A flag with a ring of 21 stars and the words “In God we trust.” To the left is the line of the Mississippi River’s western border. In the center is a magnolia blossom.
Ryan Green's "Magnolia River Flag" design depicted a ring of 21 stars — 20 for Mississippi being the 20th state to enter the Union, plus one for the Native American nations that first lived there — and the words “In God we trust.” To the left is the line of the Mississippi River’s western border. Featured prominently in the center is a magnolia blossom, the state flower and a longtime symbol of hospitality. (Courtesy of Ryan Green)

Inspired by his grandfather, a VCU grad’s design nearly becomes the new Mississippi state flag

Ryan Green’s design, one of four runners-up out of 3,000 submissions, focused on three themes: “resiliency, hospitality and unity — all three of which, I think, Mississippi really embodies.”

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When the Mississippi legislature decided to remove Confederate imagery from its state flag, a VCU College of Engineering graduate’s design for a new flag was one of five finalists selected from a pool of nearly 3,000 submissions.  

“I thought it was great that a student who graduated from VCU, an institution that takes pride in being inclusive and diverse, was one of the top contenders to change the Mississippi flag,” said Erdem Topsakal, Ph.D., chair of Virginia Commonwealth University’s Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering. 

For Ryan Green, Ph.D., a multigenerational Mississippian who came to VCU to study with Topsakal and earn a doctorate in electrical engineering, the decision to enter the design competition was personal. 

VCU Engineering alumnus Ryan Green on a videoconference call.
VCU Engineering alumnus Ryan Green was a top contender in a contest to design the new Mississippi flag. (Photo courtesy VCU Engineering)

“The House and Senate voted to change the flag in a special session on a Sunday. The next day, I lost my grandfather, the man who taught me from a very young age how to love Mississippi,” Green said. 

Now an assistant professor at Mississippi State University, Green decided to channel his grief into a creative project that would honor his grandfather and celebrate what Green considers the real Mississippi. 

“The flag that flew since 1894 just no longer represented the state,” he said of the retired design. “In my design, what I was trying to get at instead were three themes: resiliency, hospitality and unity — all three of which, I think, Mississippi really embodies.”  

The design based on Green’s original submission depicts a ring of 21 stars — 20 for Mississippi being the 20th state to enter the Union, plus one for the Native American nations that first lived there — and the words “In God we trust.” To the left is the line of the Mississippi River’s western border. Featured prominently in the center is a magnolia blossom, the state flower and a longtime symbol of hospitality. 

“When you think about it, hospitality also involves dignity and unity,” Green said. “That’s what I think Mississippi is about.”  

Though Green’s design ultimately was not selected for the new state flag, his themes resonated — both with citizens who voted his design into the top five and the Mississippi flag commission, which on Sept. 2 selected a design that also featured a magnolia blossom on a red and blue background. Voters will decide this November whether to approve the flag or restart the process. 

Green actually developed five designs for the competition. But it was the one with the river and magnolia, dubbed the “Magnolia River Flag,” that went the distance. His mother, a quilter, predicted it would be the favorite. “I'm taking this as a lesson that Mom is always right,” Green said with a laugh.

In my design, what I was trying to get at instead were three themes: resiliency, hospitality and unity — all three of which, I think, Mississippi really embodies.

One afternoon in late August, Green received a text from a friend saying the Mississippi flag commission was talking about his design in a Facebook Live event. 

“I got on and, sure enough, the commission was talking about it and so were other people on social media,” Green said of the event, which revealed the top nine design finalists. “I was like, ‘Oh, this is great. Now I’m on Mississippi’s refrigerator!’” 

Green learned the commission eliminated his flag because the irregular line of the Mississippi River incorporated in the design would make it too difficult to manufacture. “And when you look at it from the back side, they said it looked like Alabama,” Green added.

Nevertheless, Green said he wouldn’t trade the experience for anything. The most meaningful moment, he said, was going with family members to the old state capitol in Jackson to see his flag flying along with the other four finalists.  

“My mother and grandmother very tearfully told me that my grandfather would have been so proud that I made it that far,” Green said. “And, you know, I just definitely felt his presence, and felt that he was beaming.”