A symbol of Canadian identity
The
official ceremony inaugurating the new Canadian flag was held on
Parliament Hill in Ottawa on February 15, 1965, with Governor General
Georges Vanier, Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson, the members of the
Cabinet and thousands of Canadians in attendance.
The
Canadian Red Ensign, bearing the Union Jack and the shield of the royal
arms of Canada, was lowered and then, on the stroke of noon, our new
maple leaf flag was raised. The crowd sang the national anthem O Canada
followed by the royal anthem God Save the Queen.
The
following words, spoken on that momentous day by the Honourable Maurice
Bourget, Speaker of the Senate, added further symbolic meaning to our
flag: "The flag is the symbol of the nation's unity, for it, beyond any
doubt, represents all the citizens of Canada without distinction of
race, language, belief or opinion."
Birth of the Canadian flag
The
search for a new Canadian flag started in earnest in 1925 when a
committee of the Privy Council began to research possible designs for a
national flag. However, the work of the committee was never completed.
Later,
in 1946, a select parliamentary committee was appointed with a similar
mandate, called for submissions and received more than 2,600 designs.
Still, the Parliament of Canada was never called upon to formally vote
on a design.
Early in 1964, Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson
informed the House of Commons that the government wished to adopt a
distinctive national flag. The 1967 centennial celebration of
Confederation was, after all, approaching. As a result, a Senate and
House of Commons Committee was formed and submissions were called for
once again.
In October 1964, after eliminating various
proposals, the committee was left with three possible designs -- a Red
Ensign with the fleur-de-lis and the Union Jack, a design incorporating
three red maple leaves, and a red flag with a single, stylized red
maple leaf on a white square. (Pearson himself preferred a design with
three red maple leaves between two blue borders.)
Two
heraldry experts, who both favoured a three-leaf design, played a
decisive role in the choice of our flag: Alan Beddoe, a retired naval
captain and heraldic adviser to the Royal Canadian Navy, and Colonel
Fortescue Duguid, a heraldist and historian.
The names of
Mr. John Matheson and Dr. George Stanley are well known in the story of
the evolution of a new Canadian flag. Mr. Matheson, a Member of
Parliament from Ontario, was perhaps one of the strongest supporters of
a new flag and played a key advisory role. Dr. Stanley was Dean of Arts
at the Royal Military College in Kingston, and brought to the attention
of the committee the fact that the Commandant's flag at the College --
an emblem, i.e. a mailed fist, on a red and white ground -- was
impressive.
Dr. Stanley's design is based on a strong sense
of Canadian history. The combination of red, white and red first
appeared in the General Service Medal issued by Queen Victoria. Red and
white were subsequently proclaimed Canada's national colours by King
George V in 1921. Three years earlier, Major General (later the
Honourable) Sir Eugene Fiset had recommended that Canada's emblem be
the single red maple leaf on a white field - the device worn by all
Canadian Olympic athletes since 1904.
The committee
eventually decided to recommend the single-leaf design, which was
approved by resolution of the House of Commons on December 15, 1964,
followed by the Senate on December 17, 1964, and proclaimed by Her
Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, Queen of Canada, to take effect on February
15, 1965.
In due course the final design of the stylized
maple leaf was established by Mr. Jacques St-Cyr, the precise
dimensions of red and white were suggested by Mr. George Best, and the
technical description of precise shade of red defined by Dr. Gunter
Wyszchi.
The national flag of Canada, then, came into being,
credit to those eminent Canadians: the Right Honourable Lester B.
Pearson, who wanted a distinctive national flag as a vehicle to promote
national unity; John Matheson, who established the conceptual framework
for a suitable flag, then sought out and combined the appropriate
components to create it; and Dr. George Stanley, who provided the
seminal concept - the central concepts of red-white-red stripes with a
central maple leaf - in this process.
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