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Flag of California

The Bear Flag is the official flag of the U.S. state of California.[1] The precursor of the flag was first flown during the 1846 Bear Flag Revolt and was also known as the Bear Flag. A predecessor, called the Lone Star Flag, was used in an 1836 independence movement;[2] the red star element from that flag appears in the Bear Flag of today.[3]

Bear Flag
Flag of California
The Bear Flag
UseCivil and state flag, state ensign
Proportion2:3
AdoptedFebruary 3, 1911; 113 years ago (1911-02-03) (standardized 1953)
DesignA single red star in the canton, a red stripe along the bottom, and a California grizzly bear atop a mound of green grass defacing a white field.
Designed byDonald Graeme Kelley, based on flag flown during the Bear Flag Revolt

Current flag edit

 
The flag on display at the California State Capitol.

Law and protocol edit

The 1911 statute stated:

The bear flag is hereby selected and adopted as the state flag of California. ... The said bear flag shall consist of a flag of a length equal to one and one-half the width thereof; the upper five-sixths of the width thereof to be a white field, and the lower sixth of the width thereof to be a red stripe; there shall appear in the white field in the upper left-hand corner a single red star, and at the bottom of the white field the words 'California Republic,' and in the center of the white field a California grizzly bear upon a grass plat, in the position of walking toward the left of the said field; said bear shall be dark brown in color and in length, equal to one-third of the length of said flag.

In 1953, the design and specifications for the state flag were standardized in a bill signed by Governor Earl Warren and illustrated by Donald Graeme Kelley of Marin County, California.[4] The Californian state flag is often called the "Bear Flag" and in fact, the present statute adopting the flag, California Government Code § 420, states: "The Bear Flag is the State Flag of California."

Pursuant to Section 439 of the California Government Code, the regulations and protocols for the proper display of the flag of California is controlled by the California Adjutant General:

The Adjutant General shall, by regulation, prescribe rules regarding the times, places, and the manner in which the State Flag may be displayed. He shall, periodically, compile the laws and regulations regarding the State Flag. Copies of the compilation shall be printed and made available to the public at cost by the Department of General Services.

When the flag is displayed vertically, it is rotated 90 degrees clockwise such that the bear and star face upward and red stripe is on the left.[5]

The flag is also used as the state ensign.[6][7]

Design edit

The first official version of the Bear Flag was adopted by the California State Legislature and signed into law by Governor Hiram Johnson in 1911 as the official state flag.[8]

The contemporary state flag is white with a wide red strip along the bottom. There is a red star in the upper left corner and a grizzly bear facing left (toward the hoist) in the center, walking on a patch of green grass. The size of the bear is ⅔ the size of the hoist width and has a ratio of 2 by 1. The grass plot has a ratio of 11 to 1.[1] The five-point star is taken from the California Lone Star Flag of 1836.[5] The hoist of the flag is two-thirds the fly.[9]

The bear on one 1911 version of the flag is claimed to have been modeled on the last California grizzly bear in captivity.[10] The bear, named "Monarch", was captured in 1889 by newspaper reporter Allan Kelly, at the behest of William Randolph Hearst.[11] The bear was subsequently moved to Woodwards Gardens in San Francisco, and then to the zoo at Golden Gate Park. After the bear's death in 1911, it was mounted and preserved at the Academy of Sciences at Golden Gate Park.[12]

While the bear flag was adopted in 1911, until 1953 the image of the bear varied depending on the flag manufacturer, and was finally standardized based on an image of Monarch.[13] In 1953 the bear image was standardized based on an 1855 watercolor by Charles Christian Nahl.[14][15] The 1953 law includes an official black and white rendering of the bear as well as the plot of grass and brown tufts. This drawing and other specifications that define the flag's colors and dimensions are identified as "54-J-03".[16]

The Californian flag is one of two U.S. state flags to depict a bear, along with Missouri.

In 2001, the North American Vexillological Association surveyed its members on the designs of the 72 U.S. state, U.S. territorial, and Canadian provincial flags and ranked the flag of California 13th - 8th out of 50 U.S. states, and the best flag that contains words, specifically the state's name.[17]

Colors edit

 
Vertical display

The 1953 legislation defined the exact shades of the California flag with a total of five colors (including the white field) relative to the 9th edition of the Standard Color Card of America (now called the Standard Color Reference of America).[16] It is one of only four US state flags not to include the color blue, along with Alabama, Maryland, and New Mexico.

