THE
6 FLAGS OVER TEXAS
Over
the years, there has been some debate over exactly which
flags should be used as the official Six Flags of
Texas. While the flag designs of the United States,
Texas and Mexico are well established, there has been some
variation in the selection of the Spanish, French, and
Confederate flag designs.
Spain
1519-1685;
1690-1821
The
first European, Alonso Alvarez de Pineda, made his way
along the Texas coast in 1519, exploring and bringing it
under the Spanish Flag.
There are two versions
of the Spanish flag which are frequently seen in a display
of the Six Flags. Both designs incorporate the heraldic
emblems of Leon and Castile, the lion and castle, but differ
in their arrangement.
In 1936, the Texas
Centennial Exposition chose to use a flag based on the
banner which was carried by Cortez during the conquest of
Mexico. The flag was:
"Red
damask, double faced, equally divided into four squares,
carrying the emblems of Castile and Leon. The upper left
square next to the staff and the lower right carry the
castle with three ramparts. The lower left and the upper
right carry the rampant Lion, without the crown usually
seen, in a smaller center field of white. The lion is red.
The reverse side pictures the Holy Virgin Mary with hands
folded. (For Exposition purposes, the flag will not carry
out this part of the description.) "
From "Why the Six Flags of Texas?" Texas
Centennial Review, February 19, 1936, page 3.
This flag is still
sometimes used as one of the Six Flags. However, the Spanish
flag in use after 1785 is now more commonly seen. This red
and yellow striped flag depicts a lion of Leon and a castle
of Castile on a shield surmounted by a crown.
France
1685-1690
In
1684, Rene Robert Cavelier Sieur de La Salle attempted to
establish a French colony on the Texas coast. The venture
was unsuccessful, and by 1690 Fort St. Louis had been
abandoned. In the 1680s, there was not one official French
flag; a number of different designs were in use, and it is
not clear which La Salle's expedition might have carried.
Some patterns which have been used in Texas include a
white banner with three gold fleur-de-lis, a blue banner
with three gold or white fleur-de-lis and a white banner
liberally sprinkled with gold fleur-de-lis. For the
Centennial Exposition, the white flag sprinkled with gold
fleur-de-lis was adopted as the most likely design, and
this pattern is most commonly seen today.
Mexico
1821-1836
In 1821,
Iturbide led a successful revolution and Mexico became an
independent country and Texas came under the new flag of
Mexico.
Republic of Texas
1836-1845
Chafing under new laws imposed on the
colonists by Mexico, a revolution led by Sam Houston finally succeeded in
beating the Mexican army beside the San Jacinto River and ran them out of Texas
in 1836 and Texas became an independent republic under it's own flag.

USA 
1845-1861;
1865-
In February of 1846, the Republic of
Texas became the State of Texas in the United States of America.


Confederate States of America (CSA)
1861-1865
Between 1861 and 1865,
the Confederate States of America had three national flags,
as well as naval ensigns and battle flags.
The first national
flag, the Stars And Bars, is the flag most commonly used in
the Six Flags of Texas today. It was adopted by the
provisional government, and first raised in Montgomery,
Alabama on March 4, 1861. As adopted, the Stars and
Bars has a blue field with a circle of seven stars, and
three horizontal stripes -- red, white and red. It was
originally intended that stars would be added as states
joined the Confederacy, but the version with just seven
stars remained common in Texas, which was the seventh state
to join the Confederacy. Texans sometimes modified this flag
design by arranging six stars in a circle, with a seventh
star in the middle of the circle.
This flag was used as
the Confederate flag until May 1, 1863. However, the
strong resemblance between the Stars and Bars and the United
States flag created confusion on the battlefield, so a
variety of battle flags were substituted. The most famous of
these battle flags is the one originally used by the Army of
Northern Virginia. It was a square with a red ground,
marked with a blue saltire bordered with white and with a
white five-pointed star for each of the Confederate
states. A rectangular version of this flag was used as
the naval jack.
Although Confederate
troops used a number of other battle flags, this flag was
one of most popular and widely used. The United
Confederate Veterans designated the battle flag of the army
of Northern Virginia the flag for use by veterans
organizations. Because of its popularity and wide
recognition, this flag was sometimes used in Six Flags
displays. However, in 1936 the Texas Centennial
Exposition opted to use the Star and Bars and the use of the
battle flag as one of the Six Flags has declined.
The
battle flag design was incorporated into both the second
and third national flags of the Confederacy. The
second flag, know as the Stainless Banner, flew from May
1, 1863 until March 4, 1865 and was a white banner with
the battle flag in the upper corner near the pole.
In March of 1865, the Stainless Banner was modified by the
addition of a vertical red stripe. Neither later
flag is commonly used in Six Flags displays.

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