Last modified: 2007-07-28 by rick wyatt
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Mercer County (on the line with Indiana about 70 miles north of Dayton), is
seeking designs for the county flag. The city of Celina,
the county seat, already has a flag. This is for the bicentennial of the state
of Ohio in 2003.
In terms of county history, we were the site of the biggest defeat of the U.S.
Army by Indians in St. Clair's Defeat in 1791. Over 1200 men were killed or
wounded and left behind. This dwarfs the defeat at the Little Big Horn in 1876
where Custer lost less than 300 men. A second battle was fought on the site a
few years later when Gen. Anthony Wayne brought the U.S. Army Legion up from
what is now Cincinnati and built a fort on the site called Ft. Recovery (the
town bears this name today). Wayne went on to defeat the Indian Confederation at
Fallen Timbers and, with the Treaty Of Greeneville, established what became the
state of Ohio and what would eventually become the state of Indiana (that name
coming from the Indian territory). Mercer County was named after Gen. Hugh
Mercer of the Revolutionary War Continental Army.
Greg Biggs, 31 October 2001
I took the photo of the Mercer County flag (above) at the Bicentennial Parade
for Statehood Day in Chillicothe (Ohio's first capital) on March 1. The county
flags (88 of them) were all represented, many of them new for the occasion.
There is some plan to exhibit them in Columbus, I understand, but the delay
seems to be a lack of flagpoles. I'm promised a call from a state employee
when/if this happens.
Interestingly enough, in spite of what I thought was an historic first for the
state, none of the local media here or in Cincinnati (where Pete Kinderman was
observing) even mentioned the parade. What little coverage there was consisted
of the governor's unveiling of a commemorative Ohio postage stamp and the
ringing of a bicentennial bell (each county is getting one). Flags were neither
mentioned nor pictured.
John Purcell, 11 March 2003