Isolated Traveller Flags North America
Flag of Wisconsin

A national flag · vexillological catalog

Flag of Wisconsin.

The Wisconsin state coat of arms on a navy blue field, with "WISCONSIN" arching above and the year "1848" below (added 1980).

Proportion
2:3
Adopted
1913
01 · Symbolism
The shield is divided into four quarters depicting the state's industries: a plough (agriculture), a pick and shovel (mining), an arm and hammer (manufacturing), and an anchor (Great Lakes commerce). A sailor and a miner flank the shield. The cornucopia and lead pile below symbolise abundance and Wisconsin's historic lead-mining industry.
02 · Palette

The colours, in order.

Navy blue

Gold

FFD700

White

FFFFFF

Brown

6B3D1F

03 · About

On the design.

The usa-state/wisconsin/" data-it-autolink="1">Wisconsin state coat of arms on a navy blue field, with "WISCONSIN" arching above and the year "1848" below (added 1980).

The design

The Flag of Wisconsin is a national emblem rendered in the colours and proportions defined by the country’s flag law. Its official aspect ratio is 2:3, the height-to-length ratio that fixes how the flag should be cut and flown. The colour scheme uses navy blue, gold, white, brown, with each shade specified to particular Pantone or RGB values for official reproduction.

Colour palette

Colour Name Common symbolism
Navy blue navy blue A nationally significant colour for this flag — see the symbolism section below for the country-specific meaning.
Gold gold Stands in for sunlight, mineral wealth or sovereign authority.
White white Commonly represents peace, purity, honesty or snow-capped landscapes.
Brown brown Suggests soil, indigenous heritage or the working land.

Symbolism & heraldry

The shield is divided into four quarters depicting the state's industries: a plough (agriculture), a pick and shovel (mining), an arm and hammer (manufacturing), and an anchor (Great Lakes commerce). A sailor and a miner flank the shield. The cornucopia and lead pile below symbolise abundance and Wisconsin's historic lead-mining industry.

Heraldic elements on the Flag of Wisconsin — 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 1913. Earlier banners flown by Flag of Wisconsin 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 Wisconsin 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 Wisconsin
Continent North America
ISO alpha-2 2-letter code
ISO alpha-3 3-letter code
Adopted 1913 year of current design
Proportion 2:3 height : length
Colours navy blue, gold, white, brown
Designer
Emoji Unicode codepoint sequence

Did you know?

The state name and date were added in 1980 because Wisconsin's flag was repeatedly mistaken for those of other Midwestern seal-on-blue state flags at military and civic events.

Dispatch 13 · MAY · 26

A small thing, worth noting.

The state name and date were added in 1980 because Wisconsin's flag was repeatedly mistaken for those of other Midwestern seal-on-blue state flags at military and civic events.

— filed from the catalog