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image by António Martins-Tuválkin, 8 March 2008
See also:
The NAVA image at http://www.nava.org/Flag%20Design/City%20Survey%202004/city_flag_photos/Harrisburg.jpg and shown in the American Flag Survey (2004) and American City Flags (Purcell, 2003) shows a very dark blue 3:4 flag with a thin golden yellow border (or fringe?) and a large white keystone centered on it, slightly offset to the top, charged with a dark blue line art representation of the local capitol dome (emerging from a cloud?) above three golden yellow crescents pointing up (set 2+1) and between a sun and a fleur de lis, both also golden yellow, near the top of the keystone. (If the keystone is interpreted as a shield this could be blazoned as Argent a dome azure and in chief dexter a sun Or and in chief sinister a fleur de lis Or and in base three crescents Or pointing upwards set in counterchevron.) Below the keystone the word "Harrisburg" arched upwards and set in golden yellow serif capitals.
At
http://www.mike-snook.com/photos/tradelist/PA-HarrisburgPDTrader.jpg, a
police badge uses the same emblem, also on blue, with the keystone bordered in
red.
Here are some photos and texts about the Harrisburg Capitol dome:
http://www.warnerphotography.net/images/Capitol.jpg
http://www.eventective.com/USA/Pennsylvania/Harrisburg/
http://www.temple.edu/harrisburg/img/news/temple-harrisburg-capitol.jpg
http://www.flickr.com/photos/gailontheweb/5495565/in/set-138486/
http://www.epodunk.com/cgi-bin/genInfo.php?locIndex=14100
António Martins-Tuválkin, 8 March 2008
A much older picture of the city flag is shown here (Myers Mfg Co. post card,
1908):
http://www.ioffer.com/i/HARRISBURG-CITY-PA-FLAG-POSTCARD-FRM-MYERS-MFG-CO-1908-13126739.
The main difference is the very thin border; yellow is rendered as gold; and
clouds appear behind the crescents as well. It strikes me that the fleur-de-lis
may refer to the short period when Harrisburg was called Louisburg.
Jan
Mertens, 3 May 2009
image by António Martins-Tuválkin, 8 March 2008
The website at
http://harrisburg.pahighways.com shows a different flag at
http://harrisburg.pahighways.com/images/harrisburgflag.jpg: It is rather
a 4:7 medium blue flag with the seal centered on it in large size (~7/8ths of
the flag height). This seal is very dark blue with a wide yellow border (and
an outer dark blue rim) and shows a white keystone with a thin red edge; on
it a dark blue line art representation of the local capitol dome above three
yellow crescents pointing up (set 2+1) and between a sun and a fleur de lis,
both also yellow, near the top of the keystone. On the yellow border, "City
of Harrisburg" on the upper half and "All-America city" on the lower half,
separated by mid-dots, all set in bold serif capitals.
António Martins-Tuválkin, 8 March 2008
Keystone (contents unchanged but for the evaporated cloud) with narrow red border on a dark blue disk with yellow rim, outlined in dark blue, bearing title “CITY OF HARRISBURG / ALL-AMERICA CITY” (dark blue serif letters and two separating dots). The entire emblem or seal is placed on a medium blue field.
This “All America City” is a title granted by the National Civic League:
Harrisburg, PA received it in 1990. Briefly from
http://ncl.org/programs.html:
“The
All-America City Award is America's oldest and most prestigious community
recognition award. Since 1949 the All-America City Award has encouraged and
recognized civic excellence, honoring communities of all sizes (cities, towns,
counties, neighborhoods and regions) in which citizens, government, businesses
and voluntary organizations work together to address critical local issues.”
Jan Mertens, 5 May 2009
image located by Valentin Poposki, 1 August 2009
Another variant of the flag of Harrisburg is shown in a large photo with
visible details:
http://www.yorkblog.com/explorer/flag.jpg. It has a yellow border and red
border to the emblem.
Valentin Poposki, 1 August 2009