIAV
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Second flag of Vermont (October 20, 1837 – May 31, 1923) Template:FIAV
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Early rendition of the current flag seen in the early 1920s Template:FIAV
During the Mexican-American War Vermont sent troops that carried similar flags to the second state flag but with the name of the regiment on it. One of the flags was described as: "It is of silk, the regular thirteen stripes, but in the place of the field of stars in the coat of arms of Vermont, in a five pointed star. Beneath runs the motto, "Freedom and Unity," and on the sides of the star is emblazoned "27th Regiment."<ref>Daily Alta California, 24 February 1861</ref>
During the American Civil War, the Spanish–American War and World War I, the Vermont militia fought under a banner composed of the coat of arms of Vermont surrounded by a white circle with a gold, blue and white outline on a blue field.<ref name="Benedict" /><ref>Red Bluff Independent, 24 February 1863</ref> This was essentially the same as the Vermont governor's flag which would later become the current state flag.
Because of confusion between the striped Vermont state flag and the U.S. flag, the design of the Vermont governor's flag was adopted as the official state flag on June 1, 1923.<ref name="netstate" /><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Proposals have been considered to make the flag of the Green Mountain Boys' the state flag of Vermont, but none have succeeded.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Template:Clear
Gallery
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Illustration of the state flag from 1882
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Black and white photograph of Vermont's second official flag<ref name="Internet Archive 2010">Template:Cite web</ref>
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Presentation of the state flag
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Vintage state flag
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The Vermont state flag as depicted in the 1976 bicentennial postage stamp series
See also
References
External links
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