(4)Baltimore, MD. Origin late 1800's. Derived from the heraldic colors of Lord Baltimore and resembling a pattern on the Maryland state flag. Black and yellow gold geometric pattern with a black field heraldic shield bordered in gold in the center of the flag. The center of the shield depicts Baltimore's Battle Monument in white./Asset/baltimore.png
(4)Boston, MA. Adopted 1917. The Boston city seal in blue, white and buff centered on a "Continental blue" field. Continental blue has no Pantone equivalent, and has been read as either light blue or dark blue./Asset/boston.png
(5)Chicago, IL. Adopted in 1933. Two light blue horizontal bands across a white field, above and beneath the center white portion containing four six pointed red stars which represent historic Chicago events. One of the most iconic city flags in America./Asset/chicago.png
(4)Cincinnati, OH. Origin 1896, adopted in 1940. A white field with a red letter "C" in the center, three wavy blue lines extending to the hoist and the fly end from the red letter. A red buckeye leaf cluster is attached to the top of the C. Within the center of the C is the city seal as it appeared in 1896./Asset/cincinnati.png
(4)Cleveland, OH. Adopted in 1896. Three equal vertical bands of red, white and blue with the city coat of arms centered on the white band. The colors are the same of the flag of the United States. The coat of arms includes from top to bottom, the text "Cleveland", "1796", "Progress and Prosperity"./Asset/cleveland.png
(4)Columbus, OH. Adopted in 1929. Three vertical bands of yellow (Spanish gold, white and scarlet red from hoist to fly end. The city coat of arms and seal is centered on the white band./Asset/columbus.png
(4)Dallas, TX. Adopted 1967. Split horizontal red and blue fields bisected by a horizontal white line. A five pointed white star is centered on the flag, with the City of Dallas shield in black text on gold centered within the star./Asset/dallas.png
(4)Denver, CO. Adopted in 1926. A blue field over red mountain shapes of the bottom field, split by a white band symbolizing white mountain tops. A gold circle in the blue field symbolizes the sun. The flag colors reflect those from the Colorado state flag./Asset/denver.png
(4)Houston, TX. Adopted in 1915. A light blue field centered with a large white five pointed star, the city seal is centered within the star./Asset/houston.png
(4)Indianapolis, IN. Adopted in 1963. A field of navy blue overlaid with a white cross meeting at a white circle containing a white five pointed star within a red circle./Asset/indianapolis.png
(4)Jacksonville, FL. Adopted in 1976. Two equal horizontal fields; the lower field a solid orange containing a silhouette of Duval County with the text "City of Jacksonville, Florida", both in yellow gold. The upper field contains sunburst rays on white overlaid with a brown silhouette emblematic of an equestrian statue of Andrew Jackson./Asset/jacksonville.png
(4)Los Angeles, CA. Adopted in 1931. Originally known as the Fiesta Flag, designed for the city's sesquicentennial; a notched vertical tri-color of green, golden yellow and red from hosit to fly end. The City seal is centered on the yellow band./Asset/losangeles.png
(4)Madison, WI. Adopted 1962, modified 2018. Field of light blue bisected by a white band from lower hoist to upper fly end. A black cross emblem containing a gold circle is centered on the white band. The emblem symbolizes the four local lakes and the dome of the State Capitol building./Asset/madison.png
(4)Memphis, TN. Adopted in 1963. A white field on the hoist side, red over blue field on the fly end, meeting at an angle at a one third to one half the width of the flag and overlaid by the city seal./Asset/memphis.png
(4)Minneapolis, MN. Adopted in 1955. White field with a royal blue pennant shape from hoist to fly end. A white circle is centered on the pennant shape divided into four quadrants indicating emblems in the same royal blue for a building, a metal gear, a microscope and a pilot's wheel./Asset/minneapolis.png
(4)Mobile. AL. Adopted in 1968. Equal red and blue horizontal bands towards the top and bottom respectively, across a white field with the city seal centered on the white field./Asset/mobile.png
(4)New Orleans, LA. Adopted in 1918. The City of New Orleans flag consists of three gold fleur-de-lis arranged in a triangular pattern, two centered higher, one centered lower, on white field framed by a red horizontal band along the top edge and a blue horizontal band along the bottom edge. The red, white and blue colors match the colors of the flags of both the United States and France. The gold fleur-de-lis are borrowed from traditional French fleur-de-lis flags. The City of New Orleans flag was adopted by the Commission Council February 5, 1918 in honor of the City's Bi-Centennial./Asset/neworleans.png
(4)New York, NY. Adopted in 1915. "A flag combining the colors orange, white and blue arranged in perpendicular bars of equal dimensions (the blue being nearest to the flagstaff) with the standard design of the seal of the city in blue upon the middle, or white bar, bearing the number 1625, which colors shall be the same as those of the flag of the United Netherlands in use in the year sixteen hundred twenty-five." (ref. nyc.gov, City Seal and Flag)/Asset/newyorkcity.png
(4)Pittsburgh, PA. Adopted in 1816. Equal vertical bands of black, gold and black with the city seal centered on the gold portion. The seal is based on the coat of arms of the city's namesake, the British statesman Sir William Pitt the Elder./Asset/pittsburgh.png
(4)Portland, OR. Adopted in 1970. A Kelly green field quartered by an offset cross of UN blue in the center, edged on either side by white-yellow-white stripes, and a white four-pointed star left center. The intersecting crosses are meant to represent the Columbia and Willamette Rivers./Asset/portland.png
(4)San Antonio, TX. Designed 1935, adopted 1972, revised 1992. Vertically even split blue and red fields, blue to the hoist with a white five point star at ninety percent of the height of the flag centered. An outline in black of the Alamo appears on the white star./Asset/sanantonio.jpg
(4)San Francisco, CA. Adopted in 1940, in use circa 1900. The City and County shall have an official flag to be known as "The Flag of San Francisco." The flag shall be as follows: A phoenix rising from the flames, below which shall appear the motto "Oro en Paz - Fierro en Guerra" (gold in peace; iron in warfare), both in a golden hue on a field of white, with the flag itself bordered with gold. The words "San Francisco" shall appear horizontally along the lower portion of the flag, below the phoenix and the motto, in letters of appropriate size, rich blue in coloring. (ref; San Francisco Administrative Code, General Provisions [Ord. No. 979 (1939), Sec. 1]./Asset/sanfrancisco.png
(4)St. Louis, MO. Adopted in 1964. Red field with three thick wavy, white-blue-white bars from top and bottom hoist corners and the center fly end, intersecting center left, over which is a dark blue fleur-de-lis emblem within a gold globe. The wavy lines represent the confluence of the Missouri and Mississippi rivers./Asset/stlouis.png
(4)St. Petersburg, FL. Adopted in 1951. A white pelican emblem superimposed over our horizontal bands of equal width of orange, red, green, and blue surrounded by a white border. Some variants have 5 stripes with two shades of blue and no border./Asset/stpetersburg.jpg
(4)Wichita, KS. Adopted in 1937. Alternating red and white rays, six in total, increasing in width to full white on the hoist, full red on the fly. A blue disk with a white border at the center of the rays, is centered left on the flag, super-imposed with a white Native American sun emblem (similar to that on the New Mexico state flag)/Asset/wichita.png