Last modified: 2023-09-02 by rick wyatt
Keywords: united states | confederate | csa | polk pattern |
Links: FOTW homepage |
search |
disclaimer and copyright |
write us |
mirrors
On this page:
See also:There were six (or more) different basic design styles of Confederate Army Military Flags. As the flex and flow of military necessity effected the organization and reorganization of Confederate forces, so did the designs of their flags. A couple of examples of this would be in the Vicksburg Defense a subgroup of flags came into being that featured white crosses instead of blue, in Missouri and Louisiana a design subgroup with a Christian Cross design became popular. Faced with this we will divide them into groups. Some of these groups will be the Stars and Bars Pattern, the St. Andrews Cross Pattern (Southern Cross with a white flag border), the Army of Tennessee Pattern (Southern Cross without a white flag border), the Van Dorn Pattern, the Hardee Pattern, and the Polk Pattern. The last three are named for the Confederate Commanders who first designed (or had designed) the basic Regimental flag design to be used by the units under their command.
Most of the flags on this page use the Polk Pattern favored especially by the Army of Tennessee, commanded by the fiery and controversial Confederate General Leonidas Polk. It was issued to his units beginning in January of 1862. It incorporates eleven white stars on a red St. George's Cross on a blue field.
Pete Loeser, 26 August 2023
image courtesy of Hugh Warner, United States Flag Service
This modern illustration shows the use of eleven white stars on a red St. George's Cross on a blue field used with the Polk Pattern.
Source: Historical Flags of Our Ancestors.
Pete Loeser, 26 August 2023