
Last modified: 2005-12-17 by rick wyatt
Keywords: baton rouge | louisiana |
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image by António Martins-Tuválkin, modified by Al Kirsch
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This is the most recent flag to be added to the rich history of flags that have flown over "The Capital City on the Mississippi" as the old city flag told all who watched her lime green background, for growth, vitality and fertility of the land. But times change and so do flags. The new Baton Rouge City Flag is a field of crimson representing the great Indian Nations that once inhabited the area.
The flag also keeps symbols of the foreign flags that have flown in her balmy skies.
The Fleur d'Lis of France
The Castle of Spain and
The striped Union Jack of Great Britain.
The City was founded in 1721 and incorporated in 1817, information no longer included on the new flag. Also omitted from the new flag is the Indian headdress and the cypress tree.
Eric Martin, 18 June 1997
Baton Rouge comes from French Bâton Rouge (with a "^" over the "a"), meaning red stick. When exploring the Mississippi, the French navigator Iberville spotted bald cypresses which had been barked and coated with blood. The local natives used these "sticks" to sacrifice wild animals and mark borders between tribes. [At least this is the story as it is reported by Guide du Routard.]
Ivan Sache, 10 July 2002
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