Last modified: 2014-07-19 by rob raeside
Keywords: royal anglesey yacht club | blue ensign |
Links: FOTW homepage |
search |
disclaimer and copyright |
write us |
mirrors
See also:
The ensigns for the Royal Anglesey Yacht Club, the Royal Southampton Yacht Club,
the Royal Torbay Yacht Club are identical.
Clay Moss, 2 February 2006
The crown is the St Edward's Crown, but not knowing the date upon which the
Warrant for a defaced ensign was granted to the club I don't know whether this
replaced the Tudor Crown circa 1952?
Christopher Southworth, 2 February 2006
Dates of the Blue Ensigns with a crown on the Union:
Royal Torbay YC (1875 - current). Crown on burgee.
Royal Southampton YC (1877 - current). Crown and shield of
Southampton on burgee.
Royal Anglesey YC (1887 - current). Red dragon on burgee.
David Prothero, 2 February 2006
I'm not sure if this ensign ever sported a Tudor crown, but if it did,
here it
is.
Clay Moss, 25 February 2006
A brief history of the Royal Anglesey Yacht Club, which began life in 1802 as
a Book Society can be seen at
http://royalangleseyyc.org.uk/History.htm
After the yacht club was
formed in 1885 applications were made on 13 May for the title ‘Royal’ and for a
special ensign. The Home Office were inclined to refuse the title Royal on the
grounds that the club was too small, until it was noticed that the title had
been granted to the Forth Yacht Club, whose members’ yachts totalled 3,083 tons,
while the Anglesey Club’s came to 3,418 tons. Royal title approved 17 June 1885.
A Blue Ensign defaced with a crown on the Union was granted in 1887.
In
1928 the Yacht Racing Association wrote to the Home Office pointing out that
“sixty-seven yacht clubs (including colonial and Irish) which are Royal wear a
crown on their burgee, except the following quaint exceptions, Royal Anglesey,
Royal Cornwall, Royal Engineer and Royal Harwich.” They were probably wrong to
include the Royal Engineer Yacht Club, since the Royal is part of the name of
the parent organisation, and not a title approved for the yacht club. [National
Archives HO 144/152/A39660]
David Prothero, 30 June 2014
image by Clay Moss, 29 June 2014
The Dumpy Book of Ships and the Sea (1957)
shows the burgee blue, with a red Welsh dragon facing the hoist.
James
Dignan, 12 February 2008