
Last modified: 2026-04-25 by rick wyatt
Keywords: forty-seven | united states | unofficial |
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It's clear that there's never been an official 47-stars flag of the United States. New Mexico became the 47th state on 6 January 1912, but since the United States only adopts new flags on the 4th of July, the addition of Arizona as the 48th state changed the number of stars again before a new flag was adopted.
Of course, for a new flag to be flown at the 4th of July flag, manufacturers have to make the flags before those are official. In some cases a state was added so close to the 4th of July, that manufacturers had already begun making flags that were never to be. But since Arizona gained statehood on 14 February 1912 this apparently did not happen for the 47 star flag.
The 47 star flag is a rare item. Still, it's not completely unique. Apparently some people did make such flags, what ever their reasons for doing so may have been. Doing some quick Internet research gave me the following list:
An incident occurred on Jan. 6, 1912, in Santa Fe, New Mexico, when a telegraphed message arrived to confirm that statehood legislation had been signed, the Lt. Governor lowered the 46-star flag and raised a one-of-a-kind 47-star S&S, which he had sewn himself, at the Capitol.
Bill Dunning, 14 February 2007
image located by William Garrison, 21 March 2026
Source: https://jeffbridgman.com/inventory
An unofficial U.S. 47-star flag, size: 56" x 110". Star arrangement per row: 8/8/8/8/8/7. Auction house comment: "New Mexico became the 47th state on January 6th, 1912 and was followed by Arizona on February 14th. Per the Third Flag Act of 1818, Congress decreed that the official new year for the American flag was Independence Day, at which time a star would be added for each new state that had entered the Union over the preceding "flag year." Stars were thus added for the 47th and 48th states on July 4th, 1912. For this reason the 47 star count never became official and was accurate for a mere 38 days. .... The canton and stripes of the flag are made of wool bunting that has been pieced and joined with machine stitching. The stars are made of cotton and are double-appliquéd (applied to both sides) with a zigzag machine stitch. There is a sailcloth canvas sleeve along the hoist with two brass grommets."
William Garrison, 21 March 2026
image located by William Garrison, 21 March 2026
Source: https://www.ebay.com/itm/157320928678
8/8/8/8/8/7 (top row flush left)
William Garrison, 21 March 2026
image located by William Garrison, 21 March 2026
Source: https://jeffbridgman.com/inventory
7/7/7/7/7/7/5 star arrangement; size 17.25" x 24.5"
William Garrison, 21 March 2026
image located by William Garrison, 21 March 2026
Source: https://www.reddit.com/r/vexillology
8/8/8/8/8/7 star arrangement, rows aligned flush-left.
William Garrison, 21 March 2026
image located by William Garrison, 21 March 2026
Source: https://freemansauction.com
8/7/8/8/8/8 star arrangement; size: 7"x2" silk flag. [documented in the book "The Stars and Stripes: Fabric of the American Spirit", Richard Pierce, LLC, 2005 (page 20).]
William Garrison, 21 March 2026
image located by William Garrison, 21 March 2026
Source: https://www.amazon.com/magFlags
8/8/7/8/8/8 star arrangement.
William Garrison, 21 March 2026