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Polyester US State Flag of Florida
The flag of Florida consists of a red saltire (diagonal cross) on a white background, with the seal of Florida superimposed on the center. The design was approved by a popular referendum in 1900. The flag design has been in use since 1985 after the state seal was modified and officially sanctioned for use by state officials.
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Polyester US State Flag of Georgia
The flag of Georgia (adopted on May 8 2003) has three red & white stripes with the state coat of arms on a blue field in the upper left corner. In the coat of arms the arch symbolizes the state's Constitution and the pillars represent the 3 branches of government: legislative, executive, & judicial. The words of the state motto, "Wisdom, Justice, Moderation," are wrapped around the pillars, guarded by a male figure dressed in Colonial (soldier of the American Revolution) with a drawn sword. "In God We Trust" appears under these elements though it is not part of the state seal nor coat of arms, and thirteen stars represent Georgia and the 12 other original states that formed the United States of America.
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Polyester US State Flag of Idaho
The flag of Idaho consists of the state seal on a field of blue. The words "State of Idaho" appear in gold letters on a red and gold band below the seal. The seal in the center of the flag depicts a miner and a woman representing equality, liberty and justice. The symbols on the seal represent some of Idaho's natural resources: mining, forests, farmland, and wildlife. The flag was based on a design of a flag carried by the First Idaho Infantry in 1899 during the Spanish-American War, and was adopted on March 12, 1907, and slightly modified in 1957.
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Polyester US State Flag of Illinois
The flag of the state of Illinois (designed in 1912 by Lucy Derwent in response to a contest held by the Daughters of the American Revolution) passaged in the Illinois State House and Senate on July 6 1915 but Governor Edward F. Dunne did not sign nor veto the bill. The current flag depicts the Great Seal of Illinois. In the eagle's beak there is a banner with the state motto, "State Sovereignty, National Union." The dates on the seal, 1818 and 1868 represent the year Illinois became a state and the year in which the Great Seal was redesigned by Sharon Tyndale. Although "State Sovereignty" comes first in the motto, Illinois was recently victorious American Civil War on the Union side, fighting against state sovereignty, so Tyndale placed "State" at the bottom and "Sovereignty" upside-down.
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