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Thursday, January 1, 2004
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Happy New Year from Somerville, the un-CambridgeBoston
may have its First Night fireworks, but the city of Somerville
greets the first day of the New Year with history, hoofbeats, huzzahs
and the hoisting of an almost-familiar flag.
The horse's rider was "General Washington," delivering the red, white and blue
banner of the united colonies to the top of Prospect Hill, reenacting
the events of January 1, 1776. This time, the only gunfire was a salute to the
flag, as veterans of more recent wars, city officials and more than 100
other citizens, some in 18th century costume, joined in the noontime
ceremony. (Yes, some really did cheer "Hip, Hip, Huzzah!")
The original flag with red and white stripes for the 13 colonies
was
flown from the fortified hilltop in defiance of the British garrison
across the river in Boston. Pre-dating the Declaration of Independence,
the Prospect Hill flag carried Great
Britain's red and white union crosses on its blue field until they were
replaced by the first 13 stars. Whatever its details, back in
1776 the flag and its Continental Army did the job -- the British
were forced to leave Boston on St. Patrick's Day. That's an event still
celebrated on March 17 as "Evacuation Day" in that city. It's a fine
coincidence that closes government offices and schools and turns off
the parking meters for the day of the parade. (Driving out snakes was
one thing, but parking in Boston is an evil St. Patrick never had to
contend with. ) Somerville, formerly part of Charlestown, has been
independent of Boston for more than 150 years, and is proud to have its
own identity. A speaker at the New Year's Day event mentioned annoyance
at some sources that name Cambridge as the site of the First Flag
raising.
In present-day Somerville, tradition is not the only thing that needs
upholding, city officials noted. The 101-year-old triple-decker stone tower
that flies the First Flag
year-round is in need of repair, including the considerably less
historical fiberglass flagpole atop the tower. Officials said they
feared the pole wouldn't take the strain of raising a much larger flag
donated for the
annual ceremony a few years ago by Flagraphics of Somerville, so
Thursday's event used the standard-size flag.
Even that one took some work to raise from street level, but it gradually made it to the top -- just as the sun burst through the clouds to set it aglow. Honest. It was enough to make you go "Huzzah!"
[Click the flag for more pictures and a few captions, and let me know if you'd like larger versions or permission to use them elsewhere.]
Footnote (Jan. 4.)
On the First, this blogger focused more on getting a few pictures
online than actually "covering" the flag-raising ceremony and the
"who's who" involved. Mayor-elect Joe Curtatone, whose inauguration is coming up tomorrow, was one of the speakers. Congressman Michael Capuano was in the crowd and waved when introduced, but passed up the chance to sit on stage. I didn't see outgoing Mayor Dorothy Kelly Gay at the event, or unsuccesful mayoral candidate Tony Lafuente, although his company Flagraphics
was thanked for donating the oversized ceremonial flag that the city
originally intended to use in the ceremony. The weakness of the
flagpole, not Lafuente's weakness at the polls, was given as the reason
for performing this year's flag-raising with a standard-size banner.
9:46:42 PM
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© Copyright
2008
Bob Stepno.
Last update:
7/19/08; 12:52:29 PM.
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