Last modified: 2009-08-15 by rick wyatt
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image by António Martins-Tuválkin, 27 March 2008
based on an image at http://www.waymarking.com/gallery/default.aspx?f=1&guid=1870e53d-e380-426b-bf65-75da974aaf43&gid=2
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The municipal flag was very prominently displayed on public buildings and on
the stages of the school auditoria in the three schools which I attended in that
city. As I recall, it consisted of a navy blue (i.e., very dark blue) flag with
a horizontal gold stripe running through the middle of the flag. In the centre
of this stripe was the municipal seal, which is very striking. On either side of
the seal were the words 'City of (seal) Norfolk, Virginia' in black Olde English
lettering. The blue and gold colours were chosen to reflect the city's historic
traditions with the navy - before 1776 with the Royal Navy and after that with
the USN.
Ron Lahav, 22 February 2004
The NAVA image at
http://www.nava.org/Flag%20Design/City%20Survey%202004/city_flag_photos/Norfolk.jpg and shown in the
American Flag Survey (2004) and American
City Flags (Purcell, 2003) matches
Ron's description. I'd add that the height of the golden yellow stripe seems to
be one third of the flag height, and that the overall flag ratio seems to be
3:5.
António Martins-Tuválkin, 27 March 2008
With respect to the Norfolk city flag itself, the use of an Old English type
face for the lettering on each side of the city seal is a result of a conscious
decision to copy the type face used for the leading newspaper in Norfolk (and
more recently in all of Tidewater Virginia), the Virginian-Pilot, formerly known
as the Norfolk Virginian-Pilot. The Pilot has dominated Norfolk and more
recently all of southeastern Virginia since the last quarter of the 19th
Century. It was the Pilot which organized the movement for a Norfolk City Flag
(the exact date slips my mind, but I believe that it was during the interwar
period), and in recognition of the newspaper's work in this regard the City
Council at the time (it might still have been the Board of Aldermen) adopted the
type face used by the newspaper. Over the years the paper's type face has
changed, both externally and for the inside pages, and for a time I seem to
recall that the lettering used on the Norfolk city flag would change to reflect
this. Sometimes the face used on the interior pages, notably on the editorial
page, would differ from that used on the masthead. The version which I saw in
our family synagogue during my visit had a slightly different version of the
type face, more in keeping with the present masthead usage; the type face used
on the flag shown above seems to me to resemble that used on the editorial page
of the Pilot when I was growing up, during the 1950s and 1960s.
Ron Lahav,
29 March 2008
image by António Martins-Tuválkin, 27 March 2008
At
http://norfolk.gov/planning/Images/Norfolk%20Seal.gif there's a large b/w
image of the seal. See <us-vanf).gif> attached, matching the colors used for the
seal on the flag. Non-flag uses of the seal seem to be fully colored, as shown
at
http://www.norfolk.gov/About/Seal.asp,
http://www.ich.gov/newsletter/images/norfolk_seal.jpg, or
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:NorfolkSeal.gif.
At
http://www.burnhammarket.com/pages/norfolk.html it says that the "Norfolk
seal can often be found in the waters around the Norfolk coast"; local
vexillologists with scuba diving gear may want to check.
António Martins-Tuválkin,,
27 March 2008