Last modified: 2007-08-25 by phil nelson
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2:3 representation
image by António
Martins-Tuválkin, 8 April 2006
Source: "The arms, flags and floral emblems of Canada" [c9a67]
1:2 representation
image by António Martins-Tuválkin, 8 April 2006
The Story of Canada's Flag Appendix E (web edition)
The publication "The arms, flags and floral emblems of Canada" [c9a67] has the first flag of Saskatchewan.
This flag was granted in 1964 by the Saskatchewan during the Diamond Jubilee and Canada Centennial Corporation for the province's 60th anniversary celebrations in 1965 and its participation in the centennial of Confederation in 1967. The flag is not official. Ratio 2:3.
The colours have a significant meaning: golden yellow is the symbol of
ripening wheat fields; green represents the luxuriant growth; and red suggest
the fires which swept the prairies in early days before cultivation.
Jaume Ollé, 22 January 1996
The arms, shield only, were granted 25 August 1906. As happened with Alberta, the shield was not shown as a badge in the
Admiralty Flag Book, even though all the earlier provincial badges were still
shown. The flag may possible have been used on land for a few years after
1906; it was used as a car flag from 1958 - 1963. The current Lt-Governor's flag was approved 26 September 1981.
The arms of Saskatchewan were augmented; crest, supporters, motto etc., by
royal warrant 16 September 1986.
David Prothero, 11 November 2002
The site of the
Saskatchewan
Council for Archives and Archivists
shows a postcard with Red Ensign with Saskatchewan badge on
it. When you lay the mouse on it, it reads "Historic
Saskatchewan Flag". I didn't find any explanation.
Valentin Poposki, 15 April 2007
I am an archivist here at the Saskatchewan Archives and a flag enthusiast, I have mentioned this flag to those who created the website.
It is my opinion that no such flag has ever existed for Saskatchewan, officially or unofficially. The use of the Red Ensign with the Saskatchewan arms in the fly was likely created from the imagination of the postcard artist or publisher. Postcard collectors may know of similar cards from this series for other provinces. The postcard probably dates from the early 1900s to 1910s.
Tim Novak, 18 July 2007
Archivist
Saskatchewan Archives Board