Royal Air Force flag: timeline for introduction (original) (raw)


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Detailed timeline for adoption of RAF flag

The sequence of events went something like this:

The flag, as described by The Times, is similar to this image which is based on a photograph in a book in the Eyewitness Guides Series; "Flag" by William Crampton (page 47). The photograph is acknowledged to the Imperial War Museum, and is captioned, "This special ensign was produced for the Royal Air Force at the time of the Armistice celebrations in 1918." However the flag as described by General Seely in a letter to Lord Cromer is slightly different. "As compared with a drawing seen a fortnight earlier, the cross was twice as broad as on the White Ensign. Crown and wings in centre on blue cross, not on white diamond." [See note.]

17 April 1919 report

What is strange is that Seeley (in a letter in AIR 2/155) also says that the original alterations were made at the suggestion of the King. I suppose if you're King, you can change your mind whenever you want... I also note that the RAF were referring to the (blue) cross as a St. Michael's cross, to try and differentiate between the proposed flag and the White Ensign, with its (red) St. George's cross.

There is an example of the flag in the Imperial War Museum. The story that it was flown from the Air Ministry building on Armistice Day 1918 comes from Ray Allen in an article in Flag Bulletin vol.26 (1-3) pp.6-12. I suspect that the information will have appeared on the item's record card at the Museum, so someone, at some time, at the IWM must have believed it to be true, even though the chronology appears at odds with the archive record. I couldn't find any orders or invoices for this flag at the PRO, however, even though there was material on some of the other suggested designs.
Ian Sumner, 7 October 2004

I am a little puzzled about the 1919 ensign with the blue cross and crown & eagle � in that the eagle is shown as looking to the left. Is this correct? Somewhere I have seen a drawing of this flag with the eagle facing to the right, as it is in the RAF badge, and the RAF Blue ensign from 1986 for Marine Craft, the RAF Sailing Association and the RAF Yacht Club.
Scott Williamson, 14 September 2007

The original ensign is in the Imperial War Museum collection, and the eagle's head does indeed face the left, even though the eagle in the RAF badge, introduced in 1918, faces the other way.
Ian Sumner, 15 September 2007

The reason the unofficial 1919 RAF Ensign had the eagle looking to the "left" is that, traditionally, an animal is portrayed on a flag facing the hoist / flagpole, so that it "looks towards the enemy" when the flag is carried forward.
Miles Li, 15 September 2007

Two shades of blue?

This is no longer the case. Thomas Woodcock, Somerset Herald, stated in 'The Oxford Guide to Heraldry' (Oxford Univ. Press, 1988) p.198, that the tincture bleu celeste was introduced into English heraldry by the College of Arms after the Second World War specifically because of badges and awards to RAF units and personnel.
Ian Sumner, 7 October 2004


See also: