Last modified: 2009-07-04 by rick wyatt
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image by Eugene Ipavec, 24 August 2008
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The town of Liberty (3,009 inhabitants in 2000; 11.1 sq. km) is located in
Pickens County, north-western South Carolina. Located in the foothills of the
Blue Ridge Mountains, Liberty emerged as the result of the railroad.
In
"The Pickens Sentinel", 13 August 2008, Rita-Sue Seaborn reports the official
adoption of the flag of Liberty as follows:
"After months of exploring
designs and sketches, members of the Liberty council agreed Monday night on a
flag that represents the many qualities of life offered by Liberty. "We've been
searching for a flag that suits Liberty," Councilman Michael Sheriff said.
"We've had the original flag of the Liberty Bell, and we've had one with the
city logo, but we have been looking for a flag that reflects Liberty and our
name."
The flag hosts a sliver of a white moon in the left corner set on a
deep blue field. Liberty, also in white lettering, runs across the bottom of the
flag. The design is based on the Moultrie Flag, which
was designed in 1775 and flew over Fort Moultrie in the Charleston harbor,
Sheriff said. The Moultrie Flag was destroyed by the British during a 1776
battle, and was later the flag of the South Carolina Minute Men. Following the
passage of a resolution adopting the flag as Liberty's own, Mayor Brian Deese
said that the city could have official items of clothing designed depicting the
flag along with the city's motto, "Our name says it all."
[...]"
http://www.pickenssentinel.com/articles/2008/08/13/news/004-libertycouncil%208-13-8.txt
Interestingly, a very similar flag is
presented on the FOTW website as an erroneous version of the historical Fort
Moultrie flag.
Image after a photograph shown on the "Pickens
Sentinel" website.
Ivan Sache, 14 August 2008
Speculative
image by Eugene Ipavec, 24 August 2008
The story [quoted above about the new flag] also mentions "the original flag
of the Liberty Bell, and [...] one with the city logo." However there is no logo
at http://www.libertysc.com, just the
city seal, which does contain the Liberty Bell. I wonder if that seal had
featured on one or another of these two earlier flags? Hypothetically, here is
the former flag.
Eugene Ipavec, 24 August 2008