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November 24,2016

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The Ministry of Education, Department of Culture, Youth and Sport has extended condolences to the family and friends of Dr. Whitney Smith, an American Vexillologist, who designed the Golden Arrowhead Flag of Guyana. He died on Thursday, November 18th, 2016 in Peabody, Mass., at 76 years old, a release from the Ministry said today.
The Ministry had been in contact with  Smith and his family prior to and during Guyana’s Golden Jubilee.

Dr. Smith was a professional Vexillologist and scholar of flags. He also created the term ‘vexillologist’ which is the scholarly analysis of all aspects of flags. His interest in flags saw him founding several vexillologist organisations including the Flag Research Center, International Federation of Vexillological Association, North American Vexillological Association and the Flag Heritage Foundation. He also wrote over 20 books and 250 articles and journals about flags. Most of those pieces were published in the Encyclopedia Britannica, the release said.

Dr Whitney Smith

Dr Whitney Smith

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From the NY Times Obituaries last Tuesday

Photo
Whitney Smith with the flag of Guyana, which was based on his design.

Whitney Smith, who turned a childhood fascination with flags into a scholarly discipline — vexillology — of which he was the leading light, died on Thursday in Peabody, Mass. He was 76.

The cause was advanced Alzheimer’s disease, his son Austin said.

Mr. Smith, the author of the standard work “Flags Through the Ages and Across the World” (1975), became obsessed with flags around the time he started kindergarten, his enthusiasm amplified by the heritage of his hometown, Lexington, Mass., and its annual displays on the town green.

“When I was 8 or so, I’d go down there before Patriots’ Day and tell the highway department crew how to set up the flags in the proper order of admission to the Union,” he told Smithsonian magazine in 1997. “The workers always looked as if they wished this kid would go home to his sandbox.”

While other boys were memorizing baseball statistics, he amassed newspaper clippings and articles on flags and wrote to obscure foreign consulates asking for precise information on colors, stripes and symbols.

“Some of the kids thought I was weird,” he told People magazine in 1985. “But to be 13 years old and literally the only person in the Western world who knew what the flag of Bhutan looked like, well, this was my world.”

The fever never cooled. At 18, deciding that the study of flags deserved its own name, he coined the term vexillology, combining the Latin word for flag, “vexillum,” with the Greek suffix meaning “the study of.” “I’ve been criticized because it combines Latin and Greek, a barbarism,” he told Smithsonian, “but I say, ‘I was a teenager!’”

As a political science undergraduate at Harvard, he designed a flag for newly independent Guyana. In 1961, with a fellow enthusiast, Gerhard Grahl, he created the bimonthly Flag Bulletin, the first journal of its kind. A year later he founded the Flag Research Center, a consulting firm that answered inquiries from filmmakers, historians and commercial flag makers.

Photo
A cricket fan waved the Guyana flag in 2008. Credit Andres Leighton/Associated Press

Mr. Smith designed flags for the Saudi Navy. He advised the Smithsonian Institution on how best to preserve the Star-Spangled Banner, the flag that flew over Fort McHenry in Baltimore Harbor during the War of 1812. He helped design flags for the islands of Bonaire and Aruba. He eventually amassed a collection of more than 4,000 flags.

Interviewing Mr. Smith in 2011, the editors of the Encyclopaedia Britannica noted that he was their most prolific contributor, having written more than 250 flag histories.

An outspoken opponent of flag-desecration laws, on First Amendment grounds, Mr. Smith appeared as a defense witness for a Massachusetts teenager who had been arrested after wearing a small American flag on the seat of his jeans and sentenced to six months in prison. The case eventually went to the Supreme Court, which in 1974 struck down the state’s flag law.

“I’m a monomaniac, that’s clear,” he told People. “But I’m more fortunate than most people because I have something that infuses my whole life. I relate flags to everything.”

Whitney Smith Jr. was born on Feb. 26, 1940, in Arlington, Mass., and grew up in Lexington and Winchester. His father, a lawyer, worked as an investigator for the John Hancock Insurance Company. His mother, the former Mildred Gaffney, sewed ski masks that she sold to Boston department stores.

Her sewing talent came in handy when, in 1960, Mr. Smith designed a national flag for Guyana, which was then emerging from British colonial rule. Mr. Smith wrote to Cheddi Jagan, an independence leader, to ask what the new country’s flag was going to be. Mr. Jagan replied that a flag had not been designed and asked for ideas.

Mr. Smith came up with a prototype, a golden arrowlike triangle with an overlapping red triangle against a green ground. He then asked his mother to sew it and sent it in. It was adopted, with slight modifications. Mr. Smith did not find out for six years, when Guyana gained formal independence.

Officials, inviting Mr. Smith to attend an Independence Day celebration, were surprised to discover that the designer of their flag was not a Guyanese émigré, as they had thought, but a white American.

Photo
Mr. Smith wrote more than 250 flag histories for the Encyclopaedia Britannica.

After earning a bachelor’s degree in political science from Harvard in 1961, Mr. Smith studied at Boston University, where he was awarded a doctorate in political science in 1964. He wrote his dissertation on political symbolism.

He taught at Boston University but left academia in 1970 to devote himself full time to flags, whose importance he never tired of pointing out.

“Flags express the unity and identity of one group as against all others,” he told Smithsonian. “That can be ugly — Hitler’s swastika flag embodied the dark side of vexillologic symbolism. But flags also can allow frail humans to feel bolstered by higher powers.”

