User:Jnestorius/Flag of Arkansas

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

<Flag of Arkansas

History[edit]

Early proposals[edit]

At the Centennial Exposition in 1876, Arkansas was represented by a red flag with the state seal in the center.[1]

Sarah Ellsworth of Hot Springs informed 1911 convention in El Dorado of the Arkansas Federation of Women's Clubs that the General Federation of Women's Clubs recommended that a state's delegates carry its flag to the General Federation's convention, and that Arkansas had no flag.[2][3] The El Dorado convention recommended a design by Maie Davidson Moore, the wife of John Isaac Moore, a state senator and former acting governor. Ellsworth and Moore went to Little Rock to raise the matter with the Arkansas General Assembly, but found its biennial session was about to adjourn.[2][3]

zzz Possibly more in Hanger and Eno 1935.

Arkansas Travelogue[edit]

6th & 7th Arkansas regiment flag[4]

Self-published source:

John, Russ T. (1 August 2005). "The Arkansas State Flag". The Arkansas Travelogue. Archived from the original on 22 July 2012 – via aristotle.net.

Info:

  • Arkansas FWC for 1910 [sic: recte 1911?] national FWC convention in Cincinnati made blue flag with state seal, the default design of the age.
  • Civil War veteran Stan Harley in a letter to the Gazette, suggested using the flag of the combined 6th & 7th Arkansas Infantry Regiment.
  • After Cincinnati the FWC modified the design: 'the seal was moved to the upper left corner and in the center a "landscape medallion showing the chief assets of the state; a stream of water, green fields, an apple tree in full bloom, in the background the hills filled with mineral wealth.' Doesnt seem to be in online display of candidates; Archives had "on microfilm".
  • John Ike Moore's design was the Cincinnati one, not the modified one.
  • come back another day because that day's session was out of control
  • "The AFWC design was submitted and considered along with all the others"
  • Diamonds were discovered in 1906 so still fresh
  • Unveiled at 1914 Arkansas State Fair at Hot Springs. "Hocker cristened the flagpole with a bottle of Hot Springs mineral water. The band played Dixie and the Arkansas flag was raised."
  • "The state turned to Willie Hocker" for the 1924 rejig:
    • "lettering was moved up"
    • "The two blue stars just below the lettering were redesignated to symbolize Arkansas and Michigan"

Sources:

  • Harley, Stan; "Would Have Club Women Adopt Cleburne Flag"; letter to editor of Arkansas Gazette, 23 April 1910.
  • Jacobson, (senator); "Fight Promised Over Selection of Flag Design"; Arkansas Democrat, 28 Dec 1912, letter to editor.
  • "Committee Named to Select Flag Design"; Arkansas Democrat; December 1912.
  • Dawoody, W. L.; Arkansas Gazette, January 1913, letter to editor from Daughters of American Revolution.
  • "First Appearance of Flag"; Augusta Free Press; 13 March 1914.
  • Hocker, Willie; article in Pine Bluff Commercial; 11 May 1916.
  • "True Story of the State Flag"; from News of the AWFC reprinted in the Arkansas Gazette.
  • Herndon, Dallas; "Arkansas State Flag"; Arkansas Historical Review; vol. 1, #2, June 1934, p. 42.
  • Ingram, Norris; "The Flags of Arkansas", Arkansas Democrat; 21 October 1962, Magazine Section, pp. 1-2
  • Brown 1963

1913 adoption[edit]

Original flag presented by DAR to USS Arkansas in 1913.

