Flag of Los Angeles
Flag of Los Angeles, California | |
Use | Other |
---|---|
Adopted | 1931 |
Designed by | Roy E. Silent and E.S. Jones |
The flag of Los Angeles, California, consists of a background of three notched stripes of green, gold and red. The colors represent olive trees (green), orange groves (gold) and vineyards (red). The flag was designed by Roy E. Silent and E.S. Jones in 1931 for the Los Angeles sesquicentennial.
The city seal is shown in the center of the flag. Surrounding the shield are representations of three major Californian crops, grapes, olives, and oranges. The seal contains a heraldic shield quartered showing:
- an approximation of the shield shown on the Great Seal of the United States, though the blue chief features thirteen stars
- an approximation of the flag of California
- a tower and lion of the Kingdom of Castile and the Kingdom of León representing the arms of Spain
- an approximation of the coat of arms of Mexico.
The flag received brief international prominence when, during the closing of the 1980 Moscow Olympics, it was raised instead of the United States flag as a symbol of the next Olympic host.[1] The move was seen as a response to the American-led boycott of the Moscow Olympics.
See also
References
- ↑ Xaaku015 (August 3, 1980). "Moscow 1980 — Closing Ceremony — Los Angeles and Moscow's flags in the stadium.". Retrieved November 9, 2013.