Maryland State Flag
The flag of the State bears the escutcheon of the great seal—the
Calvert and Grassland arms quartered. The device seems to have been
adopted by common consent, as there was no formal adoption of any
design as the official flag of the State until 1904. To Mr. James W.
Thomas, of Cumberland, Md., the author of "Chronicles of Colonial
Maryland," is due the credit of the passage of the Act of 1904,
Chapter 48, "to formally adopt and legalize the Maryland flag."
That the Colony had a distinct flag or standard we know. The first
recorded instance of the use of a Maryland flag occurs in Leonard
Calvert's report of the reduction of Kent Island (February, 1638),
in which he says that he and his force marched with Baltimore's
banner displayed. At the Battle of the Severn, in 1655, where the
supporters of the proprietary government, under William Stone, the
Governor, were defeated by the Puritan party under Captain William
Fuller, Stone's forces marched under the flag of Maryland, borne
by William Nugent, "Standard bearer of the Province," while Fuller's
party displayed the Flag of the Commonwealth, charged with the
crosses of St. George and St. Andrew. It is also said that a Maryland
flag was carried by the Marylanders who accompanied Braddock's
expedition against Fort DuQuesne (Pittsburgh), in 1755.
The Maryland Flag, like the great seal, was evidently designed
and adopted by Cecilius, Lord Baltimore, and sent out by him with
the Colony, as it was unfurled and officially used a few days after
taking formal possession of the Province, when Governor Calvert,
to more forcibly impress the natives, ordered the "Colors to be brought
on shore" and a military parade. While there does not seem to be
any distinct record of the design of the colonial flag of Maryland, it
is believed to have been the same as the one now in use. Maryland
is also as unique in her State flag as she is in her Great Seal, in that
it, too, is strictly of heraldic design, and is an exact reproduction of
the shield or escutcheon upon the reverse of the Great Seal of the
Province. Apart from its historic interest, the Maryland Flag, as
may be seen from the accompanying illustration, possesses marked
symmetry and beauty. The parallel and diagonal lines of the Calvert
quarterings being in singular harmony with the crosses and trans-
posed colors of those of the Crossland arms. The combination, too,
of the colors of the former—gold and black—while in brilliant con-
trast with those of the latter quarterings—silver and red—are both
effective and pleasing. Silver being a white metal, the white color
is substituted for silver in Maryland flags made of bunting or silk,
and is so provided for in the Act of 1904, Chapter 48. When painted
on panels or printed in colors, however, the rich heraldic colors, gold
and black, silver and gules (blood red), should be adhered to.—[From
booklet entitled Annapolis, History of Ye Ancient City and Its Public
Buildings, by Oswald Tilghman.J
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