Florida State Flag
Florida's flag had a non-native tree and mountains on a flat state for 117 years. The red cross was added in 1900 so it wouldn't look like surrender. Here's what each element means and why the seal changed.
Florida State Flag
Official State Flag of Florida
- Red cross added
- November 6, 1900 — approved by popular vote
- Vote count
- 5,088 to 3,819
- Who proposed the cross
- Governor Francis P. Fleming — former Confederate officer
- First official flag
- 1868 — state seal on plain white field
- Seal errors 1868–1985
- Cocoa palm (non-native), mountains (Florida has none), Seminole headdress (inaccurate)
- Seal corrected
- May 21, 1985 — artist John Locastro, Governor Bob Graham
- Color values in law
- Not specified — no Cable or Pantone values in Florida statute
- NAVA design ranking
- 34th among North American flags (2001)
The Surrender Problem, the Vote, and the 117-Year Seal Error
Florida's first official state flag came from the 1868 Constitutional Convention: the state seal on a plain white field. It served Florida for 32 years. The problem was visual. When the flag hung without wind, the white field with a small central seal was indistinguishable from a flag of truce.
Governor Francis P. Fleming raised the issue in the 1890s. Fleming had fought in the Civil War as a Confederate officer and recognized the problem immediately. He proposed adding a red cross. Senator Thomas Palmer introduced a joint resolution in 1899 to add diagonal red bars — St. Andrew's Cross. The Senate passed it unanimously on May 18; the House followed on May 31. Florida voters ratified the amendment on November 6, 1900, by a vote of 5,088 to 3,819. Florida's flag design is one of the few in the country approved by popular vote.
The seal at the center of the cross carried three errors from 1868 until 1985. The original design included a cocoa palm — a tree not native to Florida — standing where a sabal palmetto should have been. It showed mountains in the background of a state with no mountains. And it depicted a Seminole woman wearing a headdress that Seminole historians noted was culturally inaccurate. In 1985, Governor Bob Graham and the Cabinet commissioned artist John Locastro to correct the seal. Locastro replaced the cocoa palm with a sabal palmetto, removed the mountains, and removed the headdress. The revised flag was officially adopted on May 21, 1985.
What the Cross and Seal Say About Florida
The red saltire's primary documented purpose is functional: it prevents the flag from looking like a surrender banner. The historical context matters too. Governor Fleming was a former Confederate officer, and the diagonal cross he championed bears a clear visual resemblance to the Confederate battle flag. The 1900 adoption came during the height of the Jim Crow era in Florida. Historians note both facts — the practical reason and the political moment — without treating one as exclusive of the other.
The seal carries Florida's founding-era symbols, corrected in 1985 to match what Florida actually is. The sabal palmetto is the state's actual tree. The Seminole woman represents Florida's indigenous presence without the cultural inaccuracy of the earlier headdress. The steamboat represents 19th-century commerce on Florida's extensive waterways. The sun rays connect to the state's climate — Florida averages more sunshine than any other continental state.
Florida statute does not assign official meaning to the white field and does not specify exact color values for any element of the flag. The white functions as a neutral background, not a symbol with a stated meaning in law.
The Cross, the Seal, the Field — What Each Means
Red Saltire
A red saltire — St. Andrew's Cross — extends diagonally from each corner toward the center. The bars measure one-fifth the hoist in width. The design was added in 1900 specifically to prevent the flag from appearing as a surrender banner when hanging still.
The saltire was proposed by Governor Francis Fleming, a former Confederate officer. Many historians note its visual resemblance to the Confederate battle flag and the timing of its 1900 adoption during the Jim Crow era. Florida statute addresses neither connection.
State Seal
The state seal occupies the center of the flag where the saltire bars meet. Its diameter measures one-half the hoist. The seal was established in 1868 and corrected in 1985.
The current seal shows a Seminole woman scattering flowers by the shore, a sabal palmetto tree, a steamboat on water, and sun rays. The words Great Seal of the State of Florida: In God We Trust circle the image. Three elements from the original 1868 seal — the cocoa palm, the mountains, and the Seminole headdress — were removed in 1985 as geographically or culturally inaccurate.
White Field
A white field covers the entire flag background. Florida statute does not assign an official meaning to the white, nor does it specify an exact shade.
Before 1900, the white field alone was the entire flag — just the seal on white. The all-white design was the visual problem that led to the saltire's addition.
Two Primary Colors, No Statutory Values
Florida's flag uses white and red as its two primary colors. Florida statute specifies neither Cable nor Pantone values for either. The seal adds gold, green, brown, tan, and blue for its internal elements — none are defined by color code in state law.
The absence of statutory specifications means the red shade varies between manufacturers. Florida is among the minority of states that have not codified exact color values into law.
Florida's Flags From Statehood to 1985
Moseley Flag
Unofficial flag with five horizontal stripes and a 'Let us alone' ribbon, flown at Governor Moseley's inauguration. Never officially adopted.
Lone Star Flag
Unofficial flag raised by Colonel William H. Chase at the Pensacola Navy Yard in early 1861. Thirteen red and white stripes with a single white star on a blue canton.
Secession Flag
Unofficial secession flag presented to Governor Madison S. Perry and displayed at the Capitol during the signing of the Ordinance of Secession.
Civil War State Flag
Florida's first official state flag, adopted following secession. The design was recorded from a written description; it is unknown whether the flag was ever physically flown.
Seal on White
Florida's post-Civil War state flag: state seal on a plain white field, as directed by the 1868 Constitutional Convention. The all-white field prompted the 1900 redesign. The seal at this stage already contained the cocoa palm, mountains, and headdress that would persist until 1985.
Red Cross Flag
Red saltire added to white field with the 1868 seal. Adopted after voter approval on November 6, 1900, by 5,088 to 3,819. The seal's errors — cocoa palm, mountains, headdress — remained throughout this period.
Current Flag
Corrected seal: sabal palmetto replacing cocoa palm, mountains removed, Seminole headdress removed. Commissioned by Governor Bob Graham, executed by artist John Locastro. Officially adopted May 21, 1985.
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