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The
Tennessee State Flag was designed by Captain LeRoy Reeves of the Third Regiment,
Tennessee Infantry. Captain Reeves explained the design of his flag as follows:
The three stars are of pure white, representing the three grand divisions of
the state. They are bound together by the endless circle of the blue field
the symbol being three bound together in one-an indissoluble trinity The large
field is crimson. The final blue bar relieves the sameness of the crimson field
and prevents the flag from showing too much creation when hanging limp. The
white edgings contrast more strongly the other colors.
This flag was adopted as the official flag of the State of Tennessee by an
act of the Legislature passed and approved April 17, 1905. The design of the
flag was described by that act, Chapter 498 of the Public Acts of 1905, as
follows:
An oblong flag or banner in length one and two thirds times its width, the
large or principal field of same to be of color red, but said flag or banner
ending at its free or outer end in a perpendicular bar of blue, of uniform
width, running from side to side; that is to say, from top to bottom of said
flag or banner, and separated from the red field by a narrow margin or stripe
of white of uniform width; the width of the white stripe to be one-fifth that
of the blue bar; and the total width of the bar and stripe together to be equal
to one-eighth of the width of the flag.
In the center of the red field shall be a smaller circular field of blue,
separated from the surrounding red field shall be a smaller circular field
of blue, separated from the surrounding red field by a circular margin or
stripe of white of uniform width and of the same width as the straight margin
or stripe first mentioned. The breadth or diameter of the circular blue field,
exclusive of the white margin, shall be equal to one-half of the width of
the flag. Inside the circular blue field shall be three five-pointed stars
of white distributed at equal intervals around a point, the center of the
blue field and of such size and arrangement that one point of each star shall
approach as closely as practicable without actually touching one point of
each of the other two around the center point of the field; and the two outer
points of each star shall approach as nearly as practicable without actually
touching the periphery of the blue field. The arrangement of the three stars
shall be such that the centers of no two stars shall be in a line parallel
to either the side or end of the flag, but intermediate between same; and
the highest star shall be the one nearest the upper confined corner of the
flag.
SYMBOLISM
Those familiar with Tennessee's geography and politics have no trouble identifying
the meaning of the three stars. Culturally and geologically, East, Middle,
and West Tennessee are as different as any three state could be. Yet non-Tennesseans
are often confused about the symbolism of the tri-star flag.
In its October 1917 issue, National Geographic magazine featured a colorful
and detailed article about the flags of the world. The author of the article
was apparently not familiar with Tennessee, and, rather than consulting Tennessee
sources for an explanation of her flag, he seems to have invented a theory
based upon the coincidence that Tennessee was the sixteenth state to be admitted
to the American Union, i.e the third after the original thirteen.
The National Geographic article was so widely circulated, and the prestige
of that journal is so great, that this erroneous notion of Tennessee's three
stars became widely accepted. As a result, in 1920 John Trotwood Moore, director
of the Tennessee Department of Library, Archives, and History (now the State
Library and Archives), asked the flag's designer to explain the meaning of
the stars. After reasserting that the stars represented the Grand Divisions
of the state, Captain Reeves went on to say:
" I remember to have seen published in the past a statement that the three
stars were intended to represent the fact that Tennessee, which was the sixteenth
state to be admitted, was the third state after the original thirteen I had
nothing of the kind in mind when I designed the flag prior to its adoption
in 1905."
Ever since, every publication by the state of Tennessee on the design and
meaning of the Tennessee flag has emphasized that the stars represent the
Grand Divisions of the state. Yet the misinformation published in the National
Geographic in 1917 continues to be republished by sources outside of Tennessee.
" Which Way Is Up?"
Another common problem with the Tennessee flag is the issue of "which
way is up," Despite the generally good example of the state government,
as often as not Tennesseans will fly their flag upside down. The United States
Postal Service helped to compound the problem in 1976, when a series of postage
stamps were issued featuring the flags of the states.
The Tennessee flag stamp displayed the flag upside down. Despite protests
by state officials, the Postal Service insisted that the stamp was correct,
and continued to print Tennessee's flag belly-up.
The Tennessee flag law specifies: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.
The law also specifies that the circular blue field, not including the white
margin, is to have a diameter equal to one-half the width of the flag. Flag
manufacturers often ignore that specification, and at times flags can be
seen on which the blue disc occupies almost all of the red field.



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