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Polyester US State Flag of Florida

The flag of Florida consists of a red saltire (diagonal cross) on a white background, with the seal of Florida superimposed on the center. The design was approved by a popular referendum in 1900. The flag design has been in use since 1985 after the state seal was modified and officially sanctioned for use by state officials.
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Polyester US State Flag of Kansas

The official flag of Kansas was designed in 1925 and officially adopted by the State Legislature in 1927. It is represented by a dark-blue silk rectangle arranged horizontally with the state seal aligned in the center. Above the seal is a sunflower which sits above a twisted bar of gold and light blue which represents the Louisiana Purchase. It was modified in 1961 to add the word "KANSAS".
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Polyester US State Flag of Missouri

The flag of Missouri was designed and stitched in Jackson, Missouri, by Marie Elizabeth Watkins Oliver (1885-1959), the wife of former State Senator R.B. Oliver. Her design was adopted in 1913 and remains unchanged to this day. The flag consists of three horizontal stripes of red, white and blue. These represent valor, purity, vigilance, and justice. The colors also reflect the state's historic status as part of the French Louisiana Territory. In the center white stripe is the Seal of Missouri, circled by a blue band containing 24 stars, symbolizing Missouri's admission as the 24th U.S. state.
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Polyester US State Flag of Nebraska

Nebraska's official flag was adopted in 1925. It features the state seal (designed in 1867 by Isaac Wiles, a member of the House of Representatives), picturing a blacksmith hammering on an anvil, a settler's cabin, sheaths of wheat, a steamboat on a river, and the transcontinental railroad, with mountains in the background. The state motto, "Equality Before the Law," is on a banner above the landscape. The date of Nebraska's admission to the union, March 1, 1867, is listed below the seal.
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Polyester US State Flag of New Jersey

The flag of New Jersey includes the emblem from the Great Seal of the State of New Jersey on a buff-colored background. According to the minutes of the New Jersey General Assembly for March 11, 1896, the buff color is due indirectly to George Washington, who had ordered on October 2, 1779, that the uniform coats of the New Jersey Continental Line be dark (Jersey) blue, with buff facings. Buff-colored facings had until then been reserved only for his own uniform and those of other Continental generals and their aides.
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Polyester US State Flag of Oklahoma

The flag of Oklahoma consists of a traditional Osage Nation buffalo-skin shield with seven eagle feathers on a sky blue field. The Osage shield is covered by two symbols of peace: the peace pipe or calumet representing Native Americans, and the olive branch representing whites. Six golden brown crosses, Native American symbols for stars, are spaced on the shield. The blue field represents the first official flag flown by any Native American Nation, the Choctaw flag of the American Civil War.
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Polyester Ka Hae Hawaii US State Flag

Ka Hae Hawaii, or the Flag of Hawaii, is the official standard symbolizing Hawaii as a kingdom (under a short British annexation), protectorate, republic, territory and state. Ka Hae Hawaii is the only state flag in the United States to have been flown under so many various forms of government and the only one that features the Union Flag (more commonly known as the Union Jack), the flag of the United Kingdom.
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Polyester US State Flag of Michigan

The flag of Michigan depicts the state's coat-of-arms on a dark blue field. The state coat of arms depicts a light blue shield upon which the sun rises over a lake and peninsula, and a man with raised hand and holding a long gun representing peace and the ability to defend his rights. The elk and moose depict great animals of Michigan, while the bald eagle represents the United States. The design features three Latin mottos: E Pluribus Unum, "Out of many, one", a motto of the United States; Tuebor, "I will defend"; and Si Quaeris Peninsulam Amoenam Circumspice, "If you seek a pleasant peninsula, look about you" (the official state motto).
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Polyester US State Flag of Georgia

The flag of Georgia (adopted on May 8 2003) has three red & white stripes with the state coat of arms on a blue field in the upper left corner. In the coat of arms the arch symbolizes the state's Constitution and the pillars represent the 3 branches of government: legislative, executive, & judicial. The words of the state motto, "Wisdom, Justice, Moderation," are wrapped around the pillars, guarded by a male figure dressed in Colonial (soldier of the American Revolution) with a drawn sword. "In God We Trust" appears under these elements though it is not part of the state seal nor coat of arms, and thirteen stars represent Georgia and the 12 other original states that formed the United States of America.
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Polyester US State Flag of Idaho

The flag of Idaho consists of the state seal on a field of blue. The words "State of Idaho" appear in gold letters on a red and gold band below the seal. The seal in the center of the flag depicts a miner and a woman representing equality, liberty and justice. The symbols on the seal represent some of Idaho's natural resources: mining, forests, farmland, and wildlife. The flag was based on a design of a flag carried by the First Idaho Infantry in 1899 during the Spanish-American War, and was adopted on March 12, 1907, and slightly modified in 1957.
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Polyester US State Flag of Minnesota

The flag of Minnesota consists of the state seal on a royal blue background with gold fringe. The seal is surrounded by a wreath of the state flower, the showy lady slipper. Three dates are woven into a wreath of the state flower: 1858, the statehood year; 1819, the year Fort Snelling was established; and 1893, the year the original flag was adopted. Nineteen stars ring the wreath, symbolizing the fact that Minnesota was the 19th state to enter the Union after the original 13. The largest star represents the North Star and Minnesota. The current flag was adopted in 1957 and the state seal in the flag was modified in 1983.
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Polyester US State Flag of Nevada

The flag of Nevada was designed in 1926 and consists of a blue field with a star in the upper left hand corner, surrounded by the state name "Nevada." Above this is a ribbon with the words "Battle Born," indicating that Nevada became a state during the American Civil War. Below the star are two sprigs of green sagebrush (the state flower) with yellow flowers. A law enacted in 1991 directed that the word "Nevada" appear below the star and above the sagebrush sprays, thus producing the design now in use.
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Polyester US State Flag of North Dakota

