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Yachting Clubs (Canada)

Last modified: 2008-06-07 by phil nelson
Keywords: yachting clubs | canada |
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Ensigns

The Royal Canadian Yacht Club claims to have been founded in 1852, while the Royal Nova Scotia Yacht Squadron claims to be the oldest yacht club in North America, having been established in 1837, though it was then known as the Halifax Yacht Club.
David Prothero, 29 July 2006


Canadian clubs that had a plain Blue Ensign as their special ensign were:

  • Royal Cape Breton Yacht Club, Sydney, Nova Scotia. 1901.
  • Royal Kennebeccasis Yacht Club, St John, New Brunswick. 1899.
  • Halifax Yacht Club. 1862. Became Royal Nova Scotia YS in 1880.
  • Royal St Lawrence Yacht Club, Montreal. 1894.

Clubs with a defaced Blue Ensign were:

In 1937 the nine Canadian yacht clubs were authorised to fly the Canadian Blue Ensign, and responsibility for Canadian special ensigns was transferred from the Admiralty to the Canadian Department of National Defence. Use of the Canadian Blue Ensign ended in 1965, but some yacht clubs continued to use their old special ensign, either the Canadian Blue Ensign, or the pre-1937 Blue Ensign defaced with the club badge, as a club-house land flag.
David Prothero, 13 March 2006


According to the Royal Victoria Yacht Club the Blue Ensign they used for the was defaced with a crown above the letters "VI" for Vancouver Island.
Dean McGee, 12 March 2006


Canadian Yachting Clubs in The Dumpy book of ships and the sea

[Canadian] burgees as depicted in The Dumpy book of ships and the sea [sam57].
James Dignan, 12 February 2008

Royal Nova Scotia Yacht Squadron

Blue with a red cross fimbriated white. in the canton (fimbriated as per the other quadrants) the flag of nova scotia, but with a crown over the central shield
James Dignan, 12 February 2008

Cape Breton Yacht Club

White with a blue diagonal from the honour point, in the centre of which is a crown. It has a red border around all three edges.
James Dignan, 12 February 2008