Last modified: 2023-09-09 by rick wyatt
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Masao Okazaki, 29 November 2021
See also:
Facebook posts show that Boonsboro has used a new flag since at least 2018.
2018:
https://www.facebook.com/VisitBoonsboroMD/photos/1132140603594734
2020:
https://www.facebook.com/VisitBoonsboroMD/photos/1792818877526900
The attached video screenshot, the source of which I forgot, shows that the new
flag is the previous design with the city seal surrounded by stars.
The
previous flag:
https://www.facebook.com/VisitBoonsboroMD/photos/1197740787034715/
The
city seal:
https://www.facebook.com/VisitBoonsboroMD/photos/a.243368992471904/243369929138477/
Masao Okazaki, 29 November 2021
image by Masao Okazaki, 29 November 2021
based on image located by Paul Bassinson, 9 May 2019
Source:
https://boonsborohistoricalsociety.org/boonsboro-reflections-boonsboros-flag
From
https://boonsborohistoricalsociety.org/boonsboro-reflections-boonsboros-flag/:
Aug 15, 2017
Boonsboro’s flag was first unfurled in 1975. After
Mayor Edward. T. Weaver and town council endorsed the idea of creating a flag
for Boonsboro, they turned to Pat Lemkuhl, a faculty member at Boonsboro High
School. She organized a flag design contest and Wayne Shifler submitted the
winning design. The flag’s prominent silhouette of a frontiersman with a hoe was
to represent the Town’s founders, William and George Boone, settlers who
cultivated the soil. Thirteen stars represent the original 13 colonies and the
number seven denotes that Maryland was the seventh state to enter the Union. The
colors of Maryland’s state flag, red, black and orange also beautify Boonsboro’s
flag.
Helen Lakin Trueheart (Pat Lemkuhl’s aunt) labored to create the
flag by hand appliqué in time for it’s official unfurling at the first
Boonsborough Days on September 6, 1975. While the flag is not commonly flown
around Boonsboro, the frontiersman has become a popular symbol of the town and
is seen on banners and literature reminding us of Boonsboro’s historic past.
Paul Bassinson, 9 May 2019