Thursday, 28 August 2025

Defaced Blue Ensign

 

Defaced Blue Ensign

‘Ensign’ has a couple of meanings. In the British army it used to be the lowest ranked commissioned officer, now known as a second lieutenant. In the US navy an ensign is the lowest commissioned officer.

The ensign referred to here is a flag.

In the 17th century, during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, the English fleet was organised in three squadrons for more efficient deployment. In order of precedence, they were plain unadorned flags ranked red, blue, and white.

In the mid-nineteenth century, the Royal Navy standardised its flags. The White Ensign was assigned to RN warships, the Red Ensign was reserved for merchant ships, and the Blue Ensign was allocated to ships commanded by Royal Naval Reserve officers. This change meant that the Blue Ensign became a symbol of official service.

The Blue Ensign is deep blue with the Union Flag in the top left corner. It can be flown by British government ships, merchant ships under the command of RN Reserve officers, and some privileged yacht clubs, like the Royal Yacht Squadron.

When an ensign is defaced, it is not vandalised or despoiled. It simply has been modified with an emblem added to it to signify which organisation is using it. Below are some examples of defaced Blue Ensigns.


Defaced Blue Ensign of Wales

Defaced Blue Ensign of Metropolitan Police

Defaced Blue Ensign of Bermuda



8 comments:

  1. Our national flag seems to be a defaced Blue Ensign. How unfortunate.

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  2. A Defaced Blue Ensign is a flag that originates from the British system of maritime flags. The base design is the Blue Ensign, which is a dark blue field with the Union Jack in the upper left corner. When this standard ensign is “defaced,” it simply means that a badge, emblem, or symbol has been added to the fly (the right-hand side of the flag). This modification allowed different colonies, territories, and organizations under British authority to display their own identity while still acknowledging ties to the United Kingdom. That is what I am concerned so far

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  3. The flag of Ontario is a defaced Red Ensign, with the Royal Union Flag in the canton and the Ontario shield of arms in the fly. The flag of Ontario was derived from the Canadian Red Ensign that was used as a civil ensign and the flag of Canada from the late 19th century to 1965. When the new Canadian Flag replaced the old in 1965, Ontario changed the Canadian arms on the former national flag to the Ontario arms. May 21 is Ontario Flag Day.

    You can see it here if you wish.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flag_of_Ontario

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  4. Defaced here has an entirely different meaning!

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  5. Thank you for the explanations. I thought defaced meant someone added something they shouldn't.

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  6. "Defaced" seems like a negative thing, doesn't it? They need a new name. "Modified Blue Ensign," maybe.

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  7. Ah, the wonderful intricacies of our English language.

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