DMSE Flags are made from Strong 100D Denier 100% Polyester Materials. Bright Vivid Colors with Fade Resistant Materials. Double Stitched Flags with an added Four Rows of stitching on the fly side to prevent Fraying in hard winds. 2 Strong Metal Grommets for easy Installation and Superior Hold. PROUD USA COMPANY DMSE Flags made from high end 100D 100% Polyester material. Bright Vivid Colors with Fade Resistant Materials. Double Stitched Flags with an added Four Rows of stitching on the fly side to prevent Fraying in hard winds. 2 Strong Metal Grommets for easy Installation and Superior Hold. PROUD USA COMPANY The national flag of Sierra Leone is a tricolour consisting of three horizontal green, white and blue bands. It was adopted in 1961, Sierra Leone's independence year, to replace the British Blue Ensign defaced with the arms of the Crown Colony of Sierra Leone.The British first arrived in what is now modern-day Sierra Leone in 1787, when philanthropists and abolitionists acquired 52 square kilometres (20 sq mi) of land situated close to Bunce Island for freed slaves. The site of the settlement is where Freetown is now located. It became a crown colony of the United Kingdom within its colonial empire in 1808, Colony of Sierra Leone.[1][2] Under colonial rule, Sierra Leone used the British Blue Ensign and defaced it with the arms of the territory. The emblem of Sierra Leone at the time consisted of a circle depicting an elephant, an oil palm tree and mountains, along with the letters "S.L." standing for the initials of the territory's name. Other than the initials, the rest of the emblem's design was identical to the colonial arms of the Gold Coast, The Gambia and the Lagos Colony.[3] Sierra Leone was granted its own unique coat of arms in 1914, and the emblem on the Blue Ensign was modified to reflect this change.[3] In 1960, the College of Arms formulated and then approved of a new flag and coat of arms for Sierra Leone, in anticipation of the colony's independence the following year. The arms was designed first, and its predominant colours of green, white, and blue were subsequently utilized towards the creation of the flag.[4] It was first hoisted at midnight on 27 April 1961, the day Sierra Leone became an independent country.[5] Two years later, the government pas