Last modified: 2009-06-27 by rick wyatt
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image located by Valentin Poposki, 25 September 2007
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The City of Aurora, approximately 20 miles west of Chicago, can trace its
beginnings to a community established on an island in the Fox River in 1834
by Joseph McCarty, who had traveled west from New York. Soon, he was
joined by his brother, Samuel. The original settlement was named McCarty
Mills because the brothers had established a saw mill and grist mill in
the village. When the first post office was established in 1837, the area was
renamed Waubonsie after a local Potawatomi chief. Waubonsie was one of the
signers of the 1826 Treaty of the Wabash and of the Treaty of Chicago in
1832. However, there was already another settlement with that name.
One account of how Waubonsie became Aurora is that many of the settlers
originally lived near East Aurora in upstate New York. Another says that Waubonsie in the language of the Potawatomi means
"early dawn" and the
settlers simply "translated" it.
The city was incorporated in 1857 and in
2003, the city's population surpassed Rockford's to become the second
largest in Illinois. Because of expansion, the city now lies in four
counties, Kane, DuPage, Kendall and Will. However, Aurora's greatest
notoriety may be as the home of Saturday Night Live characters Wayne
Campbell and Garth Algar who hosted their fictional show Wayne's World on one
of Aurora's public-access cable channels.
To design a flag, the city
established a selection committee and held a contest in 1967. Over 200
entries were submitted from which the committee selected five finalists
and submitted them to the Mayor and aldermen. Their final selection was
adopted June 18, 1967, and sent for production, but was not to be revealed
publicly until the following month. Because of delays in the manufacturing
process, the unveiling was delayed until December 18, 1967. The winning
designer was Bonnie Nigales, a 14-year-old freshman at Madonna High School.
She received the first flag and an engraved plaque from Mayor Albert McCoy.
Second place winner, Max Gimple, also received a flag. The winning
design depicts the silhouette of the city skyline in black against the blaze
of a yellow aurora. Beneath the skyline is a green valley on which is the
inscription "Incorporated 1857" in black. This is encircled by two sprigs of
leaves joined at the bottom. Around the sprigs is a blue ring and beneath
is a yellow ribbon bearing the inscription "Aurora Illinois" in black. The
whole field of the flag is white. Ms. Nigales described her design saying the
blue represented the peacefulness of the Fox River Valley. The green was for
the fertile lands around the city and the yellow was for the Aurora Borealis,
after which the city is named.
Valentin Poposki, 25 September 2007