flag of Liberia
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The American Colonization Society was established in 1816 by Abolitionists who felt that freed slaves should be helped in returning to Africa. Land was purchased from local tribes on the West African coast, and the colony founded there came to be known as Liberia, from the Latin word liber (“free”). The gradual expansion of the territory and population of Liberia led to its acquisition of a distinctive flag on April 9, 1827. The U.S. flag was the basis for the design, which had 13 equal horizontal red and white stripes and a blue canton bearing a single white cross. Another colony was established nearby by the Maryland Colonization Society and was known as Maryland. It had a similar flag, with stripes of yellow and white that recalled colours in the coat of arms of the U.S. state of Maryland. In both flags the cross expressed the Christian sentiments of those who ran the colonization societies.
Local freedmen proclaimed the independence of Liberia on July 26, 1847. A national flag was needed, and a committee of women was made responsible for its design. They substituted a star for the cross, symbolizing Liberia’s status as the only independent Western-style state in Africa. The number of stripes was reduced to 11, indicating the number of men who signed the Liberian Declaration of Independence. The flag was first raised on August 24, 1847, now known as Flag Day, and it was retained after the annexation of Maryland in 1857. Despite its similarity to the U.S. flag, no change has been made in the Liberian flag in the subsequent century and a half, although several people have made suggestions for designs more in keeping with those of other African countries.