Last modified: 2009-06-27 by rick wyatt
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by located by Phil Nelson, 9 November 2003
based on an image at The Flag Lady's Flag Store
See also:
A short blue swallowtail, bearing a white bordered yellow county flag (with
radiating shading) and various objects reflecting local industry - corn,
pottery, oil derrick, and a white building. The county name is in white above.
Phil Nelson, 9 November 2003
As part of the preparations for Ohio's Bicentennial, Fairfield County
commissioners solicited flag designs from county residents and students. In
2002, a committee decided to make a composite from designs submitted by Berne
Union High School student Ambrianna Robinson, local artist Cheryl Fey and Norman
Swartz.
The committee chose a burgee rather than a standard shape to match
Ohio's state flag. The images on the flag represent industries and landmarks
which are associated with Fairfield County: the cornstalks for agriculture, the
dinnerware for Anchor Hocking glass, the oil derrick for one of the county's
earliest industries, and the covered bridge to symbolize the county's rich
covered bridge heritage and commitment to restoration of these structures. The
sunburst inside an outline of Fairfield County represents the county's bright
future.
The committee was somewhat divided on the inclusion of the oil
derrick, and animated discussions centered around whether the public,
particularly those not from Fairfield County, would mistake the derrick for a
cellular tower. The shed at the bottom right of the derrick was added in an
attempt to clarify the image as an oil derrick.
This county was named by
Arthur St. Clair, Governor of the Northwest Territory, because of its beautiful
fields.
Source:
http://www.ohiochannel.org/your_state/ohio_statehouse/education/ohio_county_flags.cfm
Located by Valentin Poposki, 26 September 2007