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Australian Federation Flag: Difference between revisions

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The '''Australian Federation Flag''', also known as the '''New South Wales Ensign''', was the result of an [[1830s]] attempt to create a flag to represent [[Australia]] as a nation.
The '''Australian Federation Flag''', also known as the '''New South Wales Ensign''', was the result of an [[1830s]] attempt to create a flag to represent [[Australia]] as a nation.
[[Image:Flag Australia NSW Ensign.png|250px|thumb|Australian Federation Flag]]
[[Image:Flag Australia NSW Ensign.png|250px|thumb|Australian Federation Flag]]
The flag was proposed in [[1831]] in the [[New South Wales|NSW]] Calendar and Post Office Gazette by [[Captain Jack Nicholson]], [[Port Jackson|Sydney]]'s Harbour Master, who also designed it. The flag was based on the [[National Colonial Flag for Australia|Colonial Flag of 1823]], which Captain Nicholson helped design. Like the Colonial Flag, the Federation Flag features a combination of the [[Union Jack]] and the [[Crux|Southern Cross]], but the cross is blue, not red, and there are five stars, not four. The flag's appearanced varied greatly depending on where it was made: different manufacturers produced Federation Flags with darker or lighter shades of blue for the cross background; using five-pointed stars instead of eight; or positioning the stars in different places. The flag looks similar to the [[Eureka Flag]], which was designed in [[1854]], and is sometimes incorrectly referred to as being based on that flag.
The flag was proposed in [[1831]] in the [[New South Wales|NSW]] Calendar and Post Office Gazette by [[Captain Jack Nicholson]], [[Port Jackson|Sydney]]'s Harbour Master, who also designed it. The flag was based on the [[National Colonial Flag for Australia|Colonial Flag of 1823]], which Captain Nicholson helped design. Like the Colonial Flag, the Federation Flag features a combination of the [[Union Jack]] and the [[Crux|Southern Cross]], but the cross is blue, not red, and there are five stars, not four. The flag's appearanced varied greatly depending on where it was made: different manufacturers produced Federation Flags with darker or lighter shades of blue for the cross background; using five-pointed stars instead of eight; or positioning the stars in different places. The flag looks similar to the [[Eureka Flag]], which was designed in [[1854]], and some expert historans have advanced the view it was based on earlier designs used in the colonies including the Federation flag.


The Federation Flag proved immensely popular, and was widely used on the East Coast of Australia for over 70 years. It was never officially adopted, but was flown unofficially by Federation-minded Australians and used as a makeshift ensign by the [[merchant marine]]. In [[1884]] [[Edward Henry Stanley, 15th Earl of Derby|Lord Derby]] of the [[Colonial Office]] banned the use of the Flag at sea, possibly because of its similarity to the [[British ensigns|British White Ensign]].
The Federation Flag proved immensely popular, and was widely used on the East Coast of Australia for over 70 years. It was never officially adopted, but was flown unofficially by Federation-minded Australians and used as a makeshift ensign by the [[merchant marine]]. In [[1884]] [[Edward Henry Stanley, 15th Earl of Derby|Lord Derby]] of the [[Colonial Office]] banned the use of the Flag at sