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The flag of Florida is the official flag of the U.S. state of Florida. The flag consists of a red saltire on a white background, with the state seal superimposed on the center.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Florida has had three official flags. The current state flag was adopted on November 6, 1900, and has only been changed once on May 21, 1985 when the state seal was standardized.

In 2001, a survey conducted by the North American Vexillological Association ranked Florida's state flag 34th in design quality of the 72 Canadian provincial, U.S. state and U.S. territorial flags ranked.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> It is one of three U.S. state flags to feature the words "In God We Trust" (the U.S. motto since 1956), with the other two being those of Georgia and Mississippi.

HistoryEdit

File:Flags of Florida in San Agustín (St. Augustine).jpg
The flag of Florida (center) alongside the Cross of Burgundy in 2013.

Spain was a dynastic union and federation of kingdoms when Juan Ponce de León claimed Florida for the Spanish Crown on April 2, 1513. Colonial authorities used several banners or standards during the first period of settlement and governance in Florida, such as the royal standard of the Crown of Castile. As with other Spanish territories, the Burgundian saltire was generally used in Florida to represent collective Spanish sovereignty between 1513 and 1821.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In 1763, Spain passed control of Florida to Great Britain via the Treaty of Paris, following the latter's victory over France in the Seven Years' War, in exchange for other territory. Great Britain used the original union flag with the white diagonal stripes in Florida during this brief period. The British also divided the Florida territory into East Florida, with its capital at St. Augustine, and West Florida, with its capital at Pensacola. The border was the Apalachicola River.

Spain regained control of the Florida Provinces (las Floridas) after the Siege of Pensacola and the Treaty of Paris following the American Revolutionary War, when Britain ceded its territories east of the Mississippi River. In 1785, King Charles III chose a new naval and battle flag for Spain, which had become a more centralized nation-state, and its crown territories. This tri-band of red-gold-red was used with the Burgundian saltire in the provinces of East and West Florida until they joined the United States in 1821. Florida was admitted to the Union in 1845.

Secession from the UnionEdit

Between 1821 and 1861, Florida had no official flag. The inauguration of Governor William D. Moseley in 1845 featured a flag with bars of blue, gold, red, white and green, along with the motto "Let Us Alone." However, this never was an official state flag.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In January 1861 Florida declared that it had seceded from the Union and declared itself a "sovereign and independent nation,"<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> reaffirming the Preamble in the Constitution of 1838.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The state used the Naval Ensign of Texas as a provisional flag between January and September 1861.<ref name="Cannon2005">Template:Cite book</ref> It also used this flag when Floridian forces took control of U.S. forts and a Navy yard in Pensacola. Colonel William H. Chase was commander of Floridian troops, and the flag is also referred to as the Chase Flag.

Later that year, the Florida Legislature passed a law authorizing Governor Perry to design an official flag. His design was the tri-band of the Confederacy but with the blue field extending down and the new seal of Florida placed within the blue field. As a member of the Confederacy, Florida saw use of all three versions of the Confederate flag. The Bonnie Blue flag, previously the flag of the short-lived Republic of West Florida, was briefly used as an unofficial flag of the Confederacy. It features a single five-point star centered in a blue background.

Florida Constitution of 1868Edit

Between 1868 and 1900, the flag of Florida was the state seal on a white background. In a discrepancy, however, a later version of the state seal depicts a steamboat with a white flag that includes a red saltire, similar to Florida's current flag.Template:Citation needed In the late 1890s, Florida governor Francis P. Fleming advocated adding a red St. Andrew's Cross so that the flag would not appear to be a white flag of truce if hanging limp on a flagpole. Floridians approved the addition of St. Andrew's Cross by popular referendum in 1900.<ref name="16Flags">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The red saltire of the Cross of Burgundy represents the cross on which St. Andrew was crucified, and the standard is frequently displayed today in Florida's historic Spanish settlements, such as St. Augustine.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Historical progression of the state flagEdit

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Other flagsEdit

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Additional perspectivesEdit

Some historians interpret the addition of a red saltire as a commemoration of Florida's contributions to the Confederacy by Governor Francis P. Fleming, who served in the 2nd Florida Regiment, Confederate army.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The addition was made during a period promoting the "Lost Cause" of the antebellum South, around the time of the flag's change.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> According to historian John M. Coski, the Florida legislature adopted its new flag near the time when it disenfranchised African Americans and passed new Jim Crow laws and segregation.<ref name="Coski8081">Template:Cite book</ref> Other former Confederate slave states, such as Mississippi and Alabama, also adopted new state flags around the same time that they instituted segregation laws.<ref name=Coski8081/>

Not all historians agree with assertions about association with the Confederacy.<ref name=mt>Template:Cite news</ref> James C. Clark, a lecturer in the University of Central Florida's history department, does not believe that Fleming's new flag had anything to do with the Confederacy.<ref name=mt/> "That St. Andrew's Cross that Fleming added, the red cross, dates back to the original flag the Spanish flew over Florida in the 16th century."<ref name=ucf>Template:Cite news</ref> Similarly, Canter Brown Jr., a Florida state-educated historian who has written extensively on Florida history, says he has "seen no specific evidence linking this flag to the Confederate one."<ref name=ucf/>

GalleryEdit

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See alsoEdit

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ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

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