Tuesday, July 5, 2016

California Flag And Its History

By Brian Scott


On June 14, 1846, a small band of settlers marched on the Mexican garrison at Sonoma and took the commandant prisoner. They issued a proclamation which declared California to be a Republic independent of Mexico. This uprising became known as the Bear Flag Revolt (after the hastily-designed flag depicting a grizzly bear and a five pointed star over a red bar and the words "California Republic."

That frontier town was Sonoma, the land was California, and the rebels, American settlers spurred on by promises of help from U.S. Army Captain John Fremont. The rebel standard, the flag of the so-called California Republic, became the California State Flag. It's time California dump that flag, a symbol of blatant illegality and racial prejudice. Like the Confederate cross of St. Andrew, the Bear Flag is a symbol whose time has come and gone.

At the point when the Legislature voted to embrace the agitator standard as the state banner in 1911, California was in the hold of a bigot, jingoistic fever. The measure was supported by Sen. James Holohan from Watsonville, an individual from the Native Sons of the Golden West. The conspicuous purpose of the measure was to commend the Bear Flaggers, who were hailed as wholesome loyalists.

Its pioneer, Ezekiel Merrit, was portrayed as "a corrupt, bourbon drinking, pugnacious individual." Known as Stuttering Merrit, he was a criminal who in 1848 supposedly stole 200 pounds of gold from his business accomplice. William Todd, who outlined the banner, originated from a group of Kentucky slave proprietors. The next is the first lieutenant, Henry L. Portage, was a U.S. Armed force coward who had imitated his brother to escape. Sam Kelsey, the second lieutenant, alongside his brother Ben, was a genocidal insane person who killed many Pomo Indians in Clear Lake.

The bear on California’s flag represents the grizzly bears that were common in California at the time and are much less common today. The bold words “California Republic” were placed to firmly establish California as an independent state apart from Mexico. The red strip along the bottom of the California flag is simply a design element and does not have a specific meaning.

There is a barrage of cheap and inferior California flags being imported and sold, that do not comply with the flag statute. This is bad for a number of reasons. Imported flags are cheaply made and more importantly, the designs, materials, colors, and methods of printing do not compare well with the better quality, longer-lasting, and correctly designed flags made by American manufacturers. The Flag Company Inc specialized in flag designs offered a special edition of decals and flags to memorize the history of California flag for the future.




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