[p.215] Early in 1912, the Pine Bluff Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, by a unanimous vote decided to present the new battleship Arkansas with a “Stand of Colors,” consisting of a United States flag, a naval battalion flag and an Arkansas State flag. To Mrs. C. W. Pettigrew belongs the honor of having originated this plan of flag giving. The acting regent of the chapter, Mrs. W. L. DeWoody, appointed a flag committee, consisting of Mrs. C. W. Pettigrew, Mrs. W. A. Taggart and Mrs. Frank Tomlinson. They wrote to the Secretary of State asking for a copy of the official State flag. He replied: “Arkansas has no State flag.” The Pine Bluff Chapter, D. A. R., then took the initiative in a movement to have the next (1913) General Assembly adopt a State flag. The flag committee caused to be published in the leading papers of the State an article asking artists and designers everywhere, particularly those of the State of Arkansas, to submit designs appropriate for a State flag to a committee of selection, consisting of not less than seven competent persons, who would, from the submitted designs, select the one most appropriate for a State flag, should an appropriate design be found among those submitted. The designs were to bear no mark of identification, but be accompanied by a typewritten explanation of the design, and by a sealed unmarked envelope containing another explanation, and the name and address of the designer. Mr. Earle W. Hodges, Secretary of State, consented to become the custodian of the submitted designs, and to name the committee of selection. The first committee met in the parlors of Hotel Marion, Little Rock, early in January, 1913. It consisted of the following named persons: Maj. Clifton R. Breckinridge, chairman; Prof. J. J. Doyne [former Superintendent of Education], secretary; Mr. George B. Rose (son of U. M. Rose), Gen. [p.216] Benjamin William Green, Col. Virgil Young Cook, Dr. Junius Jordan [former Superintendent of Education], Mrs. Julia McAlmont Noel and Mrs. Joseph Frauenthal (daughter-in-law of Max Frauenthal). They made no selection, but recommended that a committee be appointed to search the records of Arkansas to see if there ever had existed a regularly adopted State flag. This committee failed to find any such record. The second committee, consisting of Mr. Earle W. Hodges, chairman; Gen. B. W. Green, Dr. Junius Jordan, Mr. G. B. Rose, Mrs. Julia McAlmont Noel, Mrs. Jo Frauenthal, Sarah Ellsworth and Miss Julia Warner, met in the office of the Secretary of State and from the sixty-five submitted designs unanimously chose the design made by Miss Willie K. Hocker of Pine Bluff, a member of the D. A. R. Chapter that had taken the initiative in the flag adoption measure. On Saturday, February 14, 1913, Senator William Riley Phillips introduced a joint resolution to have the selected design adopted as Arkansas' official flag. The measure carried, and the following Tuesday, February 18, the House passed the resolution, and Arkansas had an official flag, regularly adopted by both houses of the General Assembly.

The design is a rectangular field of red, on which is placed a large white diamond, bordered by a wide band of blue — national colors. Across the diamond is the word “Arkansas” (placed there by request of the committee) and the blue stars, one above, two below the word. On the blue band are placed twenty-five white stars.

EXPLANATION OF DESIGN

This design has in it much of Arkansas' history as given below:

Arkansas is one of the United States, therefore the national colors are used.

The three blue stars typify the three nations, Spain, France and the United States, to whom Arkansas has successively belonged. Their number, three, indicates that Arkansas was the third State carved from the Louisiana Purchase Territory; this purchase is the greatest act yet performed by the United States. The three stars also indicate [p.217] the year (1803) when Arkansas became the property of the United States. The twenty-five white stars show that Arkansas was the twenty-fifth State in the order of admission to the Union. The State came into the Union paired with another State (Michigan); this is shown by the pair of stars on the lower angle of the blue band. Arkansas contains the only known diamond mine within the possession of the United States, therefore Arkansas should be known as "The Diamond State".

Resemblance to CSA battle flag?[edit]

Yes
  • Whitney Smith "The basic design and colours suggest the Battle Flag of the Confederacy".[5]
  • Kenneth C. Barnes calls the resemblance "obvious".[6]
  • Steven A. Knowlton: Flag of Arkansas is "more reminiscent"[7] and "more blatantly evocative"[8] of the Confederate flag than the Flag of Tennessee is, because it "repeats the angles of the rectangular version of the original".[7]
  • Derek Frisby: "Arkansas's 1912 flag appeared suggestive of the Confederacy".[9]
No
  • "Though the Arkansas state flag does not incorporate elements of the Confederate battle flag, it honors the Confederacy nevertheless."[10]
Unclear

"many southern state officials incorporated Confederate flag elements into their state flags (eg, Georgia 1879, Mississippi 1894, Alabama 1895, Arkansas 1923)"[11] Can't access directly so may just reference Coski 2005.

zzz does sos or encyclopedia comment?

1923–4[edit]

The resolutions adding and relocating the extra star were moved by Neill Bohlinger of Pulaski County, a member of the Ku Klux Klan who had been elected as a Democrat after a Klan primary.[6] In August 1924 the Arkansas Daughters of the Confederacy reported that a flag company in New York had refused to manufacture the new design.[6] For Barnes and Dougan, the location of the CSA star indicated its legitimacy and pre-eminence.[6][12] Preamble of SB715/2021 says, "In 1924, the General Assembly moved the star commemorating the state's historical membership in the Confederate States of America above the word "ARKANSAS" on the flag and placed the star commemorating the United States of America in subordination to it". This is reflected in the cover design of a 2021 University of Arkansas Press history of the Klan in 1920s Arkansas.[13]

Later[edit]

Arkansas law was codified in 1947 as the ASA (Arkansas Statutes Annotated). Despite being derived from resolutions rather than acts, the flag definition was included as ASA §zzz. The flag pledge was adopted in 1953 and inserted into the code as ASA §zzz.