Color Cable no.[16] Pantone[5] Web color[18] RGB values
  White 75001 Safe #FFFFFF (255,255,255)
  Old Glory Red 70180 200 #B71234 (183,18,52)
  Maple Sugar 70129 729C #BD8A5E (189,138,94)
  Seal 70108 462C #584528 (88,69,40)
  Irish Green 70168 348 #008542 (0,133,66)
  • Seal is used for the dark shading of the bear, the 12 darker tufts in the plot of grass, the border of the plot and the lettering "CALIFORNIA REPUBLIC".
  • Maple Sugar is the base color for the bear.
  • Old Glory Red is used for the star, the bear's tongue and the red stripe at the bottom of the flag.
  • Irish Green is used for the grass plot.
  • The bear's claws are also accented with white. The left front and rear paws have four white claws while the right rear claw displays three. The front right paw does not contain highlighting.

History edit

Lone Star of California edit

 
The lone star of the 1836 California Lone Star Flag inspired the red star in the flag of the Bear Flag Revolt
 
Last known California Lone Star flag, now held at the Gene Autry Western Museum in Los Angeles

In 1836, a coup led by Juan Alvarado declared Alta California's independence from Mexico. Declaring himself governor, Alvarado recruited U.S. frontiersmen, led by Isaac Graham, to support him. The rebels easily captured the capital Monterey, but were unable to convince southern leaders such as Juan Bandini and Carlos Antonio Carrillo to join the rebellion. Faced with a civil war, Alvarado and the other Californios negotiated a compromise with the central government wherein California's leaders accepted its status as a "department" under the "Siete Leyes" Mexican constitution of 1836, in return for more local control. Alvarado was appointed governor the next year.

The Lone Star Flag of California, associated with Alvarado's rebellion, contained a single red star on a white background.[5] One last original flag is archived at the Autry National Center.[19]

Original Bear Flag edit

 
The original 1846 Bear Flag with its designer, Peter Storm, c. 1870
 
Bear Flag monument on the Sonoma Plaza

The original grizzly bear flag was created by Peter Storm. A version of this bear flag, designed by William L. Todd, was raised in Sonoma, California, in June 1846 on a date between the 14th and the 17th,[20] by the men who became known as the "Bear Flaggers", including William B. Ide.[21] The exact creation date is at least somewhat unclear. However, U.S. Naval Lieutenant John Missroon reported the flag's existence as of June 17, 1846.[22]

William L. Todd was a cousin of Mary Todd Lincoln.[23] According to the book Flags Over California, published by the California Military Department, the star on the flag recalled the 1836 California Lone Star Flag. Todd, in an 1878 letter to the Los Angeles Express, states that the star was drawn using blackberry juice and in recognition of the California Lone Star Flag. The bear was designed to be a symbol of strength and unyielding resistance.[5]

According to the Sonoma State Historic Park, the construction of the flag was described as such:

At a company meeting it was determined that we should raise a flag and that it should be a bear en passant [a heraldry term signifying that the bear is walking toward the viewer's left], with one star. One of the ladies at the garrison gave us a piece of brown domestic, and Mrs. Captain John Sears gave us some strips of red flannel about 4 inches wide. The domestic was new, but the flannel was said to have been part of a petticoat worn by Mrs. Sears across the mountains...I took a pen, and with ink drew the outline of the bear and star upon the white cloth. Linseed oil and Venetian red were found in the garrison, and I painted the bear and star...Underneath the bear and star were printed with a pen the words 'California Republic' in Roman letters. In painting the words I first lined out the letters with a pen, leaving out the letter 'i' and putting 'c' where 'i' should have been, and afterwards the 'i' over the 'c'. It was made with ink, and we had nothing to remove the marks.[24]

The original Bear Flag and the republic it symbolized had a brief career, from about June 14 until July 9.[25] On July 7, 1846, Commodore John Drake Sloat of the United States Navy's Pacific Squadron first raised the 28-star American flag at Monterey, the capital of Alta California, and claimed the territory for the United States.[25]

Two days later, on July 9, 1846, Navy Lieutenant Joseph Warren Revere arrived in Sonoma and hauled down the Bear Flag, running up in its place the Stars and Stripes. The Bear Flag was given to young John E. Montgomery (son of Commander John B. Montgomery of USS Portsmouth), who would later write in a letter to his mother "Cuffy came down growling"—"Cuffy" being his nickname for the bear on the flag.

