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Flag of San Jose, California

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

City of San Jose
Proportion3:5
AdoptedJune 5, 1984
DesignA horizontal triband of gold (top), white (middle), and blue (bottom), with the Seal of San Jose in the center

The current flag of San Jose, California features a triband of gold on top, white in the middle, and blue on the bottom with the city's official seal in the center. It has been the official flag since 1984.

A redesign effort in 2016 garnered press coverage in The Mercury News and CBS 5 KPIX, but nothing came of it, with a city spokesman saying it was not one of the city's priorities.[1][2]

Design and symbolism

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The blue and gold stripes may symbolize the state of California, as they are the state's official colors. The seal of the flag is one unit in diameter, with the entire flag having a 3 unit by 5 unit proportion.

Seal

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The seal is a black-outlined gold ring with "CITY OF SAN JOSÉ" and "CALIFORNIA" in black block letters, separated by black six-pointed stars. The white space enclosed within the ring consists of a gold wheat sheaf and grapevines tied with a golden bow. The wheat and grapevines symbolize the area's agricultural products, the largest industry in the area prior to the shift towards technological products. Attached below the seal is an oval bearing the text "FOUNDED 1777". The seal was officially adopted on September 9, 1850.[3]

History

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First flag

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First flag, used from 1969 to 1984

The first flag was designed by city historian Clyde Arbuckle. The flag was a white field with a gold and blue border, with the gold surrounding the blue, and a white border on the very outside of the flag. In the middle of the flag is the city's seal. The text "SAN JOSE’ CALIFORNIA" is above the seal and "FOUNDED 1777" is below. Both of these are in black font. The proportions were 3 by 4.5, and was officially adopted on June 2, 1969.[3]

Second flag

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The second flag saw the removal of the borders and big text, replacing the borders with a triband with the same color scheme and the text was made smaller to surround the seal. This flag was made by both the rules committee and San Jose's Historic Landmark Commission, at the request of the San Jose City Council. The flag's proportions were also increased to 3 by 5.[3] The flag ranked 78th out of 150 American city flags in a 2004 North American Vexillological Association survey.[4]

Usage

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San Jose's official flag policy mandates that the flag be flown at the city hall, the police administration building, the San Jose Civic, San Jose International Airport, and all fire and police department facilities, in addition to city council chambers and the mayor's office.[5] The San Jose Earthquakes' current away jersey is influenced by the city's flag, featuring the same gold-white-blue triband.[6]

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References

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  1. ^ Woolfolk, John (October 22, 2016). "Time for a new San Jose flag?". The Mercury News. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  2. ^ "San Jose Man Pushes For Redesign Of City's Flag". KPIX-TV. October 24, 2016. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  3. ^ a b c Purcell, John M.; Croft, James A.; Monahan, Rich. American City Flags (PDF). North American Vexillological Association. pp. 320–321. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  4. ^ Kaye, Edward B. "2004 American City Flags Survey" (PDF). North American Vexillological Association. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 August 2017. Retrieved 2 May 2020.
  5. ^ "City Flag Policy". City of San Jose, California. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  6. ^ "2020 San Jose Earthquakes jersey - 408 Edition". Major League Soccer. Retrieved 1 May 2020.