In 1987 state senator William T. Moore (zzz perhaps a grandson of Isaac "Ike" Moore?) introduced a bill to restate the provisions of the 1913–24 resolutions in the form of an act.[14] Reasons for the restatement were the state sesquicentennial in 1986, during which numerous new state symbols were adopted, and a pending bill banning flag desecration.[14] The restatement bill passed unanimously in both houses of the assembly.[15] It and the desecration bill were signed into law by Bill Clinton, the Governor of Arkansas.[14] The same year, the ASA was replaced by the Arkansas Code Annotated (ACA) with ASA §Szzz becoming ACA §§zzz.

On 27 July 1999 aides to Rudy Giuliani, then Mayor of New York City and a prospective Republican candidate in the 2000 United States Senate election in New York, flew the Arkansas flag over New York City Hall.[16] Giuliani claimed this was to reciprocate the flying of the New York City flag at the Capital Hotel in Little Rock where he was campaigning; opponents claimed it was to present as a carpetbagger his likely Democratic opponent, Hillary Clinton, then U.S. First Lady.

A 2011 act formally specified that the Arkansas flag's red and blue were the same as those in the U.S. flag, called "Old Glory Red" and "Old Glory Blue". The act also required the state government to use U.S.-manufactured flags.

In 2013 the centenary of the flag was marked. February 26 was declared "Willie Kavanaugh Hocker Day" by resolutions of the state House and Senate.[17] On October 12 a memorial in Wabbaseka City Park was opened, with a plan in the shape of the flag's central diamond and flagpoles in three corners flying the 1913, 1923 and 1924 versions of the flag.[18]

During Hillary Clinton's 2016 presidential campaign, media pointed out that the 1987 act signed by Bill kept the Confederate symbolism of the fourth star, implying hypocrisy in both Clintons' later anti-Confederate statements.[15][19][14] Hillary Clinton supporters called shenanigans.[14]

Specifications[edit]

The state code does not specify the spacing or orientation of 25 stars etc. There must be a detailed regulation somewhere? Well, Zachary Harden notes inconsistencies [slanted white stars; blue stars bigger than white stars], which suggests otherwise.[20]

In the 1913 USS Arkansas flag:

  1. All stars (blue and white) point to top. This may be the flag which Harden says "flew over the USS Arkansas during WWII". He says its stars' orientation is exception.
  2. ARKANSAS is in tall thin letters with small serifs. Letters are bisected vertically (baselinecap height midpoint) by the horizontal axis of the diamond
The oldest two state flags in the Arkansas State Archives.[21] "The original [1913 silk] flag has been encased in glass since 1916".[21] Questions:
  1. check stars alignment in close-up picture from original article.[21] Harden says that in Hocker's design "the side star patterns were slanted" and Annin & Co., official flagmaker, does it thus.[20]
  2. Why make a silk version without ARKANSAS in the middle? Hocker's original was watercolour on paper, not silk. Maybe the committee's insistence on adding the name came after the DAR had made its first version?
  3. Second flag "Probably donated by Lewis E. Sawyer or Earle W. Hodges in about 1915 or 1916".[21] I thought ARKANSAS was mirror-image but larger photo confirms not so.

Derivatives[edit]

Seal of the Arkansas National Guard

Unlike the Tennessee flag, Arkansas' is not widely referenced in state-related graphic design culture;[7] perhaps because it is "too cluttered".[8]

The state flag was adopted in 1940 as the flag of the University of Arkansas.[22] Fans of the school's Razorbacks sports team prefer flags with its cardinal-and-white colors and razorback hog mascot.

