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image by Tomislav Todorovic, 24 January 2025
The 1957 flag was modified in 1983, along with the seal
Tomislav Todorovic, 2 January 2025
Changes made in 1983:
image by Clay Moss, 2 February 2009
Minnesota Statutes
1.141 Official state flag.
Subdivision 3. Description. The design of the flag shall conform substantially to the following description:
The staff is surmounted by a bronze eagle with outspread wings; the flag is rectangular in shape and is on a medium blue background with a narrow gold border and a golden fringe. A circular emblem is contained in the center of the blue field. The circular emblem is on a general white background with a yellow border. The word MINNESOTA is inscribed in red lettering on the lower part of the white field. The white emblem background surrounding a center design contains 19 five pointed stars arranged symmetrically in four groups of four stars each and one group of three stars. The latter group is in the upper part of the center circular white emblem. The group of stars at the top in the white emblem consists of three stars of which the uppermost star is the largest and represents the north star. A center design is contained on the white emblem and is made up of the scenes from the great seal of the state of Minnesota, surrounded by a border of intertwining Cypripedium reginae, the state flower, on a blue field of the same color as the general flag background. The flower border design contains the figures 1819, 1858, 1893. The coloring is the same on both sides of the flag, but the lettering and the figures appear reversed on one side.Joe McMillan, 14 February 2000
The flag of Minnesota has the state seal in its center. Around the seal is a wreath of the state flower , the lady slipper. Three dates are woven into the wreath.
1858 - the year Minnesota became a state,
1819 - the year Fort Snelling was established and
1893 - the year the official flag was adopted.
The largest star between the 19 stars on the wreath represents Minnesota.
Dov Gutterman, 7 October 1998
The most common color seen in Minnesota is lighter than shown here, usually a royal blue - PMS 286, though it may not be official. Minnesota is a Dakota word meaning approximately sky tinged or tinted waters. That is, waters the color of the sky. Minne = water, sota=sky color. The Dakota largely inhabited the Minnesota country until the 1700-1800's when the Objiwe moved west because of American settlers and they took over about the top half of what is
today Minnesota (they had guns).
The official color is the color of the flag produced for the legislative committee when the flag was adopted (both 1957 & 1983) and by law held by the Minnesota Secretary of State. I have approached the Secretary of State of Minnesota, Joan Growe, and later Mary Kiffmayer
(now Mark Ritchie since the 2006 election), and they had no idea what I was
referring to, and no idea where the flag is. I believe that means there is no official color, nor is there an official version of the flag. The State Seal is, however, official and released by the Sec. of State. I expect to approach the new Sec of State sometime this spring to see if he can find the flag. Minnesota Secretary of State website: www.sos.state.mn.us/student/symbols.html
Lee Herold, 21 March 2007
The Minnesota flag is heavy in detail. The version shown is the 1957-1983 flag with the Indian being driven into the sunset. Since 1983 we are "more enlightened". A couple of other details added in 1983 (going back to the
original seal from 1858) was an axe in the stump and removing the farmers boots (I don't know any farmer who ever plowed a field barefoot, but I wasn't around in 1858). Not to be nit-picky but the inner yellow circle is actually not a solid line but a series of yellow dots, each fimbriated in red. The outer yellow ring is a solid line.
As to your real question, the color is royal blue, and though it varies by manufacturer and even varies from the same manufacturer the blue I believe is closest to correct is not far from the "FOTW flag", never as light as UN blue, never very dark. The Minnesota Secretary of State is by law to have the original flag as adopted by the legislature but on my trip there, they do not have it. The flag in the Governor's office is royal blue, which I believe could be the official flag, missing from the Sec of State.
Lastly, the seal changed unofficially sometime in the 1950s, where the Indian disappeared to be replaced by a white man with a rifle. A have a copy of this seal yet which was used by several State Departments, including the Dept of Revenue, who put it on every tax return form into the 1980's. This variant was never used on the flag.
Lee Herold, 4 February 2009
A good large format rendition of the flag can be found at Wikipedia.
Lee Herold, 22 April 2009
The 1957 flag was designed specifically to lower the cost of the two-sided flag. The committee to come up with a new design proposal was limited to retaining the basic design of the current flag (i.e. the State Seal). The State law requires the Minnesota Secretary of State to keep the committee's sample and give out information about the flag when requested. Of course, the Secretary of State does not have the flag, and has no information about it. The shade of blue and other particulars are therefore to be according to the missing sample. The State of Minnesota always orders flags in royal blue.
The 1983 version has a new State Seal.
Lee Herold, 13 September 2005
The seal on Minnesota's flag has 19 stars (forming a large star) around it because it was the 19th state added after independence.
Nathan Bliss, 28 March 1996
image by Tomislav Todorovic, 10 January 2025
In 1957, a design for the state flag was proposed in the Minnesota House of
Representatives: a red-white-blue vertical tricolor, with 19 gold stars arranged
in a star-shape pattern on white field, the second-uppermost star larger than
the others; as in the state flag adopted that year, the stars symbolized
Minnesota as the 19th state admitted after the original 13, the larger star
having represented the North Star. The flag was created by Representative John
Tracy Anderson, who submitted the proposal to the House, and Major General
Joseph E. Nelson, the then Adjutant General of the Minnesota National Guard. The
proposal was rejected by the House, probably also because the state Senate had
already adopted the blue flag with the seal, which would eventually be adopted
by the House as well.
