The Ecology Flag was designed in 1970 by Jack Shepherd, then senior editor at
Look magazine, to promote the first Earth Day. Shepherd and colleagues Christopher Wren, and David Maxie, hung the first Ecology Flag from the fifth-floor window of the Look Building on Madison Avenue at 51st, next door to St Patrick's Cathedral. It went to Washington, D.C. the next day for the first Earth Day March. Ecology flags showed up many places in the 1970s. One of the earliest recorded flyings of an actual Ecology Flag was in 1970. As a 16-year-old high school student,
Betsy Boze, an environmental advocate and social activist, made a green and white "theta" ecology flag to commemorate the first
Earth Day (then called Ecology Day). Initially denied permission to fly the flag at C. E. Byrd High School in Shreveport, Louisiana, Vogel sought and received authorization from the Louisiana Legislature and Louisiana Governor
John McKeithen in time to display the flag for
Earth Day. As part of an Earth Week celebration in 1970, students at Aiken High School in Aiken, South Carolina, received permission to replace the South Carolina state flag on the flagpole outside the school with a home-made Ecology Flag. The Ecology Flag flew for a week beneath the American flag, as documented in the Aiken Standard newspaper of April 21, 1970. Students at
Harper College in
Palatine, Illinois, made an agreement with the administration to fly a homemade Ecology Flag under the U.S. flag for the 1971–1972 school year. The flag flew over the Naval Civil Engineering Laboratory in
Port Hueneme, California, in 1973 and decorated a building as a mural in
Mississippi Palisades State Park in Illinois in 1976. The flag continues to be used as a symbol of concern for the planet, showing up at the
People's Climate March in 2017. == See also ==