With the Dutch scholar Klaes Sierksma, he organized the First International Congress of Vexillology in Muiderberg, the Netherlands, in 1965. He also helped found the North American Vexillological Association and the Flag Heritage Association. His many books on flags included “The Flag Book of the United States” (1970) and “Flag Lore of All Nations” (2001).

In 2013, the Briscoe Center for American History at the University of Texas acquired his enormous collection of flag material, which includes more than 10,000 books, a quarter-million documents and ephemera.

Mr. Smith’s two marriages ended in divorce. In addition to his son Austin, he is survived by another son, Adrian; two sisters, Sybil Smith and Lynne Hartwell; and a grandson.

He had a firm opinion on the American flag: too busy. He argued for a return to the original Stars and Stripes.

“This 13-star flag is aesthetically superior to the 50-star model, as well as easier and less expensive to make,” he wrote in The New York Times in 1971. “But more importantly, a ring of stars better symbolizes our harmony in diversity.”

Kari

As a political science undergraduate at Harvard, he designed a flag for newly independent Guyana. In 1961, with a fellow enthusiast, Gerhard Grahl, he created the bimonthly Flag Bulletin, the first journal of its kind. A year later he founded the Flag Research Center, a consulting firm that answered inquiries from filmmakers, historians and commercial flag makers.

...........................................................

Her sewing talent came in handy when, in 1960, Mr. Smith designed a national flag for Guyana, which was then emerging from British colonial rule. Mr. Smith wrote to Cheddi Jagan, an independence leader, to ask what the new country’s flag was going to be. Mr. Jagan replied that a flag had not been designed and asked for ideas.

Mr. Smith came up with a prototype, a golden arrowlike triangle with an overlapping red triangle against a green ground. He then asked his mother to sew it and sent it in. It was adopted, with slight modifications. Mr. Smith did not find out for six years, when Guyana gained formal independence.

Officials, inviting Mr. Smith to attend an Independence Day celebration, were surprised to discover that the designer of their flag was not a Guyanese émigré, as they had thought, but a white American.

Kari

The Guyana flag is one of the reasons that the country is the way it is. It causes the country to be misidentified as a country in Africa. Chasing away potential investors.

Prashad
Last edited by Prashad

 Burnham thought this man was a black Guyanese and approved the design. The Kabaka was vexed when he found out the designer was white. Read it sometime back in a magazine; me thinks it was MacLean's will have yo check the archives.

R

Imagine that, a White man designed the Guyana flag. What a disgrace, no Guyanese competent enough to design it back then? And the jackasses from the aFC/PNC praising this whiteman as thought he was a god. 

FM

Regardless of who designed it.

The flag is our country's flag and we should all be proud of it.

It was just the other night on WWE Raw at ACC in Toronto I was briefly watching with my son and all of a sudden he pointed out that there was someone in the crowd waving the Guyana flag. And so it was.

I always feel proud whenever I see our flag present at any event.

Amral
Prashad posted:

Notice the similarities to African flags. Did this man know Guyana was not in Africa.

 

Look closely and you will see the various colors of flags that Hindus use in their poojas, are incorporated. The Red represents Hanuman....... Jai Hind.

Mitwah
Drugb posted:

Imagine that, a White man designed the Guyana flag. What a disgrace, no Guyanese competent enough to design it back then? And the jackasses from the aFC/PNC praising this whiteman as thought he was a god. 

Mr. Smith wrote to Cheddi Jagan, an independence leader, to ask what the new country’s flag was going to be. Mr. Jagan replied that a flag had not been designed and asked for ideas.

Mr. Smith came up with a prototype, a golden arrowlike triangle with an overlapping red triangle against a green ground. He then asked his mother to sew it and sent it in. It was adopted, with slight modifications. Mr. Smith did not find out for six years, when Guyana gained formal independence.


 

Only a twit would make such post,read the above i made it bigger and highlighted few sentences,lacking comprehension skills isn't good.

Django
Mitwah posted:
Prashad posted:

Notice the similarities to African flags. Did this man know Guyana was not in Africa.

 

Look closely and you will see the various colors of flags that Hindus use in their poojas, are incorporated. The Red represents Hanuman....... Jai Hind.

Listen you Mitwah you should be focused on teaching your tabla skills to young Guyanese East Indian children instead of worrying about some African flag.

Prashad
Django posted:
Drugb posted:

Imagine that, a White man designed the Guyana flag. What a disgrace, no Guyanese competent enough to design it back then? And the jackasses from the aFC/PNC praising this whiteman as thought he was a god. 

Mr. Smith wrote to Cheddi Jagan, an independence leader, to ask what the new country’s flag was going to be. Mr. Jagan replied that a flag had not been designed and asked for ideas.

Mr. Smith came up with a prototype, a golden arrowlike triangle with an overlapping red triangle against a green ground. He then asked his mother to sew it and sent it in. It was adopted, with slight modifications. Mr. Smith did not find out for six years, when Guyana gained formal independence.


 

Only a twit would make such post,read the above i made it bigger and highlighted few sentences,lacking comprehension skills isn't good.

The assumption is that I am a Cheddi stooge. It is a disgrace that our own local people didn't design this flag. It looks like many of you believe that Guyanese only good to cut cane and bruk their backs in the fields. The White man is your superior and that is why he must be given the responsiblity of all intellecutal/creative processes.  The same trend existed when you folks were begging the British to take over the police force in PPP time.

FM
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