Official state symbol Wyoming State Flag Adopted 1917

Wyoming State Flag

Wyoming's flag centers a white bison with the state seal, a 1917 design quietly altered after passage.

Wyoming State Flag

Wyoming State Flag

Official State Flag of Wyoming

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State Flag of Wyoming

Wyoming's state flag is the only one in the country that places a state seal on an animal. A white bison stands at the center of a blue field bordered in red, carrying the Great Seal of Wyoming on its side. Verna Keays, a 23-year-old Art Institute of Chicago graduate, won the 1916 DAR design contest with that arrangement. The legislature adopted it on January 31, 1917. Then a University of Wyoming professor suggested changing the bison's direction — and the manufacturing line just did it, without a vote. This profile appears in the list of U.S. state flags.

Wyoming State Flag Design: A Seal on a Bison, Not a Shield

The Bison

The Bison

Most state flags that carry a seal place it on a shield, a scroll, or a plain field. Wyoming put its seal on a bison. The white silhouette of an American bison dominates the center of the flag, and the Great Seal of Wyoming sits directly on the animal's body — not as decoration but as a deliberate reference to the open-range practice of branding livestock. The flag is, in a sense, a branded animal.

The State Seal

The State Seal

The Great Seal of Wyoming appears on the bison's flank. At the seal's center stands a female figure holding a banner reading 'Equal Rights' — a reference to Wyoming's 1869 suffrage law, which made the territory the first place in the United States to grant women the vote. Flanking her are a farmer and a miner. The number 44 marks Wyoming's place as the 44th state. The dates 1869 and 1890 record the year women's suffrage was granted and the year Wyoming entered the Union, connecting the state motto to both events.

Who Designed the Wyoming State Flag: Verna Keays and the 1916 Contest

In 1916, the Wyoming Daughters of the American Revolution sponsored a flag design contest and offered a $20 prize. Thirty-seven entries came in. The winner was Verna Keays of Buffalo, Wyoming — 23 years old, recently graduated from the Art Institute of Chicago. Her design placed a white bison on a blue field with a red border and put the state seal on the animal's body. Governor Robert D. Carey signed the flag bill into law on January 31, 1917.

There was one problem. Keays's original drawing showed the bison facing the fly — the right edge of the flag, away from the pole. Grace Raymond Hebard, a historian and professor at the University of Wyoming, argued after adoption that the bison should face the hoist instead, toward the pole, for better visual balance. The legislature never voted on it. The manufacturing instructions were simply changed, and every flag produced from the first production run onward showed the bison facing the hoist. The reversal became permanent without ever becoming law.

Wyoming's flag has not been formally amended since 1917. The direction of the bison — the only substantive change in the flag's history — was settled outside the legislature, by a professor's preference and a manufacturing decision. According to the Wyoming Secretary of State, the current design with the bison facing the hoist is recognized as the official version.

Wyoming Flag Colors: What Red, White, and Blue Mean Here

Wyoming's flag uses red, white, and blue — the same palette as the national flag, but with meanings assigned specifically to Wyoming's history. Blue forms the field and represents the sky and distant mountains; it also carries the traditional heraldic associations of fidelity and justice. White, used for the bison silhouette, stands for purity. These two are standard enough. The red border is more specific.

The red is described as carrying a dual meaning: it honors Native American peoples of the region, and it represents the blood of the pioneers who settled Wyoming. Both readings sit in the same color. That compression — two groups, one border, no resolution — is worth noting. The state assigned both meanings officially and left them there, side by side.

Key Dates

Timeline

1916
1916

Wyoming DAR sponsors a flag design contest. Thirty-seven entries are submitted. Verna Keays of Buffalo wins with a white bison on a blue field, red border, state seal on the bison's body.

1917
1917

January 31: Governor Robert D. Carey signs the flag bill. The 14th legislature officially adopts the Wyoming state flag.

1917
1917 (post-adoption)

Grace Raymond Hebard, University of Wyoming professor, recommends the bison face the hoist. Manufacturing instructions are changed without a legislative vote. All subsequent flags show the bison facing the pole.

Quick Answers

What does the Wyoming state flag look like?
A white silhouette of an American bison centered on a blue field, with a red border framing the entire flag. The Great Seal of Wyoming appears on the bison's body. The bison faces the hoist (toward the pole).
What does the Wyoming state flag mean?
The bison represents Wyoming's wildlife heritage and references the open-range branding tradition — the seal is placed on the animal as cattle were branded on the range. The seal carries the 'Equal Rights' motto, a reference to Wyoming's 1869 women's suffrage law. Blue represents sky and fidelity, white stands for purity, and the red border honors both Native American peoples and pioneer settlers.
Who designed the Wyoming state flag?
Verna Keays of Buffalo, Wyoming. She won the 1916 Daughters of the American Revolution design contest at age 23, shortly after graduating from the Art Institute of Chicago. The prize was $20.
When was the Wyoming state flag adopted?
January 31, 1917. Governor Robert D. Carey signed the flag bill into law. The design has not been formally amended since.
Why does the Wyoming flag bison face left (toward the pole)?
It wasn't in the original design. Verna Keays's winning entry showed the bison facing right (toward the fly). After adoption, University of Wyoming professor Grace Raymond Hebard recommended reversing the direction for better visual balance. The manufacturing instructions were changed, but the legislature never formally voted on the change. The current orientation became standard without ever being written into law.
What is unique about the Wyoming state flag?
Wyoming's flag is the only U.S. state flag that places a state seal on an animal rather than a shield or plain background. The Great Seal sits on the bison's body, referencing the livestock branding tradition of the open range.
What do the colors on the Wyoming state flag mean?
Blue represents the sky and mountains, along with fidelity and justice. White stands for purity. The red border carries two meanings: it honors Native American peoples of Wyoming and represents the blood of pioneers who settled the territory.

Sources

Information is cross-referenced with official state archives.
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