The Bear Flag given to young Montgomery returned with USS Portsmouth to the east coast of the U.S. in 1848, but in 1855 was returned to California.[26] The flag was given to California's two senators, John B. Weller and William M. Gwin. This flag was donated to the Society of California Pioneers on September 8, 1855, and was preserved at the Society's Pioneer Halls in San Francisco until it was destroyed on April 18, 1906, in the fires that followed the great San Francisco earthquake.[26] Today, a replica hangs on display in the Sonoma Barracks, or El Presidio de Sonoma. There is also a statue in the plaza at Sonoma, California, commemorating the raising of the flag, the Bear Flag Monument.

The Civil War period edit

During the secession crisis and the early part of the American Civil War in 1861, California was divided between supporters of the union and supporters of southern secession. In the months leading up to the war some opposed to the government in Los Angeles County and San Bernardino County showed support for secession by flying variants of the Bear Flag instead of the Stars and Stripes.[27]: 194–195 

During the war, Union soldiers protected the West against secessionists who ran up Confederate flags in many places, including above the California statehouse in Sacramento, then disappearing before they could be caught.[27] On July 4, 1861, during U.S. Independence Day celebrations in Sacramento, Democrat and veteran Maj. J. P. Gillis celebrated the independence of the United States from Great Britain and the secession of the Confederacy by unfurling a flag based on the first Confederate flag, the Stars and Bars, but containing seventeen stars rather than the Confederate banner's seven, and marching down the street to the cheers of pro-slavery individuals.[28] This was the only known Confederate flag captured in California during the Civil War. Unionist Jack Biderman denounced Gillis, tore the flag from his hands, and taunted secessionists to try to take the flag back. No one tried. Because Gillis' flag was seized by Jack Biderman, it is referred to either as the "Biderman Flag" or the "Gillis Flag."[29]

Flag of the governor edit

 
The flag of the governor of California

The flag of the governor of California consists of the seal of California centered on a field of azure. Like many other U.S. governors' flags, there are four five-point stars at the corners of the field.

Gallery edit

 
 
 
 
Some examples of Californian state flags from the early 20th century (before the design was officially standardized in 1953), showing multiple degrees of variation
 
Digital reproduction of the first Bear Flag
 
Digital reproduction of Todd's Bear Flag
 
Todd's original Bear Flag, fabricated and flown at the Sonoma revolt, photographed in 1890
 
Sailors waving the flag in San Diego.
 
