Alabama
Arkansas
Mississippi
Are the three states that have reference to the confederacy in their state flags. Do we care?
Add Florida, Georgia, Tennessee and North Carolina. 7 in total, as well as a few state seals and coat of arms and such.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2015/06/21/how-the-confederacy-lives-on-in-the-flags-of-seven-southern-states/
As I asked a few days ago....where do we draw the line? Are roads to be next?
If you read the descriptions of the various flags and what the symbols represent in each, only the three I listed mention the confederacy in it. For example the NC flag (where I was born and raised) is as follows:
A blue union, containing in the center thereof a white star with the letter "N" in gilt on the left and the letter "C" in gilt on the right of said star, the circle containing the same to be one-third the width of the union.
We were never taught anything about it being a representation of the confederacy. We WERE taught about the various designs and the different versions. Some of the very early versions had dates from Civil war events
Um, read it again. Georgia and Florida both are very much based on Confederate flags, and Tennessee has it's ties as well.
Georgia - "In 2002, Sonny Perdue was elected Governor of Georgia, partly by
promising voters a referendum on the new flag. In the end, the legislature changed it to a new design: it consists of the
first national flag of the Confederacy (the "Stars and Bars") with the addition of the Georgia seal."
Florida - "Florida's flag is similar to Alabama's, consisting of a state seal over a red cross. The cross was added to the flag a few years after Alabama adopted its flag,
at the suggestion of Governor Francis P. Fleming. Fleming
had enlisted in the Confederate army in his youth, and some historians see his choice of the cross as
an attempt to memorialize the confederacy."
Tennessee - "The Tennessee Legislature adopted the current flag in 1905. In a 2013
article,
vexillologist Steven A Knowlton argues that "the Tennessee flag has pragmatic unity with the Confederate flag: both share the element of white stars inside a fimbriated blue charge, and the element of that blue charge on a red field." He also notes a resemblance between the flag's vertical bars and the vertical bar of the
third national flag of the Confederacy."