
Last modified: 2026-01-10 by rob raeside
Keywords: powell river | british columbia |
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image by Valentin Poposki, 25 December 2021
See also:
The flag of the City of Powell River is Canadian style blue-white-blue
with city coat of arms on the white field with the name of the city below
https://www.flickr.com/photos/waferboard/5653240331
Valentin Poposki, 25 December 2021
image located by Dave Fowler, 27 December 2025
From: https://www.gg.ca/en/heraldry/public-register/project/3735
Blazon
Per fess Or and Azure in chief six Douglas firs on a mount, in base
a lifebelt corded, charged on either side with a dogwood flower and encircling a
salmon leaping contourné all proper;
Symbolism (hypothesized):
The Douglas firs refer to the district's logging
and pulp mill history, based on the abundance of these huge trees in the area.
The salmon likely refers to the Powell River's importance as a salmon spawning
stream. The lifebelt possibly alludes to the Malahat, a famous lumber schooner
that operated from Powell River and whose 1944 wreck site near the district is a
recognized historic site. The dogwood flower is the floral emblem of British
Columbia.
Crest
Blazon
A roll of newspaper in front of a Douglas fir on
a mount, all surmounting a rising sun proper and issuant from a crown vallary
Or;
Symbolism (hypothesized):
The sun
is taken from the arms of British Columbia and makes a reference to the
district's location on the province’s Sunshine Coast. The roll of newsprint is a
further reference to paper mills, Powell River having been the location of the
first manufacturer of newsprint in Western Canada in 1912, and which eventually
became the location of the largest pulp and paper mill in the world. The tree
repeats the symbolism of the Arms.
Motto
ORA SOLIS;
Symbolism
This Latin phrase means “The coast of the sun.” This alludes to Powell River's
location on the Sunshine Coast.
Supporters
Dexter a deer
sinister a mountain goat*, each standing on a felled Douglas fir, set on a mount
charged with a river palewise proper;
*The blazon indicates that the
sinister supporter is a mountain goat; however, the painting from the College of
Arms depicts it as a bighorn sheep.
Symbolism
Black-tailed deer and
mountain goats are species local to the district. The felled Douglas firs make a
further reference to the lumber industry, and the river alludes to the
district's namesake waterway.
Dave Fowler, 27 December 2025