The flag flying in front of San Francisco City Hall

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b . California State Library. Archived from the original on January 5, 2019. Retrieved December 3, 2007.
  2. ^ Guinn, J.M. (1898). "El Estado Libre de Alta California: The Free State of Upper California". Annual Publication of the Historical Society of Southern California and Pioneer Register, Los Angeles. 4 (2): 163–172. doi:10.2307/41167714. JSTOR 41167714.
  3. ^ "California's 'Red Star' Revolution". Santa Cruz Sentinel.
  4. ^ . californiamuseum.org. November 18, 2015. Archived from the original on October 30, 2022. Retrieved March 21, 2019.
  5. ^ a b c d e "Flags Over California: A History Guide" (PDF). California State Military Museum. State of California, Military Department. 2002. Retrieved July 22, 2012.
  6. ^ Sergeant Mark J. Denger. "Flags of California's Naval Forces". The California Military Museum. California State Military Department. Retrieved April 18, 2011. Our state ensign, easily distinguishable, truly embodies the history of this state. The "Bear Flag," known from the annals of this state's history, dates from the days of those early California pioneers and commemorates the biggest bear known to science, the California grizzly, now extinct.
  7. ^ Gregory, Tom (1912). Story of the Bear Flag - How the State Ensign Came Into Being. Journal of the Senate of the State of California. Vol. 2. State Printing Office. pp. 327–329. Retrieved April 18, 2011.
  8. ^ "9". The Statutes of California and Amendments to the Codes passed. Thirty-Ninth Session of the Legislature. 1911. p. 6.
  9. ^ "State Flag and Emblems". California Law. California Legislative Information. from the original on December 12, 2023.
  10. ^ David T. Page (June 6, 2011). Explorer's Guide Yosemite & the Southern Sierra Nevada: Includes Mammoth Lakes, Sequoia, Kings Canyon & Death Valley: A Great Destination (Second Edition) (Explorer's Great Destinations). Countryman Press. p. 49. ISBN 978-1-58157-880-5.
  11. ^ "Monarch the Grizzly Bear". Retrieved June 14, 2010.
    Katherine Girlich (June 17, 2009). San Francisco Zoo. Arcadia Publishing. p. 27. ISBN 978-1-4396-3807-1.
  12. ^ Laurel Braitman (June 10, 2014). Animal Madness: How Anxious Dogs, Compulsive Parrots, and Elephants in Recovery Help Us Understand Ourselves. Simon and Schuster. pp. 85–88. ISBN 978-1-4516-2702-2.
  13. ^ "California Flag Picture Gallery". Retrieved June 28, 2017.
  14. ^ "Flags Over California" (PDF). California State Military Museums Program. State of California, Military Department. p. 11. Retrieved January 21, 2023. Various bear images appeared on the flag until the design was standardized in 1953 modeled after the 1855 watercolor by Charles Nahl... A copy of this painting, which is in the city of Monterey collection, can be seen in the Colton Hall Museum.
  15. ^ Chamings, Andrew (July 7, 2020). "The bear on the California state flag lived in Golden Gate Park".
  16. ^ a b c (PDF). bearflagmuseum.org. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 7, 2019.
  17. ^ Kaye, Ted (June 10, 2001). . NAVA.org. North American Vexillological Association. Archived from the original on June 6, 2011.
  18. ^ . Pantone. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 30, 2020. Retrieved January 28, 2008.
  19. ^ Masters, Nathan (October 20, 2011). "Where to Find California's Oldest Flag & Other Objects in SoCal's Archives". KCET. Burbank, California. Retrieved June 12, 2015.
  20. ^ Ruiz, Augustine (June 4, 2008). "Sacramento Post Office Invites Community to Celebrate Release of 'Flags of our Nation' California Stamp". Postal News. United States Postal Service. Retrieved July 19, 2011.
  21. ^ "William B. Ide Abode State Historic Park" (PDF). California State Parks. State of California. 2008. Retrieved July 19, 2011. This rallied the settlers into action, and on June 14, 1846, a group of about thirty men—including Ide—marched on the town of Sonoma. The group became known as the Bear Flaggers
  22. ^ "CALIFORNIA IN TIME: From the War with Mexico to Statehood" (PDF). California State Parks. State of California. September 24, 2003. Retrieved July 19, 2011. William Todd brings news of Sonoma to Capt. John Montgomery of the U.S.N. Portsmouth, who sends a reply with Lt. John Missroon.
  23. ^ Hill, Kathleen Thompson; Hill, Gerald N. (2005). Insiders' Guide Napa Valley: Land Of Golden Vines. Globe Pequot. p. 293. ISBN 9780762734436. Retrieved March 8, 2013.[permanent dead link]
    Brown, Gary (1996). The Great Bear Almanac. Globe Pequot. p. 209. ISBN 9781558214743. Retrieved March 8, 2013.[permanent dead link]
  24. ^ (PDF). Sonoma State Historic Park. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 28, 2007. Retrieved June 26, 2007.
  25. ^ a b Denger, Mark J. "The Acquisition of California". The California Military Museum. California Military Department. Retrieved July 19, 2011.
  26. ^ a b (PDF). Department of Fish and Game. State of California. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 28, 2007. Retrieved July 15, 2011.
  27. ^ a b Tinkham, George Henry (1915). California men and events: time 1769–1890 (revised 2nd ed.). Stockton, California: Record Publishing Company. hdl:2027/yale.39002006519285.
  28. ^ "California's Secessionist Impulse". CA State Parks. Retrieved November 5, 2018.
  29. ^ "The Biderman Flag". MilitaryMuseum.org. Retrieved April 14, 2016.

