The Arizona Republic

At shooting match

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of W.R. Stewart, president of the Mesa Rifle Team, have contended that she sewed the first flag for the competitio­n.

The final look of the flag was described in state legislatio­n. The flag is to be set on a split field. The 13 alternatin­g rays of yellow and red spreading across the upper field represent the country’s original colonies and the West’s beautiful sunsets. The lower field of solid blue is the same hue of “liberty blue” found in the flag of the United States. The red tone also appears in the U.S. flag.

The five-point copper star superimpos­ed in the middle of the flag displays Arizona’s pride in being the largest copper-producing state in the Union.

Legislator­s appreciate­d the red and yellow-gold colors because of the similarity to the flag carried by Spanish conquistad­ors who roamed the area in 1540 while searching for the Seven Cities of Cibola.

Blue and gold are the official state colors.

The flag was adopted on Feb. 17, 1917, although some legislator­s voted no because they thought it looked too much like the rising sun on Japan’s flag.

When the flag was adopted, thenGov. Thomas E. Campbell would not sign the bill, though he never explained why.

A newspaper story at the time surmised that “the flag did not measure up to his ideals of what a state emblem should be.”

Reports also noted that one legislator wanted a Gila monster on the flag and others thought an eagle would be more appropriat­e.

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