North Dakota, flag of

North Dakota, flag of

▪ Flag History

      U.S. state flag consisting of a dark blue field (background) with a coat of arms (arms, coat of) in the centre that includes an eagle with outspread wings above a scroll with the words “ North Dakota.”

      In the late 19th century the Dakota Territorial Guard displayed a blue flag with the coat of arms of the United States in the centre. After North Dakota joined the Union in 1889, a similar design was used by the state's National Guard. Colonel John H. Fraine was the battalion commander of the state troops who saw action in the Philippines under this flag in 1898–99. He spearheaded the drive to have it recognized as the state flag, which it officially became on March 3, 1911.

      The coat of arms on the state flag was easily confused with the U.S. coat of arms, however. In the mid-20th century the North Dakota National Guard created a distinctive new coat of arms, which it proposed as a replacement for the existing design. Its display on a green field was recognized as a flag for government use on March 15, 1957, although it did not replace the 1911 flag. The green flag was basically restricted to the use of the National Guard and of the governor of the state.

Whitney Smith
 

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Universalium. 2010.

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