Last modified: 2011-06-04 by rob raeside
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The modern flag seen by Jonathan is less interesting, but it is used and it
should also be drawn. I wonder, however, whether the background colour is
actually black. I *think* I have seen photos which show it as a deep purplish
colour, and the image at
www.flickr.com/photo_zoom.gne?id=36890807&size=o doesn't look black to me.
There are also regional variants of this flag in other colours, which I don't
think need concern us much, as at
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/spl/hi/pop_ups/04/uk_east_midlands_summits_and_low_points/html/1.stm.
The typeface for the three letters, B,B,C, is Gill Sans, the type designer and
sculptor Eric Gill having carved the statue of Prospero and Ariel which is on
the front of Broadcasting House.
I have also found a reference to a BBC flag at
http://clarkphotos.spaces.live.com/, where a 'green BBC flag' was flying
from the launch which was covering the Oxford and Cambridge Boat Race. I may
have seen a photo of this, but I don't think it's important, being the same sort
of one-off as the flag reported by Ron Lahav which started off this thread.
André Coutanche, 14 March 2007
I recall seeing a dark blue flag with the whole achievement of the BBC's coat
of arms on it at a trade show in the mid 1990s. I will try to see if I can find
a photograph.
Colin Dobson, 14 March 2007
I completely agree about
that photo,
and others I have seen online. However, I saw the flag again, and it definitely
appears blacker than the online photos. There is also another variant of the
flag with the words "WORLD SERVICE" in white on two lines below the squares and
without the red-green-blue strip at the top (which to me seems to focus on
TV/internet to the exclusion of radio), as seen in this photo:
http://www.flickr.com/photo_zoom.gne?id=371789784&size=l.
Jonathan Dixon, 14 May 2007
I found two nice pictures:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a1/Bbc_broadcasting_house_front.jpg
(flag on top of the Broadcasting House, HQ of the BBC Group) and
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/tvandradio/6140915/BBC-an-institution-to-be-proud-of.html
(zoom on the previous image).
Here are some more photos of BBC
flag. Dark blue version:
http://cache.daylife.com/imageserve/01qweNU6apf1b/610x.jpg. Red (orange)
version:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/suchnone/2178457880/. White version:
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2009/04/26/article-0-049F1D7F000005DC-2_634x353.jpg.
Notice the red-blue-green color stripe on first two images. On blue flag stripe
is on top of the flag and on red flag stripe is on bottom of the flag [editor's
note: this flag is actually being flown upside down!].
Aleksandar Nemet,
9 October 2009
A Time article from 23 May 1932 concerning can be found online at
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,743750,00.html?iid=chix-sphere.
It mention's the opening of the BBC's then new Broadcasting House building
"between Regents Park and Oxford Circus" in London, where Sir John Reith hoisted
the BBC flag:
"A terrestrial globe on an azure field, representing the ether, with the seven
remaining planets in the sky around it. Around the globe is a golden ring
representing broadcast transmissions through the ether encircling the earth."
I don't think this symbol is still in use, but I did see a flag flying at
Broadcasting House the other weekend. It was black, with the BBC logo (three
squares containing the letters B, B and C) in white, and a narrow strip along
the top divided red, green and blue.
Jonathan Dixon, 12 March 2007
image by Eugene Ipavec, 27 April 2011
Based in part on an image by Campbell & Evans' 'Book of Flags'
The BBC as an organisation started in 1922, as the British Broadcasting
*Company*; it was then a consortium of manufacturers of radios - 'wireless sets'
in the language of the time. In 1927, it became a public corporation established
by Royal Charter, and John Reith, who had been the General Manger, became its
founding Director-General (and would later become Sir John, finally Lord Reith).
