Flag of Canada

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Flag Ratio: 1:2 (1965–Present)
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Flag Ratio: 1:2 (1965–Present)

The National Flag of Canada, popularly known as the Maple Leaf Flag (French: l'Unifolié "the one-leaved"), is a base red flag with a white square in its centre, featuring a red stylized 11-pointed maple leaf.

For much of its post-Confederation history, Canada had used various versions of the Canadian Red Ensign as the popularly recognized unofficial (de facto) Canadian national flag (along with the British Union Flag). While the Maple Leaf Flag has been used officially since its adoption in 1965, the Union Flag and the Canadian Red Ensign are still sometimes flown in Canada by veterans groups or those who support the monarchy.

Contents

History

Main article: Great Flag Debate
1957 version of the Canadian Red Ensign that had evolved as the de facto national flag until 1965.
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1957 version of the Canadian Red Ensign that had evolved as the de facto national flag until 1965.
Flag of the Royal Military College of Canada
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Flag of the Royal Military College of Canada

In 1963, the minority Liberal government of Lester B. Pearson gained power, and decided to officially adopt a national Canadian flag, via an act of Parliament. Although the idea of a new design for the national flag had been discussed for decades in the 20th century, it was in the 1960s that the debate intensified and became a subject of considerable controversy culminating in the Great Flag Debate of 1964. The principal political proponent of the change was Prime Minister Lester Pearson, while the main opponent was the leader of the opposition and former prime minister, John Diefenbaker, who made it his personal crusade.

The Red Ensign was unpopular in Quebec, a Liberal base of support. The Red Ensign was especially strongly favoured by rural English Canada, the heart of Tory support. Diefenbaker demanded a referendum be held on the flag issue, but Pearson instead formed a multi-party parliamentary committee to select a new design. Through a period of study with some political manoeuvring, the committee chose the current design, which was created by George F.G. Stanley, inspired by the flag of the Royal Military College of Canada, in Kingston, Ontario. The design was adopted unanimously by the committee on October 29, 1964. The new flag was adopted by the House of Commons on December 15, 1964. The Senate added its approval two days later.

Queen Elizabeth II proclaimed the new flag on January 28, 1965. [1]. It was inaugurated on February 15, 1965, at an official ceremony held on Parliament Hill in Ottawa in the presence of Governor General Major-General Georges P. Vanier, the prime minister, the members of the Cabinet, and Canadian parliamentarians. Since 1996 February 15 has been commemorated as National Flag of Canada Day [2].

Despite the preceding acrimony, the new flag was quickly embraced by the Canadian public, and internationally the flag quickly became a welcome and easily recognizable marker of Canada worldwide.

Royal Union Flag

The Union Flag, sometimes called the Union Jack, was used as a de jure flag until the adoption of the current flag in 1965. Currently, federal agencies can fly the Union Flag beside the Maple Leaf on the following holidays: Victoria Day, the anniversary of the Statute of Westminster (December 11), and Commonwealth Day. The Union Flag can also be flown at the National War Memorial or at other locations during ceremonies that honour Canadian involvement with forces of other Commonwealth nations during times of war. The Union Flag is always preceded by the Canadian flag. The Union Flag is part of the provincial flags of Ontario and Manitoba, and a modified version is used on the flag of British Columbia. Several of the provincial lieutenant governors formerly used a modified Union Flag as their personal standard, but the lieutenant governor of Nova Scotia is the only one who retains this design. [3]

Symbolism

Captain Canuck, the most famous native Canadian patriotic superhero with his costume with the National Flag markings.
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Captain Canuck, the most famous native Canadian patriotic superhero with his costume with the National Flag markings.

The white centre is a device unique to Canada, blazoned a Canadian pale, being a unique pale 1/2 the width of the field rather than 1/3 (in heraldry, a pale is a vertical stripe). The flag is blazoned Gules, on a Canadian pale argent a maple leaf of the first.

In 1921, King George V proclaimed the official colours of Canada as red, from the Saint George's Cross, and white, from the French royal emblem since King Charles VII.

As early as 1700, the maple leaf began to serve as a symbol celebrating Canada's nature and environment. The maple leaf on the flag is a sugar maple leaf. Sugar maples are native to Canada and have brilliant fall foilage. The number of points on the leaf has no significance; they do not, for instance, represent the ten provinces plus the federal government. In fact, some of the very first Canadian flags made had maple leaves of 15 points: the lower single points were tripled like the top three.

By a figure-ground reversal of the white square and the maple leaf, the two upper corners of the square can be seen as silhouettes of two angry faces arguing. This has often been considered evocative of the nature of Canadian federalism, but was wholly unintentional.

In Canadian Culture, various patriotic comic book Canadian superheroes use the Maple Leaf Flag as the basis for their costumes, much like how Captain America's costume is based on the Stars and Stripes flag. Hence, these characters' costumes are typically red and white with a red maple leaf as their symbol. Canadian superheroes who use this visual motif include:

Technical description

The ratio of the Canadian flag is 1:2, or the length of the flag is twice the width of the flag.

The Department of Canadian Heritage has listed the various colour shades that should be used when reproducing the Canadian flag, these include:

  • Printing ink
    • FIP red: General Printing Ink, No. 0-712;
    • Inmont Canada Ltd., No. 4T51577;
    • Monarch Inks, No. 62539/0
    • Rieger Inks, No. 25564
    • Sinclair and Valentine, No. RL163929/0.

The following colours 0/100/100/0 in the CMYK process or PMS032 (flag red 100%) or PMS485 (used for screens) in the Pantone colour specifier can be used when reproducing the flag. In the Pantone Matching System, the colour used (not officially) is 186c. [4]

Government promotion

Ever since the adoption of the Canadian flag in 1965, there have been programs sponsored by the Canadian government to promote the flag to their citizens and to the world at large. Two of the most famous examples is the Heritage Department's Parliamentary Flag Program and the flag program run by the Department of Public Works.

Parliamentary Flag Program

To increase awareness of the new flag, the Parliamentary Flag Program was set up in December 1972 by the Cabinet. The purpose of this program was to allow members of the House of Commons to distribute flags and lapel pins in the shape of the Canadian flag to their constituents. The program has been in operation since 1973. [5]

References

  1. ^  http://www.canadianheritage.gc.ca/progs/cpsc-ccsp/etiquette/4_e.cfm
  2. ^  http://www.pch.gc.ca/progs/cpsc-ccsp/sc-cs/df11_e.cfm
  3. ^  http://www.pch.gc.ca/progs/cpsc-ccsp/mission/11_e.cfm

See also

External links


List of Canadian flags
National: CanadaRoyal StandardGovernor GeneralRed Ensign
Provinces: AlbertaBritish ColumbiaManitobaNew BrunswickNewfoundland and LabradorNova ScotiaOntarioPrince Edward IslandQuebecSaskatchewan
Territories: Northwest TerritoriesNunavutYukon Territory
Cities: MontrealOttawaTorontoWinnipeg
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