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Flag of
California |
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The Bear Flag is
the official State flag of California. The precursor of the flag
was first flown during the 1846 Bear Flag Revolt and known as the
Bear Flag. A version of the Bear Flag was then adopted by the
California State Legislature and signed into law by Governor Hiram
Johnson in 1911 as the official state flag.[1]
The 1911 statute stated:
“ The bear flag is hereby selected and adopted as the state flag
of California. ... The said bear flag shall consist of a flag of a
length equal to one and one-half the width thereof; the upper
five-sixths of the width thereof to be a white field, and the
lower sixth of the width thereof to be a red stripe; there shall
appear in the white field in the upper left-hand corner a single
red star, and at the bottom of the white field the words
'California Republic,' and in the center of the white field a
California grizzly bear upon a grass plat, in the position of
walking toward the left of the said field; said bear shall be dark
brown in color and in length, equal to one-third of the length of
said flag. ”
In 1953, the design and specifications for the state flag were
standardized in a bill signed by Governor Earl Warren. The
California State Flag is often called the "Bear Flag" and in fact,
the present statute adopting the flag, Gov. Code 420, states: "The
Bear Flag is the State Flag of California."
The modern state flag is white with a wide red strip along the
bottom. There is a red star in the upper left corner and a grizzly
bear facing left (toward the hoist) in the center, walking on a
patch of green grass. The bear depicted is a California grizzly
bear, a subspecies that is now extinct. The size of the bear is
2/3 the size of the hoist width and has a ratio of 2 by 1. There
is speculation that the five-point star is a nod to the
Republic of Texas, and the bear represents strength. |
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Sterling Silver Charm of CaliforniaColors
The colors of the Flag of California are specified in the
following shades:
Color Cable -- Color Pantone -- Web Color -- RGB Values
White
Old Glory Red
Maple Sugar
Seal
Irish Green
Original flag
According to the California Blue Book, "(t)he flag was designed by
William Todd on a piece of new unbleached cotton. The star
imitated the lone star of Texas. A grizzly bear represented the
many bears seen in the state. The words ‘California Republic’ were
placed beneath the star and bear."
According to the Sonoma State Historic Park the construction of
the flag was described as such:
“ At a company meeting it was determined that we should raise a
flag, and that it should be a bear en passant [French: 'in
passing'], with one star. One of the ladies at the garrison gave
us a piece of brown domestic, and Mrs. Captain John Sears gave us
some strips of red flannel about 4 inches wide. The domestic was
new, but the flannel was said to have been part of a petticoat
worn by Mrs. Sears across the mountains…I took a pen, and with ink
drew the outline of the bear and star upon the white cloth.
Linseed oil and Venetian red were found in the garrison, and I
painted the bear and star…Underneath the bear and star were
printed with a pen the words 'California Republic' in Roman
letters. In painting the words I first lined out the letters with
a pen, leaving out the letter 'i' and putting 'c' where 'i' should
have been, and afterwards the 'i' over the 'c'. It was made with
ink, and we had nothing to remove the marks. ”
—William L. "Bill" Todd, artist
of original Bear Flag
The original bear was near the top, looked somewhat like a pig,
and had no ground to stand on (see picture). Also, though the bear
was described as being en passant (i.e., walking), it was drawn on
the original flag statant (standing). The modern flag shows the
bear en passant.
History
The original Bear Flag was raised for the first time in Sonoma,
California in June 1846 on a date between the 14th and the 17th,
by the men who became known as the "Bear Flaggers" led by William
B. Ide. The exact creation date is at least somewhat unclear,
however, U. S. Naval Lieutenant John Missroon reported the flag's
existence as of June 17, 1846. California had been part of Mexico
since Mexican independence in 1821 as the department of Alta
California, and under the control of Spain for many years before
that.
The original Bear Flag and the republic it symbolized had a brief
career, from about June 14 until July 9. On July 7, 1846 Commodore
John Drake Sloat of the United States Navy's Pacific Squadron
first raised the 28-star American flag at Monterey, the capital of
Alta California, and claimed the territory for the United States.
This revived the earliest claims on California by his namesake,
Sir Francis Drake (in 1579), and made good American colonial
claims on the lands from the Atlantic to the Pacific, "from sea to
sea" in the 1600s.
Two days later, on July 9, 1846, Navy Lt. Joseph Warren Revere
arrived in Sonoma and hauled down the Bear Flag, running up in its
place the Stars and Stripes. The Bear Flag was given to young John
E. Montgomery (son of Commander John B. Montgomery of the USS
Portsmouth), who, would later write in a letter to his mother "Cuffy
came down growling"—"Cuffy" being his nickname for the bear on the
flag.
The Bear Flag given to young Montgomery returned with the USS
Portsmouth to the east coast of the U.S. in 1848, but in 1855 was
returned to California. This flag was donated to the Society of
California Pioneers on September 8, 1855 and was preserved at the
Society's Pioneer Halls in San Francisco until it was destroyed on
April 18, 1906 in the fires that followed the great San Francisco
earthquake. Today, a replica hangs on display in the Sonoma
Barracks, or El Presidio de Sonoma. There is also a statue in the
plaza of Sonoma, California commemorating the raising of the flag,
the Bear Flag Monument. (A fictionalized version of this site was
featured in the 2005 film The Legend of Zorro.)
The bear on the current Flag of California was modeled on the last
wild Californian Grizzly Bear in existence. The subspecies is now
extinct. The bear, named "Monarch", was captured at Samhain by
newspaper reporter Allen Kelley[5]. The bear was subsequently
moved to Woodwards Gardens in San Francisco. After the bear's
death in 1911, it was preserved at Academy of Sciences at Golden
Gate Park. |