Further reading edit

  • Smilie, Robert A. (1975). The Sonoma Mission, San Francisco Solano de Sonoma: The Founding, Ruin and Restoration of California's 21st Mission. Valley Publishers, Fresno, CA. ISBN 0-913548-24-3.
  • California. Legislature. Senate (1912). Journal of the Senate of the State of California, Volume 2. State Printing Office. p. 327.

External links edit

  • Creation of the Bear Flag. July 23, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  • Ide, Simeon (1880). . Archived from the original on May 4, 2009.

flag, california, bear, flag, redirects, here, other, uses, bear, flag, disambiguation, bear, flag, official, flag, state, california, precursor, flag, first, flown, during, 1846, bear, flag, revolt, also, known, bear, flag, predecessor, called, lone, star, fl. Bear flag redirects here For other uses see Bear flag disambiguation The Bear Flag is the official flag of the U S state of California 1 The precursor of the flag was first flown during the 1846 Bear Flag Revolt and was also known as the Bear Flag A predecessor called the Lone Star Flag was used in an 1836 independence movement 2 the red star element from that flag appears in the Bear Flag of today 3 Bear FlagFlag of CaliforniaThe Bear FlagUseCivil and state flag state ensignProportion2 3AdoptedFebruary 3 1911 113 years ago 1911 02 03 standardized 1953 DesignA single red star in the canton a red stripe along the bottom and a California grizzly bear atop a mound of green grass defacing a white field Designed byDonald Graeme Kelley based on flag flown during the Bear Flag Revolt Contents 1 Current flag 1 1 Law and protocol 1 2 Design 1 3 Colors 2 History 2 1 Lone Star of California 2 2 Original Bear Flag 2 3 The Civil War period 3 Flag of the governor 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksCurrent flag edit nbsp The flag on display at the California State Capitol Law and protocol edit The 1911 statute stated The bear flag is hereby selected and adopted as the state flag of California The said bear flag shall consist of a flag of a length equal to one and one half the width thereof the upper five sixths of the width thereof to be a white field and the lower sixth of the width thereof to be a red stripe there shall appear in the white field in the upper left hand corner a single red star and at the bottom of the white field the words California Republic and in the center of the white field a California grizzly bear upon a grass plat in the position of walking toward the left of the said field said bear shall be dark brown in color and in length equal to one third of the length of said flag In 1953 the design and specifications for the state flag were standardized in a bill signed by Governor Earl Warren and illustrated by Donald Graeme Kelley of Marin County California 4 The Californian state flag is often called the Bear Flag and in fact the present statute adopting the flag California Government Code 420 states The Bear Flag is the State Flag of California Pursuant to Section 439 of the California Government Code the regulations and protocols for the proper display of the flag of California is controlled by the California Adjutant General The Adjutant General shall by regulation prescribe rules regarding the times places and the manner in which the State Flag may be displayed He shall periodically compile the laws and regulations regarding the State Flag Copies of the compilation shall be printed and made available to the public at cost by the Department of General Services When the flag is displayed vertically it is rotated 90 degrees clockwise such that the bear and star face upward and red stripe is on the left 5 The flag is also used as the state ensign 6 7 Design edit nbsp Metrics for the flag of California nbsp Monarch the bear nbsp Finally accepted official rendering of the bear The first official version of the Bear Flag was adopted by the California State Legislature and signed into law by Governor Hiram Johnson in 1911 as the official state flag 8 The contemporary state flag is white with a wide red strip along the bottom There is a red star in the upper left corner and a grizzly bear facing left toward the hoist in the center walking on a patch of green grass The size of the bear is the size of the hoist width and has a ratio of 2 by 1 The grass plot has a ratio of 11 to 1 1 The five point star is taken from the California Lone Star Flag of 1836 5 The hoist of the flag is two thirds the fly 9 The bear on one 1911 version of the flag is claimed to have been modeled on the last California grizzly bear in captivity 10 The bear named Monarch was captured in 1889 by newspaper reporter Allan Kelly at the behest of William Randolph Hearst 11 The bear was subsequently moved to Woodwards Gardens in San Francisco and then to the zoo at Golden Gate Park After the bear s death in 1911 it was mounted and preserved at the Academy of Sciences at Golden Gate Park 12 While