Last modified: 2021-05-21 by rick wyatt
Keywords: cheyenne | wyoming | buffalo | laramie county |
Links: FOTW homepage |
search |
disclaimer and copyright |
write us |
mirrors
3:5 image(s) by permission of David B. Martucci
image(s) from American City Flags,
Raven
9-10 (2002-2003), courtesy of the North American Vexillological Association,
which retains copyright.
See also:
Text and image(s) from American City Flags, Raven 9-10 (2002-2003), courtesy of the North American Vexillological Association, which retains copyright. Image(s) from American City Flags by permission of David B. Martucci.
The flag of Cheyenne has a white field with a brown border
and the city’s emblem in the center. On a flag of 3 by 5 feet, the border
is 4 inches wide. The emblem, which resembles a seal, is 25 inches in
diameter and consists of an outer ring in white edged in brown, and an
inner ring in brown, edged in white. In the outer ring appears in brown
CITY OF, centered and curved clockwise above, and CHEYENNE,
centered and curved counterclockwise below, all 2.5 inches high. In
the inner ring appears THE EQUALITY STATE, centered and curved
clockwise above and WYOMING, centered and curved counterclockwise
below, all in yellow letters 1 inch high. Separating the phrases in
the inner ring are two sets of three white stars, the middle star larger
than the others. Occupying most of the center of the emblem is a
brown bull bison on white, standing in three-quarter profile, facing the
hoist with its left shoulder at the center. In the center, below the grass
below the bison’s feet, is 1867 in brown, perhaps three-quarters of an
inch high.
John M. Purcell, American City Flags,
Raven
9-10,
2002-2003
Mayor Don Erickson asked his staff to develop
a city flag.
Flag adopted: Circa 1985 (unofficial).
John M. Purcell, American City Flags,
Raven
9-10,
2002-2003
Central Services Superintendent Ron Harnish.
John M. Purcell, American City Flags,
Raven
9-10,
2002-2003
The city emblem was adopted officially
on 11 July 1994 by the city council, but without the date, 1867, which
still appears on the flag. The border on Wyoming’s state flag, although
a different color, may have inspired the border on the Cheyenne flag.
John M. Purcell, American City Flags,
Raven
9-10,
2002-2003
From www.move2wyo.com/Nav.aspx/Page=%2fPageManager%2fdefault.aspx%3fPageID%3d1420404:
"Cheyenne is the capital of Wyoming, a state of the United States of America. It is the principal city of the 'Cheyenne, Wyoming Metropolitan Statistical Area' which encompasses all of Laramie County, Wyoming. As of September 2005, it had an estimated population of 55,362. It is the county seat of Laramie County and the largest city in Wyoming.
On July 4, 1867, General Grenville Dodge with his survey crew platted the site now known as Cheyenne (Dakota Territory, later Wyoming Territory). There were many from a hundred miles around who felt the construction of the Union Pacific
Railroad through the area would bring them prosperity. So, by the time the first track was built into Cheyenne four months later (November 13), over four thousand people had migrated into the new city. Because it sprang up like magic, it became known as "Magic City, Queen of the Plains".
Those who stayed and did not leave with the westward construction of the railroad were joined by gamblers, saloon owners, thieves, opportunists, prostitutes, displaced cowboys, miners, transient railroad gangs, proper business men, soldiers from "Camp Cheyenne", later named Fort D.A. Russell (now F.E. Warren Air Force Base), and men from Camp Carlin, a supply camp for all the northern army posts on the frontier.
The city was named by Grenville Dodge for the Native American Cheyenne nation ("Shay-an-nah"), one of the most famous and prominent Great Plains tribes, closely allied with the Arapaho. The Cheyenne were among the fiercest fighters
on the plains. Not pleased with the changes brought about by the railroad, they had harassed both railroad surveyors and construction crews.
As the capital of the Wyoming Territory, and the only city of any consequence, as well as being the seat of the stockyards where cattle were loaded on the Union Pacific Railroad, the city's Cheyenne Club was the natural meeting place for the organization of the large well-capitalized ranches, the Wyoming Stock Growers Association. (See Johnson County War of 1892, the largest of the "range wars" of early Wyoming history). The newspaper offices of Asa Shinn Mercer's Northwestern Livestock Journal were burned down when the paper, which was founded as a public relations vehicle for the moneyed cattle interests, began to write scathing accounts of the events that were unfolding on the open range. His
account is told in his book The Banditti of the Plains, still unavailable in Wyoming.
As a town created by the railroad, Cheyenne fittingly preserves one of the eight surviving Union Pacific Big Boy locomotives ("4004"), some of the largest steam locomotives ever built, designed for hauling freight over the Rocky Mountains at high speeds. These engines typically hauled 100 freight cars up ruling grades between Cheyenne and Ogden, Utah, at 50 miles per hour. The locomotive now resides in a city park."
Valentin Poposki, 19 June 2007
image(s) by permission of David B. Martucci
image(s) from American City Flags,
Raven
9-10 (2002-2003), courtesy of the North American Vexillological Association,
which retains copyright.
image located by Paul Bassinson, 29 February 2020
image located by Paul Bassinson, 12 March 2021
An image of the flag of the Cheyenne Police Department obtained from
https://www.facebook.com/CheyennePoliceDepartment/photos/2233759483423411
shows it is horizontally divided blue over white with the badge centered.
Paul Bassinson, 12 March 2021