OLYMPIA – The town of Fairfield takes the American flag seriously – arguably more seriously than any place else in the country.
Thursday, the state saluted Fairfield for its 100 years of saluting the flag. With about two dozen current and former residents of the tiny southeast Spokane County town in the gallery, the Senate passed a resolution honoring the upcoming Flag Day centennial celebration in Fairfield.
The senators stood and applauded the town. The people in the gallery – many wearing ties, shirts or jackets decorated with the Stars and Strips — stood and waved their flags.
It was not true, as one senator joked, that the whole town of Fairfield was in Olympia to hear the resolution read, said Sen. Mark Schoesler, the resolution’s sponsor. “But I bet it’s the highest percentage of any town that’s ever come to the Capitol.”
To read more about Fairfield’s Flag day, click here to go inside the blog.
Fairfield began celebrating the anniversary of the day in 1777 the
Second Continental Congress chose the design of the flag for a fledgling
nation in 1910, which is only five years after it became a town, and
six years before President Woodrow Wilson signed a proclamation making
the day a national holiday.
Walter Schaar, a Fairfield resident, said the town believes its 100
years of marking Flag Day is the longest in the country. They have
marked the occasion every year, although the record is a bit foggy for
1918, the year of the Spanish Influenza epidemic. “It might not’ve been
big,” he said.
This year will be big. Along with the annual parade, the local
historical society will be dedicating a new flag pole in front of the
Southeast Spokane County Museum housed in the old city hall, which is
also 100 years old this year. The pole is being dedicated to the men and
women in the armed services, Congressional Medal of Honor winner Vern
Baker from nearby St. Maries, Idaho, is an invited guest and the city is
hoping for a fly over by a KC-135 from Fairchild.
Mayor Ed Huber, who was among those making the cross-state trip to
witness the resolution, said the town wants to invite the whole state to
its celebration. Not that Fairfield and its 629 residents have the
infrastructure to support the whole state, mind you.
“But I would love to see a traffic jam in Fairfield,” Schaar said.
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