Isolated Traveller Flags North America
Flag of Tennessee

A national flag · vexillological catalog

Flag of Tennessee.

A red field with three white stars in a blue circle and a vertical blue stripe at the fly.

Proportion
3:5
Adopted
1905
Designer
LeRoy Reeves
01 · Symbolism
The three stars represent Tennessee's three "Grand Divisions" — East, Middle, and West Tennessee — bound together as one state by the blue circle. The vertical blue stripe at the fly is purely a design device, intended (as Reeves himself wrote) to "relieve the sameness of the red colour."
02 · Palette

The colours, in order.

Red

CE1126

White

FFFFFF

Blue

003580

03 · About

On the design.

A red field with three white stars in a blue circle and a vertical blue stripe at the fly.

The design

The Flag of usa-state/tennessee/" data-it-autolink="1">Tennessee is a national emblem rendered in the colours and proportions defined by the country’s flag law. Its official aspect ratio is 3:5, the height-to-length ratio that fixes how the flag should be cut and flown. The colour scheme uses red, white, blue, with each shade specified to particular Pantone or RGB values for official reproduction.

Colour palette

Colour Name Common symbolism
Red red Often signifies courage, sacrifice, revolution or the blood of those who fought for the nation.
White white Commonly represents peace, purity, honesty or snow-capped landscapes.
Blue blue Frequently symbolises sky, sea, freedom, vigilance or perseverance.
Source Official flag law The country’s own statute or constitutional appendix specifies exact shades and proportions.

Symbolism & heraldry

The three stars represent Tennessee's three "Grand Divisions" — East, Middle, and West Tennessee — bound together as one state by the blue circle. The vertical blue stripe at the fly is purely a design device, intended (as Reeves himself wrote) to "relieve the sameness of the red colour."

Heraldic elements on the Flag of Tennessee — bands, charges, emblems or stars — each carry meaning agreed at the moment of the flag’s adoption. Re-readings happen across generations: a colour or a symbol that began with one meaning often picks up further layers as the country’s history unfolds.

Adoption & history

The current flag was adopted in 1905. It is credited to LeRoy Reeves. Earlier banners flown by Flag of Tennessee reflected the politics of their day; each redesign typically marked a moment of independence, regime change or constitutional reform. The current flag was chosen, debated and codified through the country’s official channels and is now protected by flag law.

Etiquette & protocol

The Flag of Tennessee should be flown with respect: never allowed to touch the ground, never used as drapery for ceremonies it was not made for, and lowered or removed at sundown unless illuminated. When flown alongside other national flags, it takes precedence on home soil and is hoisted first and lowered last. On days of national mourning, the flag is flown at half-mast in line with directives from the head of state. These conventions are common to most nations and are usually written into the flag’s founding statute.

Specifications

Field Value Note
Country Flag of Tennessee
Continent North America
ISO alpha-2 2-letter code
ISO alpha-3 3-letter code
Adopted 1905 year of current design
Proportion 3:5 height : length
Colours red, white, blue
Designer LeRoy Reeves
Emoji Unicode codepoint sequence

Did you know?

Reeves was a 28-year-old soldier when he designed the flag — he refused payment, calling it sufficient honour that his design was adopted.

Dispatch 13 · MAY · 26

A small thing, worth noting.

Reeves was a 28-year-old soldier when he designed the flag — he refused payment, calling it sufficient honour that his design was adopted.

— filed from the catalog