Chapter 48, Acts of 1904.
AN ACT to formally adopt and legalize the Maryland flag.
WHEREAS, It is represented to the General Assembly that the flag
designed and used as the Flag of Maryland, under the Proprietary
Government, and which is still known as the Maryland Flag, has
never been formally adopted by Maryland as a State, its use having
been continued by common consent only; and,
WHEREAS, It is not only desirable that the official Flag of Maryland
should be formally adopted and legalized, but it is eminently fitting
that, by reason of its historic interest and meaning, as well as for its
beauty and harmony of colors, the flag adopted should be the one
which, from the earliest settlement of the Province to the present
time, has been known and distinguished as the Flag of Maryland;
therefore,
SECTION i. Be it enacted by the General Ass'e-mbly of Maryland,
That the flag heretofore, and now in use, and known as the Maryland
Flag, be and the same is hereby legalized and adopted as the flag of
the State of Maryland, which said flag is particularly described, as to
coloring and arrangement, as follows: Quartered—the first and
fourth quarters being paly of six pieces, or and sable, a bend dexter
counterchanged; the second and third, quarterly, argent and gules, a
cross bottony countersigned; that is to say, the first and fourth quarters
consist of six vertical bars alternately gold and black with a diagonal
band on which the colors are reversed, the second and third consisting
of a quartered field of red and white, charged with a Greek Cross, its
arms terminating in trefoils, with the coloring transposed, red being
on the white ground and white on the red, and all being as represented
upon the escutcheon of the present Great Seal of Maryland.
SEC. 2. And be it enacted, That the Flag of Maryland shall be dis-
played from the State House at Annapolis, Maryland, continuously
during the session of the General Assembly, and on such other public
occasions as the Governor of the State shall order and direct, the flag
always to be so arranged upon the flag-staff as to have the black stripe
on the diagonal bauds of the first quartering at the top of the staff as
represented in the illustration of the Maryland Flag in "Chronicles of
Colonial Maryland."
SEC. 3. And be it enacted, That this Act shall take effect from the
date of its passage.
Approved March 9, 1904.
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