A Mississippi Flag

Championhilz

Sergeant Major
Forum Host
Joined
Mar 18, 2011
Location
Clinton, Mississippi
I found the following article in the Oxford Intelligencer (Oxford, Mississippi) December 5, 1860 - Even before the secession convention met and chose a state flag in January 1861, enterprising Mississippians were designing their own:

"There now floats from the top of the Masonic Hall, over the Intelligencer office, as handsome a flag, we venture to say, as can be found. It is a flag of fifteen stripes, and in place of the blue field with its galaxy of stars, there is substituted a single star, on the right and near the top; a magnolia tree, and a rattlesnake coiled, with the motto Noli me tangere - 'do not tread on me.' The design is unique and appropriate; the execution is highly laudable, and the ladies and gentlemen who were concerned in getting it up, deserve the highest praise. We, in common with our fellow-citizens generally, return our grateful thanks to them. Mississippians can ask no prouder banner to point the way to victory; and, for one, we promise that, if, in spite of the ominous warning that have been given, our enemies still threaten to place the heel of aggression upon us, we are willing to follow that flag to battle, to strike for our rights, and to return with it, wreathed in victory, or to return no more."

"Forever float that standard sheet,
Where breathes the foe but falls before us;
With freedom's soil beneath our feet,
And freedom's banner waving o'er us"
 
Ironically enough people who want to change from the 1894 flag are offering the 1861 flag.

They don't want Confederate iconography in the state flag, but want to replace it with the straight-forward Confederate iconography the secessionists used.

When I was last out there I bought the 1894 flag.
 
Great find.

I was not aware of this flag.

It's pretty similar in spirit to the Yellowhammer over in Alabama.

Or what Tennessee used:

1645px-Tennessee_1861_proposed.svg.png
 

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Ironically enough people who want to change from the 1894 flag are offering the 1861 flag.

They don't want Confederate iconography in the state flag, but want to replace it with the straight-forward Confederate iconography the secessionists used.

When I was last out there I bought the 1894 flag.


I think that has more to do with how the CBF was used in the 1960s rather than the 1860s. It is an interesting twist on things and a bit ironic. I actually like the Magnolia Flag design. It's uniquely Mississippi.
 
I think that has more to do with how the CBF was used in the 1960s rather than the 1860s. It is an interesting twist on things and a bit ironic. I actually like the Magnolia Flag design. It's uniquely Mississippi.

Mississippi's current flag however predates the Civil Rights Movement, by 70 years.

I have doubts it will change.
 
Mississippi's current flag however predates the Civil Rights Movement, by 70 years.

I have doubts it will change.

I don't think it will change either.

Yes, the current flag predates the civil rights era, but appeared 4 years after the 1890 state constitution which disenfranchised black Mississippians, but not many people know that. However, I think the objection relates to the use of the CBF after the 1940s and into the late 1960s.
 

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