Major influence on the flag of Faulkner County[23] and the seal of the state Judicial Discipline and Disability Commission.[24]

The diamond-and-stars element appears in the seal[24] and crest[25] of the Arkansas National Guard and the flag of Benton County.[26]

Local LGBT pride flags have been based on state flag, replacing either the outer red or inner white panels with the stripes of the rainbow flag.[27]

Sources[edit]

Primary
  • 1913 contest entries digitalheritage, Arkansas State Archives, Little Rock, Arkansas
    • G4543.70, Willie K. Hocker's Winning Flag design (Alignment of stars is wonky! This is a silk flag, not the watercolour. Is it the same as the 2018 restoration one?)
    • G45543.71, Arkansas First State Flag (Alignment of stars is differently wonky! Either 45543 or 4543 is wrong in this and previous reference)
    • Arkansas State Flag Competition entries, MS.000839 is reference for original drawings and covering letters: "It contains photocopied letters sent with the entries, two original notes, one original letter, four negatives of flags, and forty-three flag design drawings. There were sixty-five total submissions to the contest. This collection contains forty-three of those entries." More allude to diamond than Confederacy
  • Harris & Ewing (April 1924). "LC-H27-A-8270 [P&P] [Group holding Arkansas state flag]". Online Catalog. Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress. Retrieved 29 November 2021. [Note that all 4 blue stars point upward]
  • Harris & Ewing (16 September 1937). "LC-H27-A-8270 [P&P] [Left to right: Frank B. Steele, Judge Saul [?] M. Wa[...]ell, Rep. Sol Bloom, presenting Arkansas flag]". Online Catalog. Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress. Retrieved 29 November 2021. [Note that all lowest blue star points downward]
  • Arkansas Code Annotated [A.C.A.] §§ 1-4-101 ["State flag"], 1-4-102 ["Salute to state flag"], 5-51-208 ["Contempt for or desecration of the Arkansas flag"]
    • A.C.A. (2008) v.1 pp.46–47 has more notes re §§ 1-4-101/2, which correspond to Arkansas Statutes of 1947 Annotated [A.S.A.] §§ 5-107 and 5-108.
      • It says "former § 1-4-101 is deemed to be superseded" — does this refer to some change between 1987 and 2008? Maybe the original 1987 version of ACA §1-4-101 was being prepared in parallel with act 1987/116, and there was no formal act transposing the 1987/116 changes into ACA1987? In which case I guess there was no substantive difference between the two. See
        • Henderson II, Vincent C. (1988). "The Creation of the Arkansas Code of 1987 Annotated". U. Ark. Little Rock L. Rev. 11: 21–48. especially p.45 [§ VII.B.6: Effect of the Code on Other 1987 Legislation]:
          Section 3 of the Code Bill was intended to make certain that the adoption of the Code during the regular session of the General Assembly in 1987 would not be interpreted as amending or repealing other legislation passed during that session. In the event of any conflict, the Code gives way to the 1987 legislation. Further, the Commission was given authority to incorporate the 1987 legislation into the Code using the same standards as were used in creating the Code for arrangement, classification, numbering, and editing, and to compile the 1987 legislation for publication as part of the Code.
        • Act 1987/267 which adopted the ACA per a digest prepared 1984–7 by the Michie Company of Charlottesville, Virginia
    • A.C.A. (2005) v.3B p.7 has no more info re §5-51-208, but A.C.A. (2013) v.3B p.2 omits it, noting 31 ALR6th 333 (ie American Law Reports 6th series vol 31 pp. 333 et seq.)
      • Same A.C.A. page notes §5-51-207, re desecration of U.S. flag, was repealed in 2013
  • "Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 11" Acts of the Arkansas General Assembly. Sess. 39 (1913) p.1508 ["That said design prepared by said Miss Hocker be and the same is hereby adopted as a design for an official flag of this State"]
  • "House Concurrent Resolution 4" General Acts of the Arkansas General Assembly. Sess. 44 (1923) pp.815–6 ["a proper and fitting respect to the memory of the heroic men and women of that period, who by their matchless sacrifice and unprecedented feats of heroism on field of battle deserve due and proper recognition as does the cause they loved so well ... an additional star be added to the State flag" ]