the bear flag was adopted in 1911 until 1953 the image of the bear varied depending on the flag manufacturer and was finally standardized based on an image of Monarch 13 In 1953 the bear image was standardized based on an 1855 watercolor by Charles Christian Nahl 14 15 The 1953 law includes an official black and white rendering of the bear as well as the plot of grass and brown tufts This drawing and other specifications that define the flag s colors and dimensions are identified as 54 J 03 16 The Californian flag is one of two U S state flags to depict a bear along with Missouri In 2001 the North American Vexillological Association surveyed its members on the designs of the 72 U S state U S territorial and Canadian provincial flags and ranked the flag of California 13th 8th out of 50 U S states and the best flag that contains words specifically the state s name 17 Colors edit nbsp Vertical display The 1953 legislation defined the exact shades of the California flag with a total of five colors including the white field relative to the 9th edition of the Standard Color Card of America now called the Standard Color Reference of America 16 It is one of only four US state flags not to include the color blue along with Alabama Maryland and New Mexico Color Cable no 16 Pantone 5 Web color 18 RGB values White 75001 Safe FFFFFF 255 255 255 Old Glory Red 70180 200 B71234 183 18 52 Maple Sugar 70129 729C BD8A5E 189 138 94 Seal 70108 462C 584528 88 69 40 Irish Green 70168 348 008542 0 133 66 Seal is used for the dark shading of the bear the 12 darker tufts in the plot of grass the border of the plot and the lettering CALIFORNIA REPUBLIC Maple Sugar is the base color for the bear Old Glory Red is used for the star the bear s tongue and the red stripe at the bottom of the flag Irish Green is used for the grass plot The bear s claws are also accented with white The left front and rear paws have four white claws while the right rear claw displays three The front right paw does not contain highlighting History editLone Star of California edit nbsp The lone star of the 1836 California Lone Star Flag inspired the red star in the flag of the Bear Flag Revolt nbsp Last known California Lone Star flag now held at the Gene Autry Western Museum in Los Angeles In 1836 a coup led by Juan Alvarado declared Alta California s independence from Mexico Declaring himself governor Alvarado recruited U S frontiersmen led by Isaac Graham to support him The rebels easily captured the capital Monterey but were unable to convince southern leaders such as Juan Bandini and Carlos Antonio Carrillo to join the rebellion Faced with a civil war Alvarado and the other Californios negotiated a compromise with the central government wherein California s leaders accepted its status as a department under the Siete Leyes Mexican constitution of 1836 in return for more local control Alvarado was appointed governor the next year The Lone Star Flag of California associated with Alvarado s rebellion contained a single red star on a white background 5 One last original flag is archived at the Autry National Center 19 Original Bear Flag edit nbsp The original 1846 Bear Flag with its designer Peter Storm c 1870 nbsp Bear Flag monument on the Sonoma Plaza The original grizzly bear flag was created by Peter Storm A version of this bear flag designed by William L Todd was raised in Sonoma California in June 1846 on a date between the 14th and the 17th 20 by the men who became known as the Bear Flaggers including William B Ide 21 The exact creation date is at least somewhat unclear However U S Naval Lieutenant John Missroon reported the flag s existence as of June 17 1846 22 William L Todd was a cousin of Mary Todd Lincoln 23 According to the book Flags Over California published by the California Military Department the star on the flag recalled the 1836 California Lone Star Flag Todd in an 1878 letter to the Los Angeles Express states that the star was drawn using blackberry juice and in recognition of the California Lone Star Flag The bear was designed to be a symbol of strength and unyielding resistance 5 According to the Sonoma State Historic Park the construction of the flag was described as such At a company meeting it was determined that we should raise a flag and that it should be a bear en passant a heraldry term signifying that the bear is walking toward the viewer s left with one star One of the ladies at the garrison gave us a piece of brown domestic and Mrs Captain John Sears gave us some strips of red flannel about 4 inches wide The domestic was new but the flannel was said to have been part of a petticoat worn by Mrs Sears across the mountains I took a pen and with ink drew the outline of the bear and star upon the white cloth Linseed oil and Venetian red were found in the garrison and I painted the bear and star Underneath the bear and star were printed with a pen the words California Republic in Roman