Last modified: 2009-06-27 by rick wyatt
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From
http://www.co.geauga.oh.us/history/courthouse.htm
1953 - A Geauga County flag was chosen through a countywide contest held during
Ohio's Sesquicentennial. The original flag is framed and exhibited on the first
floor of the Courthouse. The "Stars and Maple Leaf" was designed by Chardon
resident, 15 year old Ray Diedrich. The flag was restored to Geauga County in
1995 by Diedrich's sister, Jane Diedrich Peterson, and rededicated by the Geauga
County Commissioners. A reproduction of the flag flies on designated holidays
and special occasions on the William Burns Memorial Flagpole on the Courthouse
lawn.
Dov Gutterman, 18 December 2002
This green flag is called, "Stars and Maple Leaf." It was chosen in a
county-wide contest during Ohio's Sesquicentennial. 15 year old Ray Diedrich
from Chardon designed it in 1953. The golden maple leaf stands for the
maple-sugar industry and annual Maple Festival. Gold stars are for the sixteen
townships. The name "Geauga" comes from a Native American name for Grand River,
and the word means "raccoon."
Flag expert John Purcell provides this further
history as reported in The Cleveland Press: In 1978, the incumbent
commissioners, who claimed nobody remembered the "old" flag, held another
contest for a county flag, which was won by 12-year-old Beth Berkobein, a
Russell elementary school student. That flag had a red field, with a raccoon
placed on a large maple leaf in the center. Across the top, COUNTY OF GEAUGA
appeared; across the bottom, CLOSE TO NATURE was written (colors of the images
or letters not specified). When the announcement was made that this would be the
new county flag, the Geauga Maple Festival Board protested, saying that the
earlier flag was actually the official one, even though none was extant, and
hurried to have one made. The commissioners of 1978 declared they would have the
new flag, and Commission Chairman Richard C. Ford said he would have several
hundred of them made. Whether this ever happened, is not known, but the 1953
flag apparently won the day. We have no image of the red flag.
Source:
http://www.ohiochannel.org/your_state/ohio_statehouse/education/ohio_county_flags.cfm
Located by Valentin Poposki, 26 September 2007