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Though Alabama entered the
Union in 1819, it wasn't until the state seceded
from the Union in 1861 that Alabamans adopted a
flag of their own. At the Secession Convention
of January 11, 1861, distressed Alabama citizens
decided to withdraw from the Union of the United
States. At the same time, they adopted their own
flag. Designed by a group of Montgomery women,
the "Secession Convention Flag" became Alabama's
first official flag. Because Alabama had left
the union, the flag was often referred to as the
"Republic of Alabama flag."
The Republic of Alabama flag
displayed a different scene on each side.
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| On one side, the
Goddess of Liberty is depicted holding
an unsheathed sword in her right hand
and a flag with one star in her left
hand. The words "Independent Now and
Forever" are arched above her head. |
On the other side of
the flag is a cotton plant with a coiled
rattlesnake. Beneath the cotton plant
are the Latin words : Noli Me Tangere,
(Touch Me Not). |
The Republic of Alabama flag
did not fly long. On February 10, 1861, one
month after it was adopted, the flag was damaged
in a severe storm and was moved to the
Governor's office, never to fly over Alabama
again.
Without a flag of their own,
Alabamans rallied under the flags of the
Confederate States of America. From March 4,
1861 until April, 1865 one of two Confederate
National Flags waved over Alabama soil.
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| First National Flag:
Stars & Bars 1861 |
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Second National Flag:
Stainless Banner 1863 |
After the war, the flag of
the United States was raised over the state. It
flew until 1891 when Alabama finally decided on
a design for a unique state flag.
Four years later, on February
16, 1895, 76 years after being admitted to the
Union, the Alabama Legislature authorized the
"crimson cross of St. Andrew on a field of
white" as its official flag in the Acts of
Alabama. Reminiscent of the Confederate
battle flag, it was designated that the crimson
bars were not to be less than six inches broad
and were to extend diagonally across the flag.
Because Act 383 did not specify a particular
format, the flag is sometimes depicted as a
square and at other times depicted as a
rectangle.
For
141 years the crimson cross has flown proudly
over the state of Alabama.
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