Kansas became the thirty-fourth state adopted to the Union on January 29, 1861. Customarily, a new United States flag is adopted on the July 4 of the year in which a new state is adopted into the Union - and thus Kansas "became" the thirty-fourth star on the flag on July 4, 1861.
The state flag of Pennsylvania was adopted in 1778.
the minnesota flag was adopted in 1957
Tennessee adopted the state flag on April 17, 1905
Kansas has a sunflower on its state flag.
it was adopted
Kansas state flag is red white and blue with a bold eagle on it
The Colorado state flag was adopted on June 5, 1911
It was adopted because every union that became a state had to have a flag to represtent that union/state!
Kansas' official flag was adopted in 1927. The flag has a blue field, the word "KANSAS," the sunflower (Kansas' state flower), and the state seal of Kansas. The seal pictures rich Kansas farmland, a farmer plowing, covered wagons, Native Americans hunting bison, a rising sun, a steamboat (representing commerce) on the water (beneath the sun and the mountains), 34 stars (since Kansas was the 34th state in the USA), and the state motto, "AD ASTRA PER ASPERA," meaning "To the stars through difficulty," in Latin.
it was when nc's state flag was adopted
1788It was adopted as the national flag in 1778.