Flag of Houston

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{{Use American English|date=May 2025}}

{{More sources|date=February 2024}}

{{Infobox flag

| Name = City of Houston

| Article =

| Image = Flag of Houston, Texas.svg

| Alt =

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| Use =

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| Proportion = 1:2 (official)
17:30 (usage)

| Adoption = 1915

| Relinquished =

| Design = A blue field with the Seal of Houston in the center of a 5-pointed star in the middle of the flag

| Designer = W. A. Wheeldon

}}

File:Coat of Arms of Sam Houston.svg

The flag of Houston, Texas consists of a large white five-pointed star on a blue background with the city's seal set within the star. The flag was adopted in 1915.

In 1915, Mayor Ben Campbell decided Houston should have its own flag and organized a contest to solicit submissions from the public. According to a Houston Post clipping from 1915, one design idea included an illustration of Houston as a meteor, "the head of the star of which was plowing its way through a sky of equal proportions of red and blue."

The winning design was submitted by Major W.A. Wheeldon, a British ex-pat. The design, drawn by Mrs. J.W. Greenhill Jr., originally depicted the coat of arms of Sam Houston's family. A panel of contest judges, however, substituted the city seal for the coat of arms, saying it was more forward-looking.

The city seal was adopted in 1840, not long after the city was founded by Augustus Chapman Allen and John Kirby Allen. It depicts a 4-4-0 locomotive, although it was before any railroad reached Houston. According to John Lienhard, a professor emeritus of mechanical engineering and history at the University of Houston said the 4-4-0 locomotive featured prominently on the seal had only been around for three years at that point.[http://www.uh.edu/engines/epi2515.htm No. 2515, Houston and the Railways]. Engines of our Ingenuity

This flag is not very popular or displayed commonly. In 2015, an original 1915 prototype for what would become the official flag was found in a resident's garage and was given to Preservation Houston. Eventually, the group raised $3,500 to have the flag restored. The North American Vexillological Association kicked in the remainder of the cost with a $500 grant. The flag was sent to be restored in New Orleans and now hangs in the Julia Ideson Library downtown.{{Citation needed|date=January 2023}}

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