Bid to strip Confederate link from Arkansas flag rejected
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — Arkansas legislators on Wednesday rejected a proposal to change the meaning of one of the stars on the state flag from honouring the Confederacy to honouring the contributions Native Americans have made to the state.
The majority-Republican House State Agencies and Governmental Affairs Committee defeated the measure, which wouldn’t have changed the flag’s design but would have changed the legal meaning of the blue star above Arkansas’ name on the flag. Instead of commemorating the Confederate States of America, it would have honoured the Native American tribes that inhabited the state, including the Quapaw, Osage and Caddo.
Arkansas has four blue stars on its flag and the one honouring the Confederacy was added in 1923. In 1924, lawmakers changed the design so that star was the only one above the state’s name.
Democratic state Rep. Charles Blake, who proposed removing the Confederate link, said the star was added at the height of the Ku Klux Klan’s rise in Arkansas and elsewhere.