  • "House Concurrent Resolution No. 11" Arkansas Acts (Second Special Session), 1924, pp. 27–28. (reprinted in Herndon 1925 pp.157–158) [rearrangement of four stars within the diamond; official symbolism of the flag are explicitly defined for the first time (though France, Spain and the United States as well as CSA are mentioned in preamble of 1923 resolution; and definition is prefaced "as stated by the original author and adopted, and amended in 1923" suggesting the 1913 resolution effected the adoption of the symobolism as well as the design)]
  • "House Concurrent Resolution No. 23", Arkansas Acts 1953, p. 1510; [salute]
  • Arkansas Acts 1987, No. 116, § 1 [Enacts resolutions 1913–24 (but not 1953)] — Where A.C.A. (2008) says "former § 1-4-101 is deemed to be superseded" does 116/1987 predate or effect this supersession?
  • Arkansas Acts 1995, No. 880, § 1 [desecration]
  • Arkansas Acts 2011, No. 1205, §§ 1, 2 [slight changes of punctuation to existing; additions are: specifies U.S. flag red and blue, and U.S. manufacture]
  • Arkansas Acts 2013, No. 1348, § 6 [repealing US flag but not Arkansas flag desecration]
  • House bills and resolutions (HB and HR) not enacted:
Secondary
  • Arkansas State Archives (27 June 2019). "Historic Arkansas State Flags Return after Conservation". Retrieved 28 June 2021.
  • Brown, Walter L. (1963). "Arkansas' Flag Is Fifty Years Old". The Arkansas Historical Quarterly. 22 (1): 3–7. doi:10.2307/40018938. ISSN 0004-1823. JSTOR 40018938.
    • Brown notes differences between 1913 and 1924 stated symbolism. He asserts that Hocker had changed her mind, but perhaps compatible with view that she assented to legislature's changes rather than instigating them herself.
  • Coski, John M. (2005). The Confederate battle flag : America's most embattled emblem. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. doi:10.4159/9780674029866. ISBN 9780674029866.
  • Daniels, Charlie; Ferguson, John (1997). "Protocol for the State Flag" (PDF). Little Rock: Secretary of State's Office.
    • Arkansas Secretary of State website has a section under "Arkansas History" called "History of the Arkansas State Flag" which appears to be a somewhat messy web conversion, with base page a summary of Ware 2019 (replacing the 1997 booklet's "Brief History" by Ferguson, Ware's predecessor as State Historian).
    • Chapters 1 Care (disposal — cut diamond from red field, then burn); 2 Display (approximately the same size as, but never larger than the U. S. Flag.); 3 Desecration (not used as clothing); 4 With other flags (after national flags, and before the flags of other states; before host state at Arkansas facility in other state); 5 mourning (When the Arkansas Flag is used to cover a casket, it should be placed so that the name "Arkansas" is legible to the viewers.); 6 On boats (starboard spreader);
    • Pledge by Virginia Belcher Brock; Flag Designer (school drawing paper and watercolors); also "County Formation Dates" and "Order of States' Admission" under this topic for no good reason
  • DeMillo, Andrew (20 March 2019). "Bid to strip Confederate link from Arkansas flag fails again". AP News. Retrieved 26 June 2021. [One opponent, Bob Freeman of Hot Springs, said the Native American tribes that would be commemorated were “vicious, murdering savages.”]
  • Hanger, Frances Marion Harrow; Eno, Clara Bertha (1935). "The Story of the State Flag". History of the Arkansas Federation of Women's Clubs, 1897-1934. Arkansas Federation of Women's Clubs. pp. 225 et seq.
  • Herndon, Dallas Tabor (1925) [1922]. "The Arkansas State Flag Adopted (1913)". The High Lights of Arkansas History (2nd ed.). Arkansas History Commission. pp. 156–158.
  • Hocker, Willie K. (1917). Reynolds, John Hugh (ed.). "A History of the Official Flag of Arkansas". Publications of the Arkansas Historical Association. IV. Conway: 207–209. OCLC 1085637188. (proposed "The Diamond State" as the state nickname)
  • Knowlton, Steven A. (2013). "Evocation and Figurative Thought in Tennessee Flag Culture". Raven: A Journal of Vexillology. 20: 23–53. doi:10.5840/raven2013203. ISSN 1071-0043.
  • Smith, Whitney (1975). The Flag Book of the United States. Morrow. ISBN 978-0-688-07977-2.
  • Ware, David (14 January 2019). "Official State Flag". Encyclopedia of Arkansas.
    • Secretary of State's Office protocal booklet "incorporates elements of the U.S. Flag Code and reflects common usage throughout the states"
  • Ware, David; Crawford, Julienne (15 April 2020). The [original] Arkansas state flag. Arkansas State Archives – via Facebook.

