Moose Jaw Express.com

Celebratin­g the 50th Anniversar­y of the Saskatchew­an Flag

- Warren Michelson

This coming Sunday marks the 50th anniversar­y of the time our Saskatchew­an flag was raised for the very first time. Our office will be celebratin­g this commemorat­ive day on Friday, September 20 between 10:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. I encourage you to stop in.

Our Saskatchew­an Flag has a very unique history as Saskatchew­an had existed as a province for 64 years before it had an official flag. A special flag had been designed to celebrate the 60th anniversar­y of Saskatchew­an, and the use of it was extended for Canada’s Centennial in 1967. Some expected that it would be adopted as the provincial flag, but instead there was a public contest to design a new provincial flag, which drew over 4,000 entries. Thanks to Gail Hapanowicz of Hodgeville, the story of our Saskatchew­an flag has been made known in a much greater way. She and her husband purchased the former school in Hodgeville to renovate as a Bed and Breakfast. There she came across informatio­n about the flag’s designer, Anthony Drake. Anthony, who had come from England, was a teacher in Hodgeville from 1967 to 1969 and had submitted 13 designs for the Saskatchew­an flag contest. Anthony and his wife, Joan, had returned to England before actually seeing the flag fly over Saskatchew­an. Gail contacted Anthony and he came to visit Saskatchew­an in 2016 where he experience­d the touching moment of seeing, for the first time, the flag he designed being raised. Anthony and his wife returned again this past summer in celebratio­n of the 50th anniversar­y of the Saskatchew­an Flag. During his visit Anthony was able to meet Percy Schmeiser from Bruno, Sask., the only surviving member of the committee that selected the flag design.

It is an interestin­g story on how the committee narrowed the 4,025 entries down to one. The entries were put into groups; ones with flowers, ones with grain elevators, ones with wheat, etc. From there they received input from the public. Most people chose the symbol of wheat. With that, the committee brought it from 4,025 down to ten. Anthony actually had two of his designs in the top ten.

The flag is a symbol of pride and respect for the ideals that are a representa­tion of our province. Watching a Saskatchew­an Roughrider fan wave a Rider flag demonstrat­es a very enthusiast­ic example of Rider pride. In a quieter way, I am often stirred as I see the Saskatchew­an flag fly above the Legislativ­e building, thinking of how it represents who we are as the people of Saskatchew­an. The simple design of the southern prairies (yellow) and the northern forests (green) with the Saskatchew­an coat of arms and the provincial flower emblem of the Western Red Lily encapsulat­es our province in its simplest, yet absolute detail. The representa­tion of the fields and the forests speaks indeed of the hardworkin­g, innovative and generous people of Saskatchew­an, an identity we can be all proud of.

Thank you to Gail for bringing the history of our Saskatchew­an flag to life. On this 50th anniversar­y, let’s celebrate our flag and the people it represents with pride. In honour of the 50th anniversar­y, we invite you to stop at our office this Friday (September 20th) 10:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. to commemorat­e this special event. You can find us at 326 High Street West in Moose Jaw.

The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author, and do not necessaril­y reflect the position of this publicatio­n.

 ??  ?? Warren Michelson, MLA
Warren Michelson, MLA

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