The design for the flag of North Dakota is an almost exact copy of the unit banner carried by the state's troop contingent in the Philippine-American War. It was adopted by the North Dakota legislature on March 3, 1911, although the color was not precisely specified at that time. Legislation in 1943 brought the flag in line with the original troop banner, which is on display at the North Dakota Heritage Center in Bismarck.
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Polyester US State Flag of Iowa

The flag of Iowa consists of three vertical stripes of blue, white, and red, reflecting Iowa's history as part of the French Louisiana Territory. (Because of the wider middle stripe and symmetric design, the design is sometimes classified as a "Canadian pale".) The image of a bald eagle with a long ribbon reading "Our liberties we prize and our rights we will maintain", taken from the state seal, is centered in the middle white stripe. The word "Iowa" is placed directly below it in red, serifed majuscules.
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Polyester US State Flag of Kentucky

The flag of Kentucky consists of the Commonwealth's seal on a navy blue field, surrounded by the words "Commonwealth of Kentucky" above and sprigs of goldenrod, the state flower, below. The flag was designed by Jesse Cox, an art teacher in Frankfort, Kentucky. The flag was adopted by the Kentucky General Assembly on March 26, 1918[1] 1918 and finalized in its present form in 1928.
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Polyester US State Flag of Montana

The flag of Montana consists of the image of the Montana state seal centered on a blue field. Within the seal, a plow, shovel, and pick rest in a field in front of the Great Falls of the Missouri River. The ribbon contains the state motto, "Oro y plata" ("Gold and silver"). The current flag was adopted in 1905, and the word "Montana" above the seal was added in 1981.
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Polyester US State Flag of Illinois

The flag of the state of Illinois (designed in 1912 by Lucy Derwent in response to a contest held by the Daughters of the American Revolution) passaged in the Illinois State House and Senate on July 6 1915 but Governor Edward F. Dunne did not sign nor veto the bill. The current flag depicts the Great Seal of Illinois. In the eagle's beak there is a banner with the state motto, "State Sovereignty, National Union." The dates on the seal, 1818 and 1868 represent the year Illinois became a state and the year in which the Great Seal was redesigned by Sharon Tyndale. Although "State Sovereignty" comes first in the motto, Illinois was recently victorious American Civil War on the Union side, fighting against state sovereignty, so Tyndale placed "State" at the bottom and "Sovereignty" upside-down.
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Polyester US State Flag of North Carolina

The state legislature adopted the flag of North Carolina in March, 1885, to replace the original state flag that had been adopted on June 22, 1861 immediately following the state's secession from the Union on May 20, 1861. The red field of the old flag was replaced by blue in memory of the Bonnie Blue Flag which was used as a symbol of secession during the war. It bears the dates of the Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence (May 20, 1775) and of the Halifax Resolves (April 12, 1776), documents that place North Carolina at the forefront of the American independence movement.
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Polyester US State Flag of Mississippi

The flag of Mississippi echoes the Confederate "Stars and Bars" flag and the Confederate battle flag. It is the only U.S. state flag currently to incorporate the Confederate battle flag, included in the design as a memorial to Confederate dead. It was adopted in 1894, and before that when Mississippi seceded from the Union on January 9, 1861, as a sign of independence, the Bonnie Blue Flag (a single white star on a blue field) was raised over the capitol building in Jackson.
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Polyester US State Flag of Louisiana

The flag of Louisiana consists of a heraldic charge called a "pelican in her piety," representing a mother pelican wounding her breast to feed her young from the blood. This symbol, emblematic of Christian charity (and also the official state bird, the Brown Pelican), is also found on the state seal. On the flag it is depicted above a ribbon with the state motto: "Union, Justice, and Confidence." The current flag was adopted in 2006, revising the original pelican design of 1912.
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Polyester US State Flag of Maine

The flag of Maine features the state coat of arms on a blue field. In the center of the shield a moose rests under a tall pine tree. A farmer and seaman represent the traditional reliance on agriculture and the sea by the state. The North Star represents the state motto: Dirigo ("I Lead"). There are no official colors for the coat of arms, so variations in coloration can be seen in flags from different manufacturers. The blue field, however, is specified to be the same blue as in the flag of the United States.
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Polyester US State Flag of Massachusetts

The Commonwealth of Massachusetts in the United States has been represented by official but limited-purpose flags since 1776, though until 1908 it had no state flag per se to represent its government. The state currently has three official flags: a state flag, a "naval and maritime flag" (despite it no longer having its own navy), and a governor's flag.
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Polyester US State Flag of Oregon

The flag of Oregon is a blue field on which are placed, on the obverse, the Seal of Oregon (supported by thirty-three stars, representing its order in joining the United States); the words "State of Oregon" in block letters above; and the year of statehood, 1859, below. On the reverse is placed a figure of a beaver, the state animal. The Oregon flag is the only current state flag in the United States that has differing symbolism on its two sides.
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Polyester US State Flag of Ohio

The flag of Ohio was adopted in 1902 and designed by John Eisemann for the 1901 Pan-American Exposition. The large blue triangle represents Ohio's hills and valleys, and the stripes represent roads and waterways. The seventeen stars symbolize that Ohio was the 17th state admitted to the union. The white circle with its red center not only represents the first letter of the state name, but also its nickname, "the Buckeye State." It is the only American state flag that is non-rectangular, and one of only two non-rectangular official jurisdictional flags, at the state level or above, in the world (the other is the flag of Nepal).
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