Nearly a year after Gov. Spencer Cox signed Utah’s new state flag into law, the beehive banner became official Saturday.
The occasion was marked with a celebration Saturday at the Capitol, where a group called the Utah Symbols Commission unveiled a 60-by-30-foot version of the new tricolor flag, which features a beehive and five-sided star in the middle.
The blue stripe atop the new banner is meant to represent Utah’s “wide-open skies” and lakes. The white of the flag represents Utah’s snowcapped mountains, while the red lower third is meant to symbolize southern Utah’s redrock canyons.
State leaders and members of the public involved in the creation of the flag — a process that started in 2019 — were invited to the celebration Saturday, which marked the flag’s formal “effective date.”
The former flag, known by some in vexillology as a “seal on a bedsheet,” is still recognized as an official flag of the state and will continue to be flown for official ceremonies, special events and during legislative sessions.
“As a historical emblem, Utah’s seal will continue to be displayed — and continue to honor our state’s legacy,” according to Utah’s flag website.
Utah is not the only state to update its flag in recent years. At least four other states have considered more modern changes to their state flags.