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Last modified: 2012-12-16 by rob raeside
Keywords: gloucester | ontario | maple leaf: yellow |
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image by Peter Orenski,
17 November 2012
based on research and information
provided by James Croft
and Kevin Harrington
See also:
A green centred cross raguly on a yellow field, with a yellow maple leaf centred.
"Originally, all the land bordering the Ottawa River east of the Rideau River
to the Cumberland Boundary and south to Osgoode Township, belonged to what was
then, the Township of Gloucester. Parts of the township were annexed by the City
of Ottawa over the years, or were incorporated as separate municipalities.
Eastview (now known as Vanier) was incorporated in 1908 and Rockcliffe Park in
1925. Annexations began with New Edinburgh in 1887 and followed by a much larger
annexation in 1950. The remainder of the township was incorporated as a city in
1981. The city was then amalgamated as part of the city of Ottawa in 2001."
http://www.gloucesterhistory.com
- Gloucester Historical Society website
The flag of Gloucester is derived
from the town's arms. According to the Gloucester Historical Society, the flag,
designed by Harold Diceman, was first flown on 24 September 1983.
The
arms of Gloucester were registered on 22 June 1999 by Letters Patented recorded
on the Public Register of Arms, Flags and Badges, vol. III, p. 327 and announced
on 22 July 2000 in the Canada Gazette, Vol. 134, no. 30. The Letters Patented
also granted the flag.
Arms
Or on a cross raguly vert a maple leaf
between in fess two garbs or and in pale two cog wheels argent;
Crest
Issuant from a mural crown argent charged with a torteau thereon a trillium
flower argent barbed and seeded proper a maple tree or the trunk enfiled through
a belt vert the buckle or;
Motto
JUSTUS UT ACER. This Latin phrase
means "Just like the maple".
http://archive.gg.ca/heraldry/pub-reg/project.asp?lang=e&ProjectID=848 -
Public Register of Arms, Flags and Badges
The explanation of the arms is
given in the "Heraldry of the World" website:
"The cross in the arms
symbolises the Christian settlers who founded the town; it is raguly to show
that it was "hewn from the forest". Industry and agriculture are represented by
the wheat sheaves and the cogs. Ontario is represented by the gold maple leaf
(and by the green and gold colour scheme). The crest contains a gold maple tree
(symbolic again of Ontario and of growth) - a green belt (the national capital's
greenbelt) and a red roundel (from the arms of Gloucestershire, England). The
motto loosely translates as "Justice shall flourish like the maple".
http://www.ngw.nl/int/can/gloucest.htm
Ivan Sache, 17 November
2012
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