
Last modified: 2024-03-23 by rick wyatt
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![[Saybrook flag]](../images/u/us^saybrook.gif) image by Dave Martucci, 13 November 2023
image by Dave Martucci, 13 November 2023
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Saybrook (now part of Connecticut) was established and in the late 17th 
century and had a militia flag. This article:
https://www.ctinsider.com shows a red flag with a white canton and St. 
George cross.
Ethan Dubrow, 13 November 2023
Saybrook was never a separate colony (despite what Wikipedia says) unless 
 you count Saybrook Plantation settled in 1635 as a colony; it was purchased by 
 and brought under the Connecticut Charter in 1644 but remained a plantation and 
 not incorporated as a municipality until 1854.
The flag illustration 
 sent by Ethan is a reconstruction from the 1675 text given by someone 
 unfamiliar with militia flags and the Venn system of military colors then in 
 use. My reconstruction of what the militia color of Saybrook Plantation in 1675 
 more likely looked like is attached. An in-depth review of these types of flags 
 was published in 2006 by NAVA in Raven 13, “Flag and Symbol Usage in Early New 
 England”, by yours truly, 
 https://www.nava.org/raven-volume-13 
 Dave Martucci, 13 November 
 2023