A white shield with three grapevines on a field of azure blue.
Azure blue variant
The flag of the U.S. state of Connecticut is a white baroque shield with three grapevines, each bearing three bunches of purplegrapes on a field of royal blue. The banner below the shield reads "Qui Transtulit Sustinet", Latin for "He who transplanted sustains", Connecticut's state motto. The flag dimensions are 5.5 feet (1.7 m) in length and 4.33 feet (1.32 m) in width.[1]
The first state flag was adopted during the American Civil War. The banner was described as: "The field of the flag adopted was a deep blue, and the three vines, which had been on the Connecticut flag from the outset, were on a groundwork of white." It's nicknamed was Blue Peter, and it was usually hanging in the halls of the Old State House.[2]
In 1900, the New York Society of Sons of the Revolution sent historic Nathen Hale school house to the Connecticut Society Sons of the Revolution.[5] One year later members of the society got permission to move and restore the building. To celebrated the restoration the society invited Governor McLean and some companies of the National Guard to celebrate. The men carried with them a state flag and a state banner.[6] The banner design was not described but it most likely flew vertically.
The design comes from the seal of Saybrook Colony, designed by George Fenwick when it was established in 1639. That seal depicted 15 grapevines and a hand in the upper left corner with a scroll reading "Sustinet qui transtulit". When Connecticut Colony bought Saybrook in 1644, the seal transferred to Connecticut Colony. On October 25, 1711, the governor and legislature changed the seal. They reduced the number of grapevines from 15 to three, in order to represent the three oldest settlements (Windsor, Wethersfield, and Hartford)[7] (or possibly the three separate settlements, Connecticut Colony, Saybrook Colony, and New Haven Colony, which had been absorbed into Connecticut by that time) and rearranged the wording and position of the motto.
Customarily, the flag of Connecticut is flown at half staff when the federal flag is, which may be ordered by the President or by the Governor.[9] According to 2007-R-0624, only the governor of Connecticut may decide that the state flag should be flown at half staff, though the right is a power of office and not a law.
Typically, the state flag is flown at half staff upon the death of a Connecticut resident serving in the armed forces,[10] upon the death of a former governor or serving member of the state legislature, or for an event of great sorrow for Connecticut.[11]
^ ab"The State Flag". CT.gov. Department of Information Technology, State of Connecticut. Archived from the original on August 16, 2002. Retrieved 2013-11-30.