Confederate Proposal Flag (CSA)
📐 Custom Personalized Flag made with Flagmaker & Print. Learn more about our product line-up on the Product Details page. This custom flag design is available as both a one-sided wall flag, or a double-sided display flag
🎌 All our personalized flags are available in multiple sizes and finishing options . If you have special requests, don't hesitate to reach out to us!
✒️ The "Confederate Proposal Flag" depicted here is a lesser-known historical design proposed during the American Civil War as an alternative national flag for the Confederate States of America. Featuring a field of alternating red and blue horizontal stripes—typically interpreted as a nod to the U.S. flag's stripes—it replaces the traditional canton with a blue square bearing a circle of seven white stars, symbolizing the original Confederate states. This design merges elements of both Southern identity and American revolutionary symbolism, emphasizing unity among the seceding states while distinguishing their national banner from that of the Union. Though never adopted officially, this proposal reflects the era's rich diversity of Confederate vexillological experimentation.
Original: $14.95
-70%$14.95
$4.48


Description
📐 Custom Personalized Flag made with Flagmaker & Print. Learn more about our product line-up on the Product Details page. This custom flag design is available as both a one-sided wall flag, or a double-sided display flag
🎌 All our personalized flags are available in multiple sizes and finishing options . If you have special requests, don't hesitate to reach out to us!
✒️ The "Confederate Proposal Flag" depicted here is a lesser-known historical design proposed during the American Civil War as an alternative national flag for the Confederate States of America. Featuring a field of alternating red and blue horizontal stripes—typically interpreted as a nod to the U.S. flag's stripes—it replaces the traditional canton with a blue square bearing a circle of seven white stars, symbolizing the original Confederate states. This design merges elements of both Southern identity and American revolutionary symbolism, emphasizing unity among the seceding states while distinguishing their national banner from that of the Union. Though never adopted officially, this proposal reflects the era's rich diversity of Confederate vexillological experimentation.






