letters In painting the words I first lined out the letters with a pen leaving out the letter i and putting c where i should have been and afterwards the i over the c It was made with ink and we had nothing to remove the marks 24 The original Bear Flag and the republic it symbolized had a brief career from about June 14 until July 9 25 On July 7 1846 Commodore John Drake Sloat of the United States Navy s Pacific Squadron first raised the 28 star American flag at Monterey the capital of Alta California and claimed the territory for the United States 25 Two days later on July 9 1846 Navy Lieutenant Joseph Warren Revere arrived in Sonoma and hauled down the Bear Flag running up in its place the Stars and Stripes The Bear Flag was given to young John E Montgomery son of Commander John B Montgomery of USS Portsmouth who would later write in a letter to his mother Cuffy came down growling Cuffy being his nickname for the bear on the flag The Bear Flag given to young Montgomery returned with USS Portsmouth to the east coast of the U S in 1848 but in 1855 was returned to California 26 The flag was given to California s two senators John B Weller and William M Gwin This flag was donated to the Society of California Pioneers on September 8 1855 and was preserved at the Society s Pioneer Halls in San Francisco until it was destroyed on April 18 1906 in the fires that followed the great San Francisco earthquake 26 Today a replica hangs on display in the Sonoma Barracks or El Presidio de Sonoma There is also a statue in the plaza at Sonoma California commemorating the raising of the flag the Bear Flag Monument The Civil War period edit During the secession crisis and the early part of the American Civil War in 1861 California was divided between supporters of the union and supporters of southern secession In the months leading up to the war some opposed to the government in Los Angeles County and San Bernardino County showed support for secession by flying variants of the Bear Flag instead of the Stars and Stripes 27 194 195 During the war Union soldiers protected the West against secessionists who ran up Confederate flags in many places including above the California statehouse in Sacramento then disappearing before they could be caught 27 On July 4 1861 during U S Independence Day celebrations in Sacramento Democrat and veteran Maj J P Gillis celebrated the independence of the United States from Great Britain and the secession of the Confederacy by unfurling a flag based on the first Confederate flag the Stars and Bars but containing seventeen stars rather than the Confederate banner s seven and marching down the street to the cheers of pro slavery individuals 28 This was the only known Confederate flag captured in California during the Civil War Unionist Jack Biderman denounced Gillis tore the flag from his hands and taunted secessionists to try to take the flag back No one tried Because Gillis flag was seized by Jack Biderman it is referred to either as the Biderman Flag or the Gillis Flag 29 Flag of the governor edit nbsp The flag of the governor of California See also Flags of governors of the U S states The flag of the governor of California consists of the seal of California centered on a field of azure Like many other U S governors flags there are four five point stars at the corners of the field Gallery edit nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Some examples of Californian state flags from the early 20th century before the design was officially standardized in 1953 showing multiple degrees of variation nbsp Digital reproduction of the first Bear Flag nbsp Digital reproduction of Todd s Bear Flag nbsp Todd s original Bear Flag fabricated and flown at the Sonoma revolt photographed in 1890 nbsp Sailors waving the flag in San Diego nbsp The flag flying in front of San Francisco City HallSee also edit nbsp Heraldry portal nbsp California portal List of California state symbols List of flags by design List of U S state district and territorial insigniaReferences edit a b California State Library History and Culture California State Library Archived from the original on January 5 2019 Retrieved December 3 2007 Guinn J M 1898 El Estado Libre de Alta California The Free State of Upper California Annual Publication of the Historical Society of Southern California and Pioneer Register Los Angeles 4 2 163 172 doi 10 2307 41167714 JSTOR 41167714 California s Red Star Revolution Santa Cruz Sentinel Bear in Mind californiamuseum org November 18 2015 Archived from the original on October 30 2022 Retrieved March 21 2019 a b c d e Flags Over California A History Guide PDF California State Military Museum State of California Military Department 2002 Retrieved July 22 2012 Sergeant Mark J Denger Flags of California s Naval Forces The California Military Museum California State Military Department Retrieved April 18 2011 Our state ensign easily distinguishable truly embodies