Last modified: 2024-02-17 by rick wyatt
Keywords: ascension parish | louisiana |
Links: FOTW homepage |
search |
disclaimer and copyright |
write us |
mirrors
image located by Dave Fowler, 7 October 2018
- indicates flag is known.
- indicates it is reported that there is no known flag.
Municipal flags in Ascension Parish:
See also:
Description: A stalk of sugar cane on a field of green, a chemical complex on
a field of blue and three blood-red stars across a band of white.
Adopted:
October 4th 2018
Origins of Symbolism: The Creator went on a "inspiration
trip" and wanted an agricultural symbol, and an industrial symbol, The most
common were the sugar cane and chemical complex, and put it into the flag. The
Band vaguely reminded the creator of the shape of a bird, and to give a crisp
uniqueness to the flag. The stars are included to represent the blood dripping
from the pelican in the Louisiana flag , as necessary for all Louisiana flags.
All credit for the above information goes to Christopher Pedersen and Gordon
Crawford, the latter being the author of the flag.
Kryštof Huk, 8
October 2018
Ascension Parish has adopted a flag: https://www.theadvocate.com/baton_rouge/news/article_f7fad208-c8c0-11e8-a6a7-b7360f4562af.html.
New flag approved for Ascension Parish hints at parish past, present
A stalk of sugar cane on a field of green, a chemical complex on a field of blue and three blood-red stars across a band of white. Those elements make up a design that will soon appear on flags flying over Ascension Parish.
The Parish Council on Thursday selected the imagery as the winning design for a new parish flag, replacing the current parish flag which bears Ascension's seal.
The change comes at the urging of Gordon Crawford, a 12-year-old Ascension Parish boy who had proposed a redesign of the flag in August before the council and appeared again Thursday to make a case for the design. The goal, Crawford said, was to come up with a symbol that Ascension Parish could use to unite residents and show pride in their community.
Crawford is interested in vexillology, the study of flags, and originally put forward three designs. The parish ran a poll on its website to gauge public interest among the three new designs Crawford proposed and the current parish flag. However, the design Crawford favored and the one the council ended up choosing garnered the fewest votes in the poll. Crawford noted that only 551 people voted, a tiny fraction of the parish's nearly 123,000 residents. Crawford said he favored the design with agricultural and industrial imagery because it fully pushed intended meanings behind the redesign.
The wheat on the field of green symbolizes the parish's agricultural history. The chemical complex on the field of blue represents the parish's Mississippi River industrial base. The white and red represent unity, Crawford said, and the three red stars hearken back to the drops of blood on the pelican in the state flag. Yet, the design also represents a shift from the current flag because it is completely abstract. Nowhere does the design say, "Ascension Parish," as the current flag does.
Asked about it by Councilman Benny Johnson, Crawford responded that experts in flag design frown on text because it can't be seen from far away or when the wind isn't blowing. "Text is generally not something you want to put on a flag," Crawford said.
Parish officials welcomed the new design and said they planned a ceremony to raise the new flag at the parish complex in Gonzales. "Our new flag recalls the agricultural and industrial roots that makes Ascension Parish such a great community," Parish President Kenny Matassa said in a statement Friday.
Dave Fowler, 7 October 2018
image located by Paul Bassinson, 23 July 2018
Image source:
encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com
Paul Bassinson, 23 July 2018
image located by Valentin Poposki, 2 January 2024
There is another flag for Ascension Parish as can be seen on a photo here
https://www.theadvocate.com/baton_rouge/news/property-insurance-for-amite-health-unit-more-than-doubled-ida-is-affecting-government-rates/article_d7775e7c-9e1c-11ec-b441-23a7d04e62f4.html
A simple white flag with the parish seal centered.
Valentin
Poposki, 2 January 2024