Citations[edit]

  1. ^ Smith 1975 p. 109
  2. ^ a b Eno, Clara B. (1943). "Some Accomplishments of Arkansas Federation of Women's Clubs". The Arkansas Historical Quarterly. 2 (3): 257. doi:10.2307/40030598. JSTOR 40030598.
  3. ^ a b Hudgins, Mary D. (1952). "Sarah Ellsworth: Maker of Arkansas History". The Arkansas Historical Quarterly. 11 (2): 112. doi:10.2307/40027492. ISSN 0004-1823. JSTOR 40027492.
  4. ^ "Consolidated 6th and 7th Arkansas Regiments Battle Flag". Google Arts & Culture. Retrieved 28 June 2021.
  5. ^ Smith, Whitney. "Flag of Arkansas". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 28 June 2021.
  6. ^ a b c d Barnes, Kenneth C. (4 March 2021). The Ku Klux Klan in 1920s Arkansas: How Protestant White Nationalism Came to Rule a State. University of Arkansas Press. p. 123. ISBN 978-1-61075-737-9.
  7. ^ a b c Knowlton 2013 p. 37
  8. ^ a b Knowlton 2013 p. 38
  9. ^ Frisby, Derek W. (5 October 2018). "The Confederate Flags". In Vile, John R. (ed.). The American Flag: An Encyclopedia of the Stars and Stripes in U.S. History, Culture, and Law. ABC-CLIO. p. 38. ISBN 978-1-4408-5789-8.
  10. ^ Dedman IV, James M. (Fall 2001). "At Daggers Drawn: The Confederate Flag and the School Classroom — A Case Study of a Broken First Amendment Formula". Baylor Law Review. 53 (4): 882.
  11. ^ Talbert, Ryan D.; Patterson, Evelyn J. (September 2020). "Racial Stratification and the Confederate Flag: Comparing Four Perspectives to Explain Flag Support". Race and Social Problems. 12 (3): 233–245. doi:10.1007/s12552-020-09288-y. S2CID 216466907.
  12. ^ Dougan, Michael B. (29 March 2019). "Flag on the play: Get cultural politics off banner". Arkansas Democrat-Gazette. Retrieved 28 June 2021.
  13. ^ "Cover Reveal: The Ku Klux Klan in 1920s Arkansas" (Press release). University of Arkansas Press. 24 September 2020. Retrieved 28 June 2021.
  14. ^ a b c d e Murphy, Patricia (12 July 2017). "The Clinton-Confederate Flag Conspiracy Theory Is a New Low". The Daily Beast. Retrieved 28 June 2021.
  15. ^ a b Nicholas, Peter (23 June 2015). "Bill Clinton, the Confederacy, and the Arkansas State Flag". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 28 June 2021.
  16. ^ Goodnough, Abby (29 July 1999). "Furor Over Flag Trails Giuliani on Visit to the South". The New York Times. p. B6. Retrieved 28 June 2021.
  17. ^ HR1014 2013 and SR13 2013
  18. ^ Worthen, John (12 October 2013). "Memorial honors '13 designer of state's flag". Northwest Arkansas Online. Retrieved 28 June 2021.; "About". Arkansas Flag Wabbaseka Memorial. 2014-03-10. Retrieved 28 June 2021.
  19. ^ Hall, Sam R. (11 October 2016). "Clinton campaign took notice of Gunn on state flag". The Clarion-Ledger. Retrieved 28 June 2021.
  20. ^ a b "Arkansas (U.S.)". Flags of the World. 1 May 2021. Retrieved 27 June 2021.
  21. ^ a b c d Roberts, Jeannie (13 November 2018). "Arkansas' original state flag among 2 set for $20,000 makeover". Arkansas Democrat-Gazette. Retrieved 27 June 2021.
  22. ^ "Board Policy 100.6" (PDF). University of Arkansas System. 8 November 1940. Retrieved 28 June 2021.
  23. ^ "Faulkner County, Arkansas (U.S.)". Flags of the World. 14 July 2019. Retrieved 27 June 2021.
  24. ^ a b "Arkansas Government and Department seals (U.S.)". Flags of the World. 1 May 2021. Retrieved 27 June 2021.
  25. ^ "National Guard State Crests : Arkansas". U.S. Army Heraldry. United States Army Institute of Heraldry. Retrieved 27 June 2021.
  26. ^ "Benton County, Arkansas (U.S.)". Flags of the World. 1 May 2021. Retrieved 27 June 2021.
  27. ^ "Arkansas Gay Flag (U.S.)". Flags of the World. 8 August 2015. Retrieved 27 June 2021.; "Gay Pride Variations of U.S. Flags". Flags of the World. 8 August 2015. p. 2 § "Arkansas Rainbow Flag". Retrieved 27 June 2021.