The flag described in the 'Time' article is the banner of arms derived from the
coat of arms granted to the BBC, apparently in 1927 on its incorporation. This
is reported in the Wikipedia article at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coat_of_arms_of_the_BBC, and at an interesting
and, I think, convincing site at
www.btinternet.com/~roger.beckwith/bh/odds/crest.htm, though I cannot find
direct evidence for the date of the grant of arms. It would be wonderful if the
College of Arms could make their records available on-line, though I see they
now have on-line versions of their newsletters (
www.college-of-arms.gov.uk/#newsletter ) which include vexillologically
relevant material.
The website at
www.btinternet.com/~roger.beckwith/bh/odds/crest.htm comments on the
changing appearance of the coat of arms over the years, but the author is
clearly not very familiar with heraldry, since the changes are purely artistic
licence and the blazon is respected. There is one exception to this, however;
for some years the motto changed from "Nation shall speak Peace unto Nation" to
"Quaecunque". It is alleged both here and at Wikipedia that this happened for
unknown reasons in 1934, but I had always believed that it changed when war was
declared - or, at least, was seen as inevitable - in 1939. I haven't found any
evidence either way (but I don't have time to read all my books!). However, for
vexillological purposes, this is secondary, since the motto does not appear on
the flag.
The image above is based on a BBC television programme about the history of the
Third Programme, the BBC's 'cultural' radio channel which started after World
War II. It shows the flag flying on Broadcasting House, Portland Place, London.
Versions of the coat of
arms can be found at
www.blogstudio.com/johncoxon/03_02_03___03_08_03_Mind_Streaming.html,
www.tech-notes.tv/Links,%20Publications%20&%20Organizations/links_to_other_places.htm
and http://news.webshots.com/photo/1093559488038922344iNYvfA. The colours
vary, but I believe
that the blue isn't as vivid as some of these and should be B- (51:153:255).
A 'clean' line version of the arms can be found at
www.flickr.com/photos/69174225@N00/39215481/. Note that on the flag, the
seven 'stars' are arranged as a vertical line of three on each side with the
seventh at the top.
Boutell's Heraldry (Rev. Ed. 1963) shows the coat of arms on Plate XXIV
between pp. 226 and 227: what we call stars are "estoiles" (seven in all, each
having six wavy rays). "The gold band represents broadcast transmissions" (p.
226) actually touches the globe, surrounding it like an annulet. Other coat of
arms elements I leave out as they do not appear on the flag. The arms were
granted in 1927.
Jan Mertens, 22 March 2007
Looking at an online picture archive from Charles W Cushman (Indiana
University Archives) (http://webapp1.dlib.indiana.edu/cushman/index.jsp),
I came across a picture taken on May 30, 1961 of the Broadcasting House Langham
Place, the Main Office of the BBC (http://webapp1.dlib.indiana.edu/collections/cushman/full/P12194.jpg).
It shows a flag, which I guess was the old BBC flag. It shows a dark blue flag.
Esteban Rivera, 25 April 2011
The BBC has been running a series all this week on the implications of the
imminent enlargement of the European Union. They have chartered a barge and are
traveling down the Danube from Vienna through to Budapest. Although the barge
they chartered, the Joseph, flies an Austrian flag at her stern, from a mast
behind her wheelhouse she also flies a flag which I have never seen before - the
flag of BBC News. This is a standard rectangle, with black the background color.
In the
center are two orange ellipses (this is really not very precise - they resemble
nothing more than Salvador Dali's melting clocks). These ellipses are apparently
the symbols of BBC News now, as they appear at the beginning of all news
broadcasts on at least four regular newscasts: the hourly and half-hourly news
updates on BBC News 24, the 24-hour news channel, the Morning News, from 6 to 8
a.m., the Six o'Clock News, and the main evening newscast at 10 p.m. In the
space between these ellipses there are three small five-pointed gold stars in an
irregular formation, with a larger five-pointed gold star below. To the right of
the artwork are the words in white italics 'BBC News', in two lines.
The Beeb should be congratulated for actually devising a flag of genuine
vexillological content instead of using the traditional logo on a bed-sheet of so
many news organizations. Note that this flag differs from that of the BBC as an
organization.
Ron Lahav, 28 April 2004