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Flag plan a tall(est) order (Oglethorpe County, Georgia)
OnlineAthens ^ | 12/4/03 | Mike D'Avria

Posted on 12/04/2003 5:21:26 AM PST by CFW

The tallest freestanding flagpole in the world currently stands in Amman, Jordan, but if all goes as planned by the U.S. Armed Forces Tribute Foundation, the new tallest flagpole in the world will rise in Oglethorpe County.

According to Sam Hurst, the foundation's public relations director, a 550-foot flagpole with an American flag will stand on almost 1,400 acres of land in eastern Oglethorpe County near Centerville Road at a proposed veterans' memorial park called ''America's Tribute.''

Oglethorpe County Commission Chairman Robert Johnson said the commission has been aware of the park plans for a few months, but did not want to publicize the idea before plans were finalized.

''We thought it might be too good to be true,'' Johnson said. ''It's quite an elaborate plan, we just hope it comes to fruition.''

Johnson said a public meeting will be held to discuss the park at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the Oglethorpe County Library in Lexington. Hurst said the public has a lot of questions about the project, and the county wanted to have this meeting to answer those questions.

Currently the tallest ''freestanding'' flagpole is in the Middle Eastern country of Jordan. It is 414 feet tall, and a 98-by-196-foot Jordanian flag flies from it. But the world's tallest flagpole is in Panmunjom, North Korea, near the border of South Korea where the truce that ended the Korean War was signed. Built in 1953, it stands 525 feet tall.

According to Shane Allen, marketing and advertising director at U.S. Flag & Flagpole Supply - the company that built the three tallest freestanding flagpoles in the world - the pole in Korea ought not be considered a freestanding flagpole, because it's on top of a structure similar to a radio tower.

Allen said it is possible to build a 550-foot flagpole, but price becomes a factor as height increases. ''After you get to 150 feet, the pole has to be engineered specifically for the site it will be on,'' he said. Site topography, soil and rock conditions, and various wind-load factors play into the cost of a flagpole, Allen explained.

A 900-foot flagpole could someday be feasible - if the money's right, according to Allen.

''Anything is possible in our eyes,'' he said.

Hurst said the U.S. Armed Forces Tribute Foundation was created for the purpose of building the veterans' park, and the site in Oglethorpe County was chosen after looking at many locations in several other states. According to Hurst, the site is close enough to Atlanta, Augusta and Savannah to draw many people to the park.

''There's a lot going for Oglethorpe County ... and thank goodness it's still quiet and peaceful,'' Hurst said. ''We looked at many different states, but the land had to accommodate the area for the park.''

The park will not only host the world's tallest flagpole, but also a wall dubbed the ''Wall of Valor'' and a walkway called the ''Paths of Allegiance.'' Both structures will be built with bricks and pieces of pavement with individual inscriptions on them.

A series of 38-pound stones will create the wall, and each stone will have a serviceman or woman's name, branch of military and years served engraved on them. A similar process will be used to create the pathway, with contributors deciding what will be engraved on each piece.

Individual stones will be sold for a $65 donation, and pieces of the path can be purchased for a $35 donation.

Hurst said the donations will pay for the park and flagpole construction, as well as the land. A contract has been signed in order to buy the land, but a payment has not been made, according to Hurst. The foundation is looking to pay around $2 million for the land.

Hurst said the foundation has discussed prices with Flags USA, the company that may build the pole in Oglethorpe. Currently, Flags USA holds the record for building the tallest freestanding flagpole in the United States - 308 feet in Loretta, Texas.

Hurst said the foundation hopes to complete the project by 2006, but is making sure the money is acquired before any construction begins.

''We have never built anything else, and we do not plan to build any other parks,'' Hurst said. ''(The foundation's) sole purpose was to build this park.''

Published in the Athens Banner-Herald on Thursday, December 4, 2003.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; News/Current Events; US: Georgia
KEYWORDS: flag; flagpole; georgia; oglethorpecounty; oldglory
This sounds like a good deal for us in Oglethorpe County. However, it also sounds too good to be true.

I cannot find any other info about these folks and this project. It would seem to me that if the money is going to be raised by donations, then all veterans groups would be aware of the project.

Does any FReeper have any info?

1 posted on 12/04/2003 5:21:32 AM PST by CFW
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To: THEUPMAN; honeygrl
bump for info
2 posted on 12/04/2003 6:06:52 AM PST by CFW
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To: CFW
Wonder if they'll drop a confederate flag on it too. ;>
3 posted on 12/04/2003 6:12:47 AM PST by Naspino (I am in no way associated with the views expressed in your posts.)
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To: CFW
Wanna bet it's really a disguised Cellphone tower?
4 posted on 12/04/2003 7:42:13 AM PST by ken5050
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To: ken5050
Wanna bet it's really a disguised Cellphone tower?

