Last modified: 2009-06-27 by rick wyatt
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Leelanau discovered it had a bicentennial (1976) designed flag. Of course
that design couldn't be used nowadays, so they are conducting a contest for a
new flag. They chose four final designs which can be seen at
http://www.leelanaunews.com/drupal/?q=node/5517, in a story dated 16th March
2009.
Valentin Poposki, 14 April 2009
In a split vote, the Leelanau County Board of Commissioners on Tuesday evening finally decided on a design for an official Leelanau County flag. The board voted 5-2 to approve a design submitted by a lifelong seasonal Leland resident from Indiana who currently works as an illustrator in Boston. The flag’s designer, Matthew Shoaff, is 25 and earned a Master of Fine Arts degree last year at the Savannah College of Art & Design in Georgia. His family has summered in Leland for more than a century. Shoaff is one of 14 people who submitted 26 entries in a flag design contest launched by a committee of the county board earlier this year.
The board narrowed down its preferences to four designs last month, but this
month decided to select a modified version of Shoaff’s original design. Acting
county adminstrator Georgia Robertson contacted Shoaff and asked him to resubmit
a modified range of designs based on his original design. His original
design included a Latin phrase that translates as, “If you seek a pleasant
peninsula, look around you.” The same Latin phrase appears on the State of
Michigan’s official flag. At the request of county officials for a resubmission
of options, Shoaff substituted “Est. 1863” for the Latin phrase in some
versions, included only the words “Leelanau County” in other versions, and
changed type faces and colors in still other versions. The county flag will be
flown on a third, currently empty flagpole in front of the Government Center
where the U.S. and Michigan flags already fly.
- from:
http://www.leelanaunews.com/drupal/node/6897. There is also a small image of
the flag, which includes the central part of the flag.
Valentin Poposki,
24 May 2009
image located by Valentin Poposki, 26 February 2009
[Central portion of flag]
Here is the story about Leelanau county bicentennial flag from Eric Carlson
from 3rd February 2009:
"It turns out that Leelanau County already has an
official flag - or, at least, an official county Bicentennial emblem that was
placed on flags back in 1976. When the new Leelanau County Government Center was
being completed last year, three flagpoles were erected just outside - for the
American and Michigan flags, as well as a possible Leelanau County flag. But the
third flagpole has remained empty. Earlier this month, the Leelanau County Board
of Commissioners agreed to hold a contest in which anyone interested could come
up with a design for a county flag. At the time, no county officials said they
were aware that there had ever been an official county flag. But there was -
kind of.
Former county clerk Dorothy Wunderlich and her husband, former
county commissioner Wayne Wunderlich, had one of the flags stored away at home
with a variety of other memorabilia. Wayne Wunderlich brought the flag into the
county clerk's office last week for safekeeping. Clerk Michelle Crocker and her
staff, meanwhile, conducted some research into the issue and discovered the
flag's origin in the minutes of the Dec. 10, 1974, Leelanau County Board of
Supervisors meeting.
"Mr. Noble Travis, Chairman of the Leelanau County
Bicentennial Celebration Committee, appeared before the board with a progress
report for the committee,"¯ according to the minutes. "Mr. Travis mentioned that
the committee is sponsoring an official Leelanau County Bicentennial emblem
contest for school children participation and that the National Bank & Trust,
Traverse City State Bank and Empire National Bank have donated twenty-one $25
Savings Bonds for awards for contest winners."
In the March 6, 1975
edition of the Leelanau Enterprise, the design winners were announced. The top
design was created by 11-year-old Rochelle Walters of Elmwood Township, a sixth
grader at Norris Elementary School. The Bicentennial emblem she created featured
an outline of Leelanau County and a logo containing the words "Leelanau County
Bicentennial Commission 1776-1976."¯ Within the logo were line drawings of a
speedboat, a downhill skier, a swimmer, a snowmobile, and what appeared to be
sand dunes with cherries superimposed on them. Rochelle Walters could not be
reached for comment. She is now married and resides in Kansas City, according to
Sylvester Walters of Elmwood Township, who said he believes she is his third
cousin.
The county board's "Campus Completion Committee"¯ was meeting
Wednesday morning to discuss the flag project and other efforts to landscape the
new government center campus as well as decorate its interior. The committee was
formerly known as the "Interior Design Committee"¯ and is chaired by District
No. 4 commissioner Mary P. Tonneberger, who is also the county board chairman.
"I expect we will have one of the Bicentennial flags framed for placement
one of the walls somewhere inside the Government Center,"¯ Tonneberger said.
Because the emblem and the flag were created for a specific purpose -
celebration of the nation's Bicentennial in 1976 - the design will not be used
as the county's official flag, Tonneberger said.
This week, the committee
was expected to review several proposed designs for a new county flag that have
been received so far and make a recommendation to the full board of
commissioners at an upcoming meeting."
- from: http://leelanaunews.com/drupal/?q=node/4392, including small image of
the central part of the flag.
Valentin Poposki, 26
February 2009