JUNEAU, Alaska (AP) — The state of Alaska has issued a corrected birth certificate for the designer of the Alaska flag after researchers who were looking into his heritage found records indicating he was born more than a year earlier than previously believed.
The change means he designed the flag featuring the Big Dipper and the North Star on a field of blue when he was 14, not 13.
Superior Court Judge Adolf Zeman last week ordered the state to issue a birth certificate for John Ben Benson Jr. with the birth date of Sept. 12, 1912 and for his mother’s maiden name to be corrected.
The order followed a petition by researcher Michael iqyax Livingston, who was part of the team studying Benson’s heritage that uncovered church and other records supporting the changes.
Benson is known as Benny Benson, and in 1927, he won a territory-wide contest with his flag design, which became the state flag after Alaska was admitted to the union in 1959. Benson is believed to be the only Indigenous person to design a state flag. He died in 1972.
According to a University of Alaska web page about the history of the flag, Benson explained his design in his written submission for the contest: “The blue field is for the Alaska sky and the forget-me-not, an Alaska flower. The North Star is for the future of the state of Alaska, the most northerly in the Union. The dipper is for the Great Bear – symbolizing strenth (sic).”
Zeman’s order notes that a panel of history experts, assembled at the request of the state’s vital records section, reviewed documents submitted by Livingston and voted unanimously to recommend changing Benson’s birthdate.
A birth certificate filed in 1940 had listed Benson’s birthdate as Oct. 12, 1913. The timing of the filing coincided with a period in which men of a certain age were required to register for the draft, and it’s possible Benson was told he needed his birth certificate when he registered, the report stated.