Texas State Colors | Blue White Red
Official color palette of Texas
State color reference
State Colors of Texas
- Official colors
- Blue, White, and Red
- Official since
- 1933
- Primary use
- State government branding, Lone Star Flag design, state agency insignia
Color Specifications
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Blue
Represents loyalty — fidelity to the principles of the Texas Republic, allegiance to the United States after annexation in 1846, and devotion to the democratic ideals that Texas's founders proclaimed in the 1836 Declaration of Independence; the deep navy blue of the Lone Star Flag's vertical stripe is one of the most authoritative and dignified blues in American state vexillology
White
Represents purity — the integrity of civic life, the clean aspirations of a republic built from the frontier, and the moral clarity that Texas's founders associated with the cause of independence from Mexico; white occupies the upper half of the Lone Star Flag's horizontal field and frames the single five-pointed star that gives the flag its enduring name
Red
Represents bravery — the courage of the defenders of the Alamo in 1836, the sacrifice of the soldiers of the Republic of Texas, and the bold spirit of the Texan identity that has defined the state's self-image from the days of the Texas Revolution through the modern era; the deep crimson red of the Lone Star Flag's lower horizontal stripe is one of the defining color elements of Texas's public imagery
What Texas Colors Represent
Exactly matching the colors of the Lone Star Flag of the former Republic of Texas; blue representing loyalty, white representing purity, and red representing bravery — the three foundational virtues of the Lone Star State
Texas State Colors Official Designation
Texas designated blue, white, and red as its official state colors in 1933 under Acts 1933, 43rd Regular Session, Chapter 87. The law codified the colors of the Lone Star Flag as the state's official color tradition, so a search for Texas state colors has the same answer as the Texas flag colors: blue, white, and red. Those colors had represented Texas since the Republic era and remain the core palette on the Texas flag page.
The 1933 act explicitly tied the state colors to the specific meanings assigned to each color in the Texas Flag Code: blue for loyalty, white for purity, and red for bravery. This tripartite symbolic framework — pairing each color with a civic virtue — reflects the deliberate nation-building effort of the Texas Republic's founders, who designed the Lone Star Flag as a banner capable of representing a sovereign nation on the world stage. The 1933 legislature recognized that simply naming the colors was insufficient; the virtues they represented were inseparable from the colors themselves and from Texas's official motto.
Acts 1933, 43rd Regular Session, Chapter 87
The 1933 legislation designating Texas's official state colors did not specify exact Pantone or HEX values, as color standardization systems of that precision did not yet exist in American state government practice. The Texas State Library and Archives Commission and the Texas Secretary of State's office have since adopted standardized color specifications consistent with the flag's official manufacturing standards. The Texas Flag Code, codified in the Texas Government Code Chapter 3100, provides detailed specifications for the Lone Star Flag's colors, which serve as the definitive reference for the state colors.
The Republic of Texas Flag and the 1836 Origin
The Lone Star Flag that gives Texas's state colors their historical foundation was designed by Dr. Charles Bellinger Stewart and adopted by the Congress of the Republic of Texas on January 25, 1839. The flag featured a vertical blue stripe on the hoist side bearing a single white five-pointed star, with two horizontal stripes of white over red on the fly side. The design drew on the colors of earlier Texas revolutionary flags, creating visual continuity with the Texas Revolution of 1835-1836 that produced the Republic. When Texas joined the Union on December 29, 1845, the flag was retained as the state flag, making it one of only two flags in American history — alongside Hawaii's — to have served as both the national flag of an independent republic and a U.S. state flag in the Lone Star State narrative.
Key milestones
Republic of Texas declares independence from Mexico on March 2; the Texas Revolution produces the Lone Star State's foundational identity and the color palette of the future state flag
Congress of the Republic of Texas adopts the Lone Star Flag on January 25, establishing blue, white, and red as the national colors of the independent republic; designer Dr. Charles Bellinger Stewart's flag will serve Texas for nearly two centuries
Texas annexed by the United States on December 29, becoming the 28th state; the Lone Star Flag is retained as the state flag, making it one of only two former national flags to become a U.S. state flag
Texas Legislature formally designates blue, white, and red as the official state colors under Acts 1933, 43rd Regular Session, Chapter 87, codifying the virtues of loyalty (blue), purity (white), and bravery (red) into state law
Texas Flag Code revised and incorporated into the Texas Government Code, providing updated specifications for the Lone Star Flag's colors and their official applications across state government
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What Texas Colors Mean
Texas color meanings are defined in the Texas Flag Code: blue represents loyalty, white represents purity, and red represents bravery. That makes Texas one of the clearest state color pages for students and researchers, because the colors, meanings, and flag design all point to the same official source. The blue, white, and red of Texas are also the colors of a state that was once an independent republic before joining the United States.
Blue: Loyalty in Texas History
The designation of blue as the color of loyalty in Texas law speaks directly to the experience of the Texas Revolution and the Republic. The settlers who fought for Texas independence at the Alamo, at Goliad, and at San Jacinto in 1836 were demonstrating a loyalty to a vision of self-governance that the Mexican government under President Santa Anna had suppressed. The blue stripe of the Lone Star Flag, which frames the single white star of Texas independence, represents this fidelity — to each other, to the republic they created, and later to the United States after annexation in 1846. Texas blue, standardized as a deep navy approximating PMS 281, is one of the most authoritative blues in American state vexillology.
White: Purity in Texas History
White's designation as purity in the Texas Flag Code reflects the aspirational quality of the republic's founding documents. The Texas Declaration of Independence, adopted on March 2, 1836 — now celebrated as Texas Independence Day — articulated a vision of civic life grounded in natural rights and constitutional government. The white star at the center of the Lone Star Flag, the most iconic single element in any American state flag, embodies this aspiration. The single star also gave Texas both its flag's name and its state nickname, the Lone Star State, making white the color most directly associated with Texas's foundational self-image as an independent, self-sufficient commonwealth.
Red: Bravery in Texas History
Red's designation as bravery is among the most historically weighted color designations in American state law. The defenders of the Alamo — including James Bowie, Davy Crockett, and William Barret Travis — who held the San Antonio mission against Santa Anna's army for thirteen days in February and March 1836 before being overwhelmed on March 6, represent the archetype of Texan bravery embedded in the red of the state colors. The Alamo's fall, rather than ending the Texas Revolution, galvanized the Texan army under Sam Houston, who defeated Santa Anna at the Battle of San Jacinto on April 21, 1836 — Texas Independence Day in fact if not in declaration — with the battle cry 'Remember the Alamo.' Red in Texas carries the weight of that sacrifice.
"Texas is the only U.S. state whose official colors are directly derived from a flag that once flew over a sovereign independent republic — the blue, white, and red of the Lone Star Flag carry the weight of national sovereignty — colors that flew over a republic before they flew over a state."
Texas Colors in Flags and Symbols
Blue, white, and red are the defining colors of Texas state symbols. The Lone Star Flag, governed by Texas Government Code Chapter 3100, is the main official use of the Texas state colors and one of the most recognized flags in the United States. The Governor's Flag, legislative flags, state agency insignia, and official communications all draw from the same blue-white-red identity, including interstate-facing materials on States That Border Texas.
Quick Answers
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Sources
- Texas Government Code Chapter 3100 - State Flag
- Texas State Library and Archives Commission - State Symbols
- Texas Secretary of State - State Flag and Colors
Texas State Symbols
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