the history of this state The Bear Flag known from the annals of this state s history dates from the days of those early California pioneers and commemorates the biggest bear known to science the California grizzly now extinct Gregory Tom 1912 Story of the Bear Flag How the State Ensign Came Into Being Journal of the Senate of the State of California Vol 2 State Printing Office pp 327 329 Retrieved April 18 2011 9 The Statutes of California and Amendments to the Codes passed Thirty Ninth Session of the Legislature 1911 p 6 State Flag and Emblems California Law California Legislative Information Archived from the original on December 12 2023 David T Page June 6 2011 Explorer s Guide Yosemite amp the Southern Sierra Nevada Includes Mammoth Lakes Sequoia Kings Canyon amp Death Valley A Great Destination Second Edition Explorer s Great Destinations Countryman Press p 49 ISBN 978 1 58157 880 5 Monarch the Grizzly Bear Retrieved June 14 2010 Katherine Girlich June 17 2009 San Francisco Zoo Arcadia Publishing p 27 ISBN 978 1 4396 3807 1 Laurel Braitman June 10 2014 Animal Madness How Anxious Dogs Compulsive Parrots and Elephants in Recovery Help Us Understand Ourselves Simon and Schuster pp 85 88 ISBN 978 1 4516 2702 2 California Flag Picture Gallery Retrieved June 28 2017 Flags Over California PDF California State Military Museums Program State of California Military Department p 11 Retrieved January 21 2023 Various bear images appeared on the flag until the design was standardized in 1953 modeled after the 1855 watercolor by Charles Nahl A copy of this painting which is in the city of Monterey collection can be seen in the Colton Hall Museum Chamings Andrew July 7 2020 The bear on the California state flag lived in Golden Gate Park a b c California State Flag Specifications PDF bearflagmuseum org Archived from the original PDF on May 7 2019 Kaye Ted June 10 2001 New Mexico Tops State Provincial Flags Survey Georgia Loses by Wide Margin NAVA org North American Vexillological Association Archived from the original on June 6 2011 Pantone Color Chart Pantone Archived from the original PDF on July 30 2020 Retrieved January 28 2008 Masters Nathan October 20 2011 Where to Find California s Oldest Flag amp Other Objects in SoCal s Archives KCET Burbank California Retrieved June 12 2015 Ruiz Augustine June 4 2008 Sacramento Post Office Invites Community to Celebrate Release of Flags of our Nation California Stamp Postal News United States Postal Service Retrieved July 19 2011 William B Ide Abode State Historic Park PDF California State Parks State of California 2008 Retrieved July 19 2011 This rallied the settlers into action and on June 14 1846 a group of about thirty men including Ide marched on the town of Sonoma The group became known as the Bear Flaggers CALIFORNIA IN TIME From the War with Mexico to Statehood PDF California State Parks State of California September 24 2003 Retrieved July 19 2011 William Todd brings news of Sonoma to Capt John Montgomery of the U S N Portsmouth who sends a reply with Lt John Missroon Hill Kathleen Thompson Hill Gerald N 2005 Insiders Guide Napa Valley Land Of Golden Vines Globe Pequot p 293 ISBN 9780762734436 Retrieved March 8 2013 permanent dead link Brown Gary 1996 The Great Bear Almanac Globe Pequot p 209 ISBN 9781558214743 Retrieved March 8 2013 permanent dead link William Todd and the construction of the bear flag PDF Sonoma State Historic Park Archived from the original PDF on June 28 2007 Retrieved June 26 2007 a b Denger Mark J The Acquisition of California The California Military Museum California Military Department Retrieved July 19 2011 a b California Bear Flag Symbol of Strength PDF Department of Fish and Game State of California Archived from the original PDF on June 28 2007 Retrieved July 15 2011 a b Tinkham George Henry 1915 California men and events time 1769 1890 revised 2nd ed Stockton California Record Publishing Company hdl 2027 yale 39002006519285 California s Secessionist Impulse CA State Parks Retrieved November 5 2018 The Biderman Flag MilitaryMuseum org Retrieved April 14 2016 Further reading editSmilie Robert A 1975 The Sonoma Mission San Francisco Solano de Sonoma The Founding Ruin and Restoration of California s 21st Mission Valley Publishers Fresno CA ISBN 0 913548 24 3 California Legislature Senate 1912 Journal of the Senate of the State of California Volume 2 State Printing Office p 327 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Flags of California Hubert H Bancroft s History of California Vol V 1846 1848 Creation of the Bear Flag Archived July 23 2008 at the Wayback Machine Flags of the World California The Bear Flag Museum William Todd Quote on Bear Flag construction Ide Simeon 1880 A Sketch of the Life of William B Ide Archived from the original on May 4 2009 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Flag of California amp oldid 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