A black and white photo of the flag was published
in the Minneapolis Star daily newspaper on 1957-03-13. A colorized derivation
presented by the cited source suggests that the stars were fimbriated red, which
was also applied to an image presenting the reconstructed design in full color.
However, that detail seems to be incorrect: reddish pixels are not present in
all the stars and most notably, they do not appear in the largest one, where
such a fimbriation would have been the most recognizable. Even more importantly,
in the original photo, the stars lack groupings of dark dots which would reveal
the fimbriations (most notably, the largest star lacks them), while in the photo
of the eventually adopted flag which was published within the same article, the
contrast between the light dots within the stars and the dark dots along their
edges is easily recognizable in most of the visible stars, even though they
appeared smaller on the paper than those in the rejected flag. This is why the
stars are drawn without the fimbriations in the reconstruction presented here,
while the shades of gold, blue and red are the same as in the reconstructed
image from the source site, because when converted to grayscale, relative
brightness of the shades of gray seems to correspond well to those from the
source image, although those are all darker, possibly due to the age of original
photo and all processes (such as copying and/or scanning) applied during
creation of the digitized image.
Source:
The North Star Flag website -
Rep. Anderson's Design:
https://mnflag.tripod.com/anderson.html
Tomislav Todorovic, 5
January 2025
Before 1957 the Minnesota flag was a white field with the state arms, ribbon, and stars across the field. The reverse was supposed to be plain blue. Like Massachusetts, this was very expensive to produce. In 1957 the flag was made blue (both sides) with a white disk in the center with the state arms. The 1957 design was slightly altered in the late 1980's to make the flag conform to the state seal.
Nick Artimovich, 31 July 1996
The designer of the first Minnesota flag was Mrs. Amelia Center, in 1893. It was unique in the fact that the obverse was a white field, and the reverse a blue field. In 1957 it was simplified to a blue field on both sides (& other simplifications) and in 1983 changed again. However, all based on the original design by Mrs. Center.
Lee Herold, 14 May 1997
The State legislature of 1893, by Chapter 16, provided for a state flag. Mrs. Franklyn L. Greenleaf, Mrs. A. A. White, Mrs. Edward Durant, Mrs. F.B. Clarke, Mrs. H. F. Brown and Mrs. A. T. Stebbins were by this act named a commission to
select an appropriate design. This commission called for designs, and on Feb. 28, 1893 met and adopted the design presented by Mrs. Edward H. Center, of Minneapolis. Following is a description of the flag: "The ground is of white silk, and the reverse of blue silk, bordered with bullion fringe. In the center is the state seal, wreathed with white moccasin flowers, on a blue ground. The red ribbon of the seal bearing a motto is continued through the wreath, entwining the blossoms and floating carelessly over the lower portion of the flag. It bears, in gold, the dates 1819, the time of the settlement of Minnesota, and 1893. Above, also in gold, is the date 1858, the time of the admission of Minnesota to the Union. Below the design, in gold letters, is wrought 'Minnesota.' Grouped around the seal are nineteen stars in the design of star points, with the North Star, significant of the North Star State, in a group of three at the top." The choice of the number nineteen is a peculiarly happy one, as Minnesota was the nineteenth state, after the original thirteen, to be admitted to the Union. The standard (see note) to the flag was surmounted by a golden gopher, and tied with a gold cord and tassel. The execution of the design is entirely in needle work.
Ben Cahoon, 27 June 2003
Note: "Standard" in this context meaning the staff, which makes the golden gopher the finial--undoubtedly one of the few flags ever to have a rodent designated as a finial. (One of Minnesota's nicknames is the
"Gopher State," and the sports teams of the University of Minnesota are known as the "Golden Gophers.")
Joe McMillan, 27 June 2003
image from Wikipedia
Minnesota Statutes
1.135 State seal.
Subdivision 3. Design. The design of the seal is as described in this subdivision.
image
located by BlinxCat, 25 November 2021
This Bizarre state flag is shown on This link:
https://www.house.leg.state.mn.us/sessiondaily/SDView.aspx?StoryID=8010 and
appears as a purple "SOB" with the official state seal on it, however this is
absolutely not the state flag at all. It's clearly a poorly made one remade from
probably a description of the flag, purple is a common color in Minnesotan
culture so it's likely this design was using some very dubious source. The URL
only mentions it as the "Minnesota state flag" and not a proposal, as no hints
to this flag are found on the proposals list, my best guess in the end is a poor
reconstruction, it uses the actual state seal rather than the one used on the
flags made in reality, however
a hyperlink on the page brings you to this
link:
https://www.leg.mn.gov/webcontent/leg/symbols/MNflag.jpg and shows a more
normal looking flag but with a much smaller emblem.
BlinxCat, 25
November 2021
image
located by BlinxCat, 21 October 2023
I present an odd variant of the Minnesotan state flag, which has what I assume
is an erroneous variant of the state seal. The actual flag and seal depict the
Mississippi River and St. Anthony Falls on the right of the seal.
However, this variant I own eliminates not only some of the state's minor
details but completely removes the river and falls from the design and instead
places a white fort(?)-like structure in it's place. I am not aware of any other
similar variants. I purchased this flag from an online flag store earlier this
month and did not notice the mishap until I looked closer.
BlinxCat, 21
October 2023