Last modified: 2015-07-25 by bruce berry
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image by Martin Grieve, 16 June 2005
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Benoni is located on the East Rand, east of Johannesburg, and is part of the
larger Witwatersrand conurbation. It was established in 1881 and owes its
existence to gold-mining and manufacturing and achieved municipal status in
1907. Oscar winner Charlize Theron was born and bred in Benoni!
Benoni previously flew a typical armigerous flag with a full achievement in that
its former flag comprised the full municipal arms in the centre of a light blue
field.
These arms were granted by the College of Arms in London in 1938 and
subsequently registered at the South African Bureau of Heraldry in 1966. I don't
have the exact date on which the flag was adopted but with the re-organisation
of local government in South Africa in 1994 and again in December 2000 when
Benoni was incorporated into the Ekuruhleni Metropolitan Municipality, this flag
is now no longer in use.
The blazon of the arms granted to Benoni by Letters Patent on 16 March 1938 is
as follows:
ARMS: Or, a turreted castle of three storeys Sable on a chief Sable, three
escallops Argent, all within a bordure Gules charged with four bezants and four
heraldic fountains alternatively
CREST: In front of a sun rising Or an arm embowed, the hand grasping a
sledge-hammer proper
WREATH AND MANTLING: Or and Gules
SUPPORTERS: Two Springboks proper each gorged with a collar Azure charged with
three bezants
MOTTO: AUSPICIUM MELIORIS AEVI (A pledge for better times).
scan by
Bruce Berry, 31 Aug 2006
Sir George Farrar, the chairman of a mining company, undertook the
beautification of the rapidly growing mining town in 1904. Mine water was
channeled into a band of marshland, and reservoirs stocked with fish were
created. Today these reservoirs remain and the area is dotted with many lakes
where people fish, boat and relax and is the explanation for the light blue
field on the former flag.
The triple castle in the Arms is derived from the Arms of the town of Bedford
(England) and the three silver escallops occur in the Duke of Bedford's arms.
The gold roundels in the border - heraldically known as bezants - represent the
gold-mining industry around Benoni. The other four roundels with the alternate
silver and blue bands - heraldically known as fountains - symbolise the four
fountains of Kleinfontein, Modderfontein, Rietfontein and Vlakfontein, all
situated within the municipal area. The arm embowed wielding a hammer stands for
industry and the rising sun for the ascending destiny of the municipality. The
Springboks bear upon their collars bezants representing the gold-mining
industry.
Bruce Berry, 31 Aug 2006