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Montgomery County, Maryland (U.S.)

Last modified: 2024-09-14 by rick wyatt
Keywords: montgomery | maryland |
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[Flag of Montgomery County, Maryland] image by António Martins-Tuválkin and Pierre Gay, 11 October 2007



Known Flag - indicates flag is known.
No Known Flag - indicates it is reported that there is no known flag.

Municipal flags in Montgomery County:


See also:


Flag Description

In heraldic terms, Montgomery County's flag is quartered, azure and gules, and the fess-wise division is embattled (but not the vertical or pale-wise division). The first and fourth quarters contain a fleur-de-lys or; the second and third, a ring or, presented with its stone to chief. The ring's stone is azure. Said to be based on the arms of General Richard Montgomery who was the first high ranking American officer to be killed in the American Revolution. Montgomery Co. was founded in 1776, soon after Gen. Montgomery's death. I know that Penn. and Va. also have counties named after the General. I remember the General being referred to as the first "hero" of the Revolution. Many years ago when I happened to visit the office of the county executive I saw a highly decorative warrant from the Royal College of Arms in London granting the arms to the County. It was very nicely framed under glass and most likely still there.
John C.E. Christensen and Steve Kramer, 6 September 1998

The flag uses some elements of the family arms of General Richard Montgomery for whom the County was named. It is based on the shield of the official coat of arms of Montgomery County which was designed and approved by The College of Arms in London, England and officially adopted by Bill 38-76 (now Section 1-402 of the County Code) enacted by the County Council on October 5, 1976 at the request of the County Executive.

The gold fleur-de-lis in two quarters of the flag are reminders of the French ancestry of the Montgomery family. The gold rings with blue gemstones in two quarters of the flag proclaim royal favor and protection and are found in the family coat of arms of General Montgomery's family. The indented line which separates the upper quarters of the flag from the lower quarters of the flag represents the borders of a local government.

The following specifications are used to produce the County flag:
Height to length, 2 to 3. The flag will be quartered by a crenelated line, separating the top two quarters from the two bottom quarters, and a straight vertical line, separating the left two quarters from the two right quarters. The upper left and lower right quarters shall consist of a gold fleur-de-lis on a blue background. The upper right and lower left quarters shall consist of a gold ring with a blue gem on a red background. Crenelated line formed of 11 squares, 1/11 of flag length, with center block split in middle with left side red and right side blue. Rings and fleur-de-lys to be three times as high as a block in the crenelated line with width proportional. Rings and fleur-de-lises centered horizontally on their quarters and spaced vertically so that upper and lower edge of rings and fleur-de-lys are equal distance from horizontal outside edge of quarter and nearest part of crenelated line. Red and blue should be the same shade as is used in the United States flag and gold should be same shade as is used in the Maryland State flag.

Source: Montgomery County: Our History and Government

Phil Nelson, 5 April 2002


Construction Sheet

[Flag of Montgomery County, Maryland] image by António Martins-Tuválkin and Pierre Gay, 11 October 2007

The specifications define a construction grid of 88:132 (=2:3), with rings and fleus de lis inscribed in 36x36 imaginary squares and the crenellations in a 12x12 one.
António Martins-Tuválkin, 11 October 2007


County seal

[seal of Montgomery County, Maryland] image located by Paul Bassinson, 8 July 2018

Image obtained from www.montgomerycountymd.gov
Paul Bassinson
, 8 July 2018


Former Flag

[Flag of Montgomery County, Maryland] image by "gridsquare19", 14 October 2013
Based on: apps.facebook.com/wpsocialreader

"What [Judith] Welles learned about Lilly Stone and the history of Montgomery County is the subject of a new book, "Lilly Stone," written by Welles and published in September.

Stone was born Lilly Catherine Moore on July 20, 1861, the night before the Battle of Manassas on her family farm in Cabin John. She lived until 1960, when, at age 99, she died during the Cold War, Welles said.

During those years, most notably during the last half of her life, Stone started Stoneyhurst Quarry, launched the Montgomery County Historical Society, created an early version of the Montgomery County flag and designed a three-cent postage stamp issued in 1948 honoring Francis Scott Key.

Stone could trace her ancestry back to the Revolutionary War and was a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution, Welles said.

When members of the DAR were asked to bring their county flags to the group's general meeting of 1935, Stone learned that Montgomery didn't have a flag. She immediately organized a committee to create one. The flag was officially dedicated May 3, 1944, and remained in use until a redesigned Montgomery flag was dedicated in 1976."
apps.facebook.com/wpsocialreader
Vanja Poposki, 24 November 2012

Sheriff's Office flag

[Flag of Montgomery County, Maryland] image by D.M.S., 24 August 2017


 
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