1860 authorization of a state flag In 1860, the Alabama Legislature passed a military bill (Act No. 45) to organize a volunteer militia. Section 17 of the act empowered a military commission to adopt a state flag. No specific design is known to have been chosen.
Secession Convention flag On January 11, 1861, Alabama formally declared its withdrawal from
the Union in the
Declaration of Secession. On the same day, a flag was presented to Alabama Secession Convention in
Montgomery, where the Convention passed a resolution designating it as the official flag of the body, to be flown whenever the convention was in open session. The flag was sewn and designed by several women from Montgomery, with much of its painting done by Francis Corra, a painter specializing in military and decorative banners. Contemporary descriptions recorded its appearance. The flag was flown until February 10, 1861, when it was removed after it had been left flying overnight and was torn. It was delivered to the Governor to be placed in the state archives and was never flown again. Since its reappearance in 1939, this flag has often been incorrectly referred to as the "Republic of Alabama Flag." This flag is depicted on the
flag of Mobile, Alabama. A flag with a similar motif remained in use from February 1861 to April 1862 by the 1st Alabama Infantry, at which time it was taken into Union possession following the capture of the regiment.
Single star flags Around 1861, a number of unofficial flags featuring a single star were flown in Alabama and were commonly referred to as 'state flags,' even though no official design had been adopted.
Current flag ,
Helen Keller's birthplace in
Tuscumbia , 1925 When the bill to adopt the flag was introduced by
John W. A. Sanford Jr., it was accompanied by a physical example of the proposed flag referred to in later accounts as "the design submitted" or "the first Alabama state flag—the model". Despite this, the flag is still often depicted as being square, even in official publications of the U.S. federal government. A widely seen example of the square flag is in the logo of the
Alabama Historical Association, which appears on all historical markers erected by the association, making it visible throughout the state. More than a decade after its adoption, the flag was described as little known among Alabamians. Although one commentator has suggested a direct link to Alabama's flag, there is no clear evidence connecting Alabama's 1895 flag to Florida's red bars in 1900, and no one has provided definitive proof showing why Florida added the red bars to its state flag. ==Theories on origin==