Most participants instinctively assumed that the Association would be part of The Flag Research Center and that
The Flag Bulletin would become its journal. In contrast, I stressed that the Association must have its own independent personality. Just as Gary Grahl and I had created The Flag Research Center and would not be interested in handing it or editorship of
The Flag Bulletin over to others, so the Association must have the full opportunity to develop as its members saw fit—with changing leadership, special projects, annual meetings in different places, etc. While The Flag Research Center would be glad to help as requested—such as making its mailing list available for soliciting membership—the Association should never feel beholden to the Center, should never feel that the Center’s permission was needed for any activity it wished to pursue, and should not in any way compromise the nonprofit status which everyone agreed the new Association should seek.
I asked only that the Association not directly compete with the Center in such a way that the existence of the latter was undercut—for example, by trying to duplicate the documentation services of the Center which benefit flag manufacturers and publishers. This was eventually reflected in the phrase in the bylaws stating that one of the objectives of the association was to “cooperate with the Flag Research Center and other national, regional, and international vexillological associations.” In the subsequent 25 years, I never felt it necessary to invoke that clause or to ask the Association to desist in some action it was taking or intended to take.
THE EARLY YEARS
The 1967 organizational conference [now called
NAVA “O” for “Organizational”] was followed five months later by our first annual membership meeting [now called
NAVA 1]. It is often forgotten that the president chosen in June 1967 was Professor Pierre Lux-Wurm, I was secretary; there were no other officers. Professor Lux-Wurm organized the November 1967 meeting at the Manhattanville College of the Sacred Heart in Purchase, New York, where he was teaching.
The meeting was a great success. Newton Blakeslee, for many years editor of
NAVA News, reported on the International Congress of Vexillology which had taken place in Zurich two months before. Dr. Clarence Rungee spoke about his large collection of flags and his broad experience in delivering lectures on the subject. The son of a Japanese flag maker came to our meeting; today he is the head of the Tanaka Flag Manufacturing Company. Others made contributions as well.
At this meeting one of our members introduced a motion urging the United States government to issue a stamp commemorate the first salute to the United States flag which had taken place in 1776, at the Island of St. Eustatius in what is now the Netherlands Antilles. Later it was recognized that this kind of promotion, even if we had the resources to undertake serious work in this direction, was not really in keeping with the stated principles of our organization. Therefore, whenever subsequently one individual or group asked the Association to support a point of view or campaign having nothing to do with flag scholarship, we quite properly declined to become involved. On the other hand the Association did endorse a motion in November 1967 to encourage dictionary publishers to include “vexillology” and its cognates in their publications, as a small part of our drive for scholarly recognition.