Last modified: 2009-06-27 by rick wyatt
Keywords: hammond | indiana | calumet college |
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image by Eugene Ipavec, 23 May 2009
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The flag of Hammond, Indiana, has centered on it a map of the Land of Calumet. The flag of Hammond was adopted in 1971. Source: Albert Kirsch.
City website is at
http://www.hammondindiana.com.
Mason Kaye, 25 February 2004
As a resident of Hammond, I can tell you that the only place I've ever seen it has been at City Hall. The flag flies in
front of the City Hall building on Calumet Avenue and is flown on the
southern-most of 3 flagpoles. The taller center one flies the US stars and
stripes and the northern-most one flies the state flag of Indiana. Up until
about 4 years ago, there was only 1 flagpole with an ornate base where 3 smaller
flags (from top: US, Indiana, Hammond or POW) were flown. There are probably
some shots in Hammond's website photogallery (
http://www.gohammond.com/web/index.php?id=112,0,0,1,0,0 ).
As for Cal
College (as we in the Region call Calumet College of St. Joseph), I attended
there for about 3 years and they don't have a flag (at least not one I knew
of...). Cal College is a small "commuter" college in north Hammond and doesn't
really have any big university-style sports associations. The photo on this
webpage,
http://www.ccsj.edu/facstaff/adjunct/ showing lamppost banners, is the
closest thing to college flag found there.
Brian Ellis, 5 April 2008
As for Hammond's flag, the following is based on what I know/have learned
about Hammond while living here. Indian chief's head represents the native
American history of the Illini ("Illinois") and Miami tribes. The other head may
represent George Hammond, who Hammond is named after (details here:
http://www.hammondindiana.com/history2.htm , look at 1873). It may also
represent the non-native population now the majority in the area. The two
squiggly lines are the Grand Calumet (top) and Little Calumet (bottom) rivers.
These rivers are labeled on the flag, a classic case of "littered with letters."
(I grew up very close to the Little Calumet, it forms the border between Hammond
and Munster, Indiana.) The star at the top I would think is for Hammond and may
have a similar meaning as the star for Indiana above the torch on Indiana's
flag. Below the star is a "calumet" or native peace pipe. This area of Lake
County, Indiana, and southeastern Chicago*, is known locally as the Calumet
Region. (Another good link if you're a history buff:
http://www.museum.state.il.us/muslink/nat_amer/post/htmls/hi_explore.html ).
As to the Chief's head, at first I thought it was Chief Calumet because I've
heard of him but the more delving I do into his name, the more I'm under the
impression he may not have existed and is a corruption of the phrase "chief's
calumet," the chief's peace pipe."
*The Calumet Region is actually
northern Lake County, Indiana, and southern Cook County, Illinois, along with
some nearby areas. The area is the watershed of the Grand and Little Calumet
rivers. The rivers originate in NW Indiana and merge to form the Calumet River
in the south side of Chicago. The following link is a history and map of the
Calumet Region:
http://www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/pages/203.html.
Brian
Ellis, 15 April 2008
The flag can be found at
http://www.gohammond.com/web/aid=1062.phtml.
About the city:
"Hammond
is a city in Lake County, Indiana, United States. It is part of the Chicago
metropolitan area. The population was 83,048 at the 2000 census. The first
permanent residents arrived around 1847 to settle on land between the Grand and
Little Calumet Rivers, on the South end of Lake Michigan. Those first residents
were German farmers newly arrived from Europe looking for land and opportunity.
Before that time, the area was a crossroad for Indian tribes, explorers,
stagecoach lines and supply lines to the West. Convenient location and abundant
fresh water from Lake Michigan led to the beginning of Hammond's
industrialization in 1869 with the G.H. Hammond Company packing house following
merchants and farmers to the area. Hammond was incorporated on April 21, 1884.
Hammond is one of the oldest cities in Lake County, with Crown Point being the
oldest, established in 1834. - from Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hammond,_Indiana.
Valentin Poposki,
22 May 2009