
South Carolina needed a national flag after it seceded from the Union on December 20, 1860. The General Assembly considered a wide range of designs, but on January 28, 1861, added the palmetto to Moultrie's original design, thereby officially creating the flag as we know it today. A resolution proposing changing the color to "royal purple" as a memorial to the Confederate dead was resoundingly defeated in 1899, leaving the flag's Revolutionary War symbolism intact.
By statute the flag shall be displayed "upon the
inside of every
public school building in this State so that all
school
children
shall be instructed in proper respect for the flag,"
and
daily
except in rainy weather, from a staff upon the State
House and from
a staff upon each County Courthouse. The State Flag
is
also to be
displayed in accordance with rules set by the State
Superintendent
of Education, on the grounds of educational
institutions
supported
in whole or part, by funds derived from the State.
It is
also
prescribed that any person who mutilates, injures or
desecrates the
State Flag, wherever displayed, shall be guilty of a
misdemeanor,
punishable by a fine of not more than $100 or by
imprisonment for
not more than 30 days or both.