Concord is a capital that makes no noise. No skyline, no grand avenues, just a tidy little town surrounded by forests, wooden houses and roads that wind toward the mountains of New Hampshire. Here, politics blends into local life without imposing itself.
Concord's flag follows this logic: a classic seal, historical symbols, a simple palette that recalls the region's colonial origins and its strong relationship with nature. It does not try to seduce, it asserts a continuity — that of a Northeast attached to its traditions.
The flag flies there, discreet but stable, a reminder that even a small town can carry the responsibility of an entire state.
Concord is not a capital of spectacle: it is a capital of balance, calm, constancy. And its flag tells exactly that.
