Flag of British Columbia

British Columbia
Proportion 3:5
Adopted June 14, 1960

Variant flag of British Columbia
Proportion 1:2
Adopted 1870
Design British blue ensign used between 1870 & 1906.
Mile Zero of Alaska Highway in Dawson Creek.

The flag of British Columbia is based upon the shield of the provincial arms of British Columbia. At the top of the flag is a rendition of the Royal Union Flag, defaced in the centre by a crown, and with a setting sun below, representing the location of the province of British Columbia at the western end of Canada.

History

From 1870 to 1906, British Columbia was occasionally represented by a modified British blue ensign featuring various forms of the great seal of the Colony of British Columbia.[1] The current flag of British Columbia was based upon the 1906 arms of the province, designed by Anglican priest Canon Arthur John Beanlands of Victoria.[2] Originally, the arms featured the Union Flag on the bottom. This was changed as it conflicted with the expression "The sun never sets on the British Empire." Based upon Beanlands' revised design, the flag of British Columbia was introduced on June 14, 1960, by Premier W. A. C. Bennett, and was first flown on board the BC Ferries motor vessel Sidney (later Queen of Sidney).

Design

The four wavy white and three wavy blue lines symbolize the province's location between the Pacific Ocean and the Rocky Mountains. The setting sun represents the fact that British Columbia is Canada's westernmost province. The sun may also reflect the provincial motto "Splendor sine occasu" (beauty that never diminishes)—or, in other words, the sun that never sets (on the British Empire). In Canada, it could be argued, the Empire lives on in the country's symbols and parliamentary institutions. The Union Flag on top reflects the province's British heritage, while the King Edward crown in the centre represents the Canadian Royal Family. The flag has an aspect ratio of 3:5.[3]

The flag of British Columbia is similar to the flag of the British Indian Ocean Territory. It also bears similarities to the flag of the county of Suffolk in the United Kingdom.

See also

References

  1. Victoria Daily Colonist. "Victoria illustrated".
  2. Encyclopedia Britannica. "British Columbia, flag of".
  3. Government of British Columbia. "B.C. Facts". Province of British Columbia. Retrieved 2008-01-30.
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