No. At least not "officially." The U.S. flag from 1777 to 1795 had 13 stars and 13 red & white stripes. Then in 1795, after Vermont and Kentucky joined we had a 15 star flag with 15 red and white stripes, our "Star Spangled Banner." Then in 1818 after five more states joined our flag had 20 stars and 13 red and white stripes.
The state that is represented by the 50th star in the American flag is Hawaii.
There is no official designation for which state each star represents.
The stars represent each state. Whenever a new state is created, a new star appears on the American Flag.
Alabama was the 22nd US State.
Each star represents a state.
Each star represent a state.
Indiana is the 19th state on the American Flag. Actually, individual stars do NOT specifically refer to named states. That is, you cannot point to a star on the flag and say "that star represents state X". This is in keeping with the idea of a collective union ("from many, one"), not a group of individual states.
it depends on which flag you refer to. On the American flag each star symbolizes a state. 50 start = 50 states
The 13th star on the American flag represents Kentucky. The original 13 stars and stripes on the flag symbolize the thirteen original colonies that declared independence from Great Britain. Kentucky became the 15th state in 1792, but its star was included in the flag design to acknowledge its historical ties to the original colonies.
Do you mean on the American flag? If you are, each star means a state. There is 50 stars and 50 states, which makes sence. Exaple: California is a state in the US so California gets a star on the flag.
Each star of the current Flag of the United States represents one state in our union.
Each star stands for each united state of America