Hmmm. Lot of land to buy for a cellphone tower.

If anyone stumbles on any info about this, please let me know.

To be totally funded by donations, they are gonna have to sell a lot of bricks. That's why it bothers me that I can't find any reference to it on Veteran's groups webpages.

5 posted on 12/04/2003 7:51:47 AM PST by CFW
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To: CFW
Makes sense.....we had an offer, for big bucks, to hide one inside our church's belltower...but the vestry voted it down...
6 posted on 12/04/2003 8:02:38 AM PST by ken5050
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To: CFW
Bump. HAven't heard anything about this.
7 posted on 12/04/2003 8:33:44 AM PST by SAMWolf (Watch this space.)
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To: SAMWolf
Park-flagpole plan saluted at presentation

By Mike D'Avria
mike.davria@onlineathens.com

LEXINGTON - A proposal to locate a veterans' memorial park in eastern Oglethorpe County that would include the world's tallest flagpole drew overwhelming support from the few dozen people who attended a Tuesday night presentation by the foundation planning the park.

The U.S. Armed Forces Tribute Foundation has chosen a 1,400-acre tract near Centerville Road in eastern Oglethorpe as a potential location for the park. The foundation, formed specifically to build the park, had searched a number of states for a site.

''This was a large tract of land that was conveniently located near Augusta, Atlanta and Chattanooga, and it was affordable. Plus it has other land surrounding it, and we did not want to be landlocked. We wanted the opportunity to grow if we can,'' Sam Hurst, the foundation's public relations director, said during Tuesday's presentation at the county library.

Scott Wentworth, a resident of Oglethorpe County for more than 35 years, was among those attending Tuesday's meeting. He expressed enthusiastic support for the proposal as a means of economic development for the county.

''We have a unique rural, agricultural community and it's worth preserving. We've been looking for some alternative method to develop a tax base and sort of move into the future,'' Wentworth said. ''And this, just all of a sudden dropping in our lap, is made for Oglethorpe County.

''If we can bring this to fruition it will spawn similar industries such as the bed-and-breakfast industry or the antique industry and will kind of help to eliminate that big desire for conventional growth ... The people in Oglethorpe County need to get behind it and make this happen.''

The land will cost the foundation approximately $2 million. A contract has been signed, but no money has changed hands.

According to information from Tuesday's meeting, the park will be called ''America's Tribute.''

In addition to the flagpole, which is planned at 550 feet, the initial phase of park development will include a wall dubbed the ''Wall of Valor'' and a walkway called the ''Paths of Allegiance.''

Plans also call for the flying of a large number of military-related flags.

The wall and the path will be built with a series of stones and pavers which interested persons can buy and have inscribed. Development of the park will be funded through sales of the stones and pavers.

Hurst said Tuesday that the park will eventually employ about 50 people, as tour guides and in flag maintenance and other positions.

Future plans for the park call for camp sites and a lodge to be developed.

Hurst said the foundation has discussed the construction of the flagpole with Flags USA, the company that holds the record for building the tallest freestanding flagpole in the United States, a 308-foot structure in Laredo, Texas.

Currently, the tallest freestanding flagpole in the world, at 414 feet, is in the Middle Eastern country of Jordan.

Published in the Athens Banner-Herald on Wednesday, December 10, 2003.

8 posted on 12/10/2003 3:32:01 AM PST by CFW
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To: Naspino
I went to the meeting last night. It is going to be a fabulous project. One that will honor and recognize our armed services, and also preserve the history of the wars our soldiers have fought.

One thing I liked, it is going to be private property, so no bowing down to the PC crowd.

9 posted on 12/10/2003 5:43:19 AM PST by CFW
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To: CFW; snippy_about_it
Thanks for the update CFW.
10 posted on 12/10/2003 6:46:01 AM PST by SAMWolf (Ben Kenobi at the dinnertable: Use the FORKS, Luke!)
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To: SAMWolf; CFW; Jim Robinson
here is the link to their site
US Armed Forces Tribute Foundation, Inc.
watch closely, the Commander in Chief may be wearing one of their shirts soon.
this thing is for real.
and when this is big national news ..remember FR got it 1st.
11 posted on 12/12/2003 6:55:50 AM PST by THEUPMAN (#### comment deleted by moderator)
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To: THEUPMAN
Thanks for the update and ping.
12 posted on 12/12/2003 12:44:17 PM PST by CFW
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To: CFW
And here is another article.

oglethorpecountynews.com

13 posted on 12/12/2003 12:48:23 PM PST by CFW
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To: SAMWolf
This flagpole and military park is going to be great. Everyone is going to have to come for a visit when it is completed.

BTW, There is a great bed and breakfast right down the road from me.

14 posted on 12/13/2003 6:20:18 AM PST by CFW
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