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From checking and savings to certificates of deposits, loans and credit cards, all your banking can be done in the way that suits you best…24 hours a day, 7 days a week with Online Banking, at ATMs worldwide, or in person at any of our branches. We hope you’ll visit soon, because you’ll be greeted personally and treated like the very important person you are. WE’RE PASSIONATE about the SERVICE YOU DESERVE! TENNESSEE’S STATE WILD FLOWER

popularity, garden clubs were being organized, and Nashville had become known for the iris. Gardeners campaigned to have the iris designated the state flower,

Tennessee is one of seven states that have two state flowers. The Purple Passionflower (Passiflora incarnata) is the Tennessee’s wildflower and the iris became the state’s cultivated flower in 1933. Other states that have two flowers are, South Carolina, Michigan, Mississippi, Ohio and Oklahoma. In 1919, the Tennessee General Assembly passed a resolution providing for a state flower to be chosen by a vote of the state’s school children... with the process to be overseen by a five-member commission. The resolution stated “That the flower which shall be named by the school children and certified by the commission shall be recognized as the State flower.” Shortly after the resolution was enacted, a newspaper listed children’s favorite flowers as including daisy, elder bloom, goldenrod, red clover, rose, sunflower, water lily, wild rose, and violet. However, after the votes were counted, the commission announced that the school children had selected the passion flower, making it the state flower. The Purple Passionflower, called “Ocoee” by the Cherokee and colloquially known as “maypop”, is native throughout the state and was reported to be abundant. By the early 1930s, flower gardening was growing in

and in 1933 the General Assembly adopted a resolution stating “The State of Tennessee has never adopted a State Flower” and designating the iris as the “State Flower of Tennessee.” Because the General Assembly had designated the iris as the state flower without rescinding the previous designation of the passion flower, the state essentially had two state flowers until 1973. In that year the General Assembly resolved the confusion by designating the passion flower the state wildflower and the iris the state cultivated flower. The act naming the iris as the state flower did not specify a particular color or variety of this diverse plant. However, according to the Tennessee Department of State the purple iris is generally considered to be the state flower. Source links:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Tennessee_state_symbols

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