Flag of North Carolina


The flag of the State of North Carolina was adopted by statute of the North Carolina General Assembly in 1885. It is defined in the general Statute 144-1 as follows:
It bears the dates of the Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence and of the Halifax Resolves, documents that place North Carolina at the forefront of the American independence movement. Both dates also appear on the Seal of North Carolina.
As Province of North Carolina, the flag was the British Red Ensign, incorporating the Scottish St. Andrew’s Cross with a blue field with St. George’s Cross. Lord Tryon, the provincial governor, carried two of these flags at the Battle of Alamance during the War of the Regulation. During the American Revolution there may have been state flags but their history is lost.
North Carolina did not have an official state flag until the North Carolina state constitutional convention of 1861. During this convention, delegates voted to join the Confederacy. They established a committee to come up with a flag. This flag was ratified by the convention on June 22, 1861. The flag consisted of a red field with a white star in the center. Inscribed above the star was the date May 20, 1775, the controversial date of the Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence. Inscribed below the star in a semi-circular form was the date May 20, 1861, which was the date North Carolina seceded from the Union. The flag also contain two bars of equal width, one in blue and one in white. The design is similar to one suggested by Raleigh artist William G. Browne.
During the American Civil War, secessionist leaders spoke of the Mecklenburg Declaration with reverence, attempting to connect it with the state's joining the Confederacy. Confederate leader Jefferson Davis spoke to a Charlotte crowd in September 1864 saying "people of this section were the first to defy British authority and declare themselves free" encouraging them to continue backing the Confederacy's civil war effort against the U.S.
A former Confederate soldier and Adjutant General of North Carolina, Johnston Jones, introduced the bill which led the state legislature to adopt a new flag in March 1885 to replace the flag that had been adopted on June 22, 1861, immediately following the state's declaration of secession from the U.S. on May 20, 1861. The red field of the old flag was replaced by a blue field. This was the first and only flag formally representing the State of North Carolina as part of the United States.
On June 24, 1991, a bill was passed by the North Carolina Senate that changed the official proportions of the state flag. It changed from "..the total length of the flag shall be one-third more than its width" as written in the 1885 act to "...the total length of the flag shall be one-half more than its width".

Salute to the flag

The General Assembly of North Carolina adopted an official salute to the flag in 2007. It reads: