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All Over The Map: Happy 100th birthday to the WA state flag

Jun 14, 2023, 10:23 AM

Today is Flag Day, the holiday recognized by the federal government to commemorate June 14, 1777, when the U.S. flag was adopted by the Second Continental Congress.

It鈥檚 also a great excuse to look at the history of our own Washington state flag, which made its formal debut in Seattle on this day in 1923.

Territorial Seal of 1854

奥补蝉丑颈苍驳迟辞苍听became a state in 1889. Before that, Washington Territory聽was carved from Oregon Territory in 1853. The territory, which of course had been Native land for millennia, had an official seal for documents and ceremonial purposes, but it probably did not have a flag.

Historian Edmond S. Meany described the territorial seal in a Seattle Times article published on April 1, 1923.

鈥淚n territorial days, the state had a seal which was designed by Lieutenant Duncan of the United States Army,鈥 Meany told the Times. 鈥淭he seal portrayed a girl holding a cornucopia from which was flowing the wealth of the state [trees, a cabin, a covered wagon, an anchor, buildings, mountains]. About the girl鈥檚 head was the Indian word “Al-ki,” which means 鈥榖y and by鈥 [or, eventually].鈥

State Seal of 1889

With statehood approaching in 1889, a committee came up with a design for a state seal. They went to Olympia jewelers, the Talcott Brothers, for help making a die for embossing documents.

Writing in 1939 in Building a State, a book published by , 80-year old George Talcott said that what the committee proposed in 1889 was too complicated, depicting 鈥渢he port of Tacoma, vast wheat fields, [and] sheep grazing in the valley at the foot of Mount Rainier.鈥

George Talcott said that his brother Charles told the committee that their design would get outmoded, so Charles used an ink bottle and then a silver dollar to trace concentric circles. He then stuck a postage stamp of George Washington in the middle of it, and wrote the words, 鈥淭he Seal of the State of Washington, 1889.鈥

The committee took Charles鈥檚 advice, but it then fell to George Talcott to actually cut the die.

George Talcott wrote that the cutting was 鈥… done under difficulties. It was my first attempt to cut a die to emboss a person鈥檚 picture, and it was done under rush orders. To further complicate matters, I had a sick headache. All in all, it was a difficult combination with which to contend. I really believe a much better piece of work would have been turned out under normal conditions. The picture of Washington was copied from an advertisement of [the 19th century patent medicine] Dr. Janes鈥 (sic)聽!鈥

Given how it turned out, perhaps he was a little too hard on himself.

Creating the State Flag, 1914-1923

Twenty years went by, and by 1909, Washington was one of maybe a half-dozen states that still had no official flag. Then, sometime between 1909 and 1914, a movement was hatched to change that.

It might have had something to do with the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition, or 鈥淎YPE,鈥 the world鈥檚 fair held on the UW campus in 1909. Or it may have been due to the efforts of then Governor Ernest Lister, who sponsored a contest to design a state flag.

The turning point may have been in 1914, when the national office of the Daughters of the American Revolution, or the D.A.R., requested from D.A.R. chapters here a Washington state flag to hang ,聽which is the organization鈥檚 ornate headquarters in Washington DC, that were constructed around that time.

A statewide D.A.R. committee was formed in Washington, and they came up with a design featuring that original 鈥榟eadache-induced鈥 state seal on a green background, and surrounded by gold fringe.

They then had a three-by-five-foot banner made in Washington D.C., displayed at the D.A.R.鈥檚 Memorial Continental Hall in 1915. Then, the Washington state Elks fraternal organization borrowed the banner for a big event held in Everett in 1916, which is where and when the banner made its home state debut.

It鈥檚 not clear where it went after that, but in 1923, this D.A.R. banner served as the model for what was adopted as the official state flag by the Washington Legislature in March 1923. While the banner is meant to be displayed in what would now be called 鈥減ortrait鈥 format, the state flag design was meant to be displayed in 鈥渓andscape鈥 format.

And, in what feels like wishful thinking given the divide that sometimes seems to exist between one side of the Cascades and the other, Washington State Senator Guy B. Groff of Spokane, one of the sponsors of the 1923 flag bill, said that the green area on the flag represented 鈥渢he verdant fields of Western Washington,鈥 and the gold (in the ring around George Washington) represented the 鈥渨heat areas of Eastern Washington.鈥

Either way, the banner was officially presented as the new state flag on April 5, 1923 at a big D.A.R. meeting in Yakima. The state law adopting the design took effect on June 7, 1923, so a week later, on Flag Day 1923, the D.A.R had a big to-do with the banner at a member鈥檚 home in Seattle, with songs and speeches and, one can assume, some pretty amazing refreshments.

If all that weren鈥檛 enough, in 1928, that original banner was put on display at the Capitol in Olympia, where it remained for almost a century.

However, according to the D.A.R.鈥檚 state historian Shirley Stirling, in recent years, the original banner became so deteriorated, it鈥檚 now been put away into protective storage. At the request of , the D.A.R. has privately funded an effort to create a painstaking identical replica. The new banner is being in Oregon, and it could be ready as soon as later this year or maybe next year, but hopefully in time for the Washington state flag centennial in 2023.

There are a few other odds and ends that are worth mentioning on this Flag Day 2019.

The man who raised a “mystery flag” when Washington became a state

William Hunteman died at age 74 in Seattle in June 1939. His obituary at the time said that as a U.S. Army soldier in Walla Walla in November 1889, Hunteman 鈥減articipated in the statehood inauguration ceremonies, raising the state flag for the first time.鈥 It鈥檚 unclear what that flag would have looked like, and it suggests further research might reveal some interesting information.

They put a (Washington state) flag on the Moon

A miniature Washington state flag went to the surface of the moon aboard Apollo 17 in December 1972; astronaut Alan Bean presented it to Governor Dan Evans (attached to plaque along with a moon rock) in January 1974.

Talcott Jewelers

Talcott Jewelers, makers of that headache-induced state seal, after being in business in Olympia for an incredible 131 years.

Happy Flag Day!

You can hear Feliks every Wednesday and Friday morning on Seattle鈥檚 Morning News with Dave Ross and Colleen O鈥橞rien, read more from him鈥here, and subscribe to The Resident Historian Podcast聽here. If you have a story idea, please email Feliks鈥here.

Editor’s Note: This story was originally published June 14, 2019

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All Over The Map: Happy 100th birthday to the WA state flag