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Marshall County, Illinois (U.S.)
Last modified: 2012-12-04 by rick wyatt
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image located by Valentin Poposki, 8 April 2012
- indicates flag is known.
- indicates it is reported that there is no known flag.
Municipal flags in Marshall County:
See also:
Flag of the Marshall County, Illinois
The Marshall County flag was designed
to fly below the Stars and Strips of our country; therefore, contrasting colors
were chosen. The central figures are artifacts taken from the Steuben Township
site by Dan F. Morse, anthropologist. The bird effigy of valuable blue-gray
flint is a nearly perfect specimen as is the bowl, a prize find. The swan bone
was used to punctuate the bowl. These artifacts represent a culture of our
county from 500 BC to 580 BC. Hopewellian Indians had attained a very high
culture of the fine arts. The arrowhead tells of a period 500 years later. From
this great ancient American culture of the Hopewellian Indians, the State of
Illinois came into being. Marshall County was formed in 1839. In the flag you
see an outline of the boundaries of Marshall County superimposed upon a
silhouette of Illinois. The living green color of the county background
represents our many growing crops. The twelve white stars denote our twelve
townships; Saratoga, LaPrairie, Whitefield, Steuben, west of the Illinois River;
Hopewell, Lacon, Richland, Robert, Bell Plain, Bennington, and Evans, east of
the river. The design is well balanced due to the shape of our county and the
fine work of artist Wilda Russell of Wenona.
Source:
http://marshallcountyhistory.org/
Valentin Poposki, 8 April 2012