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by Dov Gutterman, 12 April 1999
Source: http://www.pocono.org/govbldg.html
See also:
This is the city of Scranton's Official Flag. The building in the flag is a known as a coal breaker.
[http://www.pocono.org/govbldg.html]
Dov Gutterman, 12 April 1999
The local historian and columnist Cheryl A. Kashuba related the history of
the flag of Scranton in "The
Times-Tribune", 10 June 2007, as follows:
"The Jamestown Exposition of 1907 celebrated the 300th anniversary of the
founding of the first permanent English settlement in America. It proved that
humbler things than the Eiffel Tower could come out of such a grand event. A
city flag did. In March of that year, Scranton’s Mayor Benjamin Dimmick received
a letter from the Jamestown Exposition’s officials, asking for a city flag so
Scranton could be represented in the flag gallery of Unites States cities. The
mayor knew of no such flag, and an investigation quickly determined that, in
fact, Scranton had never adopted a city flag. When The Times heard of the
request from Jamestown, it saw the opportunity to start a contest. A prize of
$20 would be awarded to the individual who came up with the best design. Running
from March 21 to April 1, the contest was open to any resident of Lackawanna
County. Mayor Dimmick, Chairman of Select Council O.B. Partridge, and Chairman
of Common Council John Thomas served as judges.
Victor Burschel, of Dunmore, took the prize. His design emphasizes the era’s
industrial character, featuring a white ground with a colliery in the center, a
powerhouse with four smokestacks, and a locomotive. The word “Scranton” is
intertwined in a wreath of laurels. The date 1886 commemorates the incorporation
of the city. Burschel divided his prize money between two charities: St.
Joseph’s Foundling Home and the Home for the Friendless. Officially adopted in
April 1907, the flag made an appearance at the New York World’s Fair and was
carried to Harrisburg in 1923 by a large group of citizens who rode a special
train to attend a hearing on the Davis-Fowler mine cave law. After that, the
flag went missing for thirteen years. In 1936, Councilman Peter O’Donnell began
a search, and City Hall employees found the flag stowed away with some old
assessment records in the attic.
The standard served Scranton well for many years. In 1966, as the city prepared
for its centennial celebration, the Scranton Association, official organizer of
all centennial celebration activities, sponsored a new contest. “The present
seal is reminiscent of the city’s past, but hardly representative of her modern
present or promising future,” said Ellis Oppenheim, Scranton Association
president. One of the rules stipulated that the design “should be of a classic
nature so as not to become quickly outmoded.” William Kozy won the contest. His
clean, uncluttered design features a fern leaf (undoubtedly to remind us that
coal is a fossil fuel) and two atomic-age symbols, surrounded by the city’s name
and date of incorporation.
[...]"
Therefore, the flag shown above seems to be the 1907 flag, which is no longer
the official flag. A better, non floating image of the old flag, including the
name of the town, after a post card, can be seen on the Lackawanna County PAGen
website:
http://www.rootsweb.com/~palackaw/. A smaller copy of the same image can be
seen on the Scranton Anthracite Museum Home Page:
http://www.anthracitemuseum.org/.
Ivan Sache, 11 June 2007
image by António Martins-Tuválkin, 12 July 2007
Based on:
http://academic.scranton.edu/department/ministry/PICTURES/crc-university-flag.jpg
and
http://matrix.scranton.edu/images/seal_color_medium.jpg
The principal colors of the shield are the traditional colors of the University,
white and royal purple. On the purple field there is a horizontal silver bar,
containing, in purple, a star taken from the seal of the Brothers of the
Christian Schools and from the seal of Saint Thomas College, predecessor of the
University, and two stacks of wheat from the obverse of the coat of arms of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, chosen for their simplicity and easier to
accommodate than other Pennsylvania symbols. The upper half of the shield
contains, in gold, two wolves grasping a cauldron suspended from a chain; they
are taken from the coat of arms of the family of Saint Ignatius Loyola, and they
identify the University as a Jesuit institution. Below the silver bar is a
golden rising sun, symbolic of Saint Thomas Aquinas, the shining light of the
Church and the Patron of the University. Indicating the Diocese of Scranton and
William Penn, founder of the Commonwealth, the black border of the shield
reproduces the border of the shield of the Diocese and the silver hemispheres
are taken from William Penn's coat of arms. The crest is a golden cross of the
particular style known as Patonce. It symbolizes Christ, the goal and the norm
of the University's educational efforts, and it complements the motto which the
University has had since its foundation: Religio, Mores, Cultura.
Source:
http://matrix.scranton.edu/pdf/ugrad_1999-2000.pdf
Ned Smith, 13 July 2007