The male figures typify the livestock and mining industries of the state. It includes the state motto, “Equal rights,” recalling that in 1869 Wyoming ’s constitution was the first such document to give equal voting and office-holding rights to women.

History at your fingertips On top of the pillars rest lamps from which burn the Light of Knowledge. The draped figure in the center holds a staff from which flows a banner bearing the words, "Equal Rights," and symbolizes the political status women have always enjoyed in Wyoming.

On the bison, once the monarch of the plains, is the seal representing the custom of branding.

Scrolls encircling the two pillars bear the words, Oil, Mines, Livestock, and Grain, four of Wyoming's major industries.The Wyoming State Flag, designed by Mrs. A.C. Keyes of Casper (formerly Miss Verna Keays of Buffalo), was adopted by the fourteenth legislature on January 31, 1917.

The Great Seal of Wyoming is the heart of the flag.

Virtually any topic for the virtual learner.

The colors of the State Flag are the same as those of the National Flag.

The state flag of Wyoming features an image of a bison.

The seal was adopted by the state legislature in 1893.

Meaning of the Flag. The two dates on the Great Seal, 1869 and 1890 commemorate the organization of the Territorial government and Wyoming's admission to the Union.

Her design was made official by legislature in 1917.

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The bison is a representation of the local wildlife.

The blue is the color of the skies and distant mountains.

The red border represents the Indian; also the blood of the pioneers who gave their lives reclaiming the soil.

The number 44 on the five-pointed star signifies that Wyoming was the 44th state admitted to the Union. In 1916 an open competition was held by Wyoming's DAR (Daughters of the American Revolution) for the design of an official Wyoming flag. The red symbolizes the Native Americans and the blood of pioneers who gave their lives.

A seal is placed on the silhouette of the bison as a tribute to the custom of branding livestock.

The white is a symbol of purity and uprightness.

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Former Director, Flag Research Center, Winchester, Massachusetts.

It is also a symbol of fidelity, justice and virility. It includes the state motto, “Equal rights,” recalling that in 1869 In 1916 there were 37 proposals submitted in a flag design competition sponsored by the Wyoming chapter of the U.S. state flag consisting of a dark blue field (background) bordered by white and red; in the centre is the white silhouette of a bison (commonly called a buffalo) bearing the state seal.

The flag of the state of Wyoming consists of the silhouette of an American Bison. Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.The seal was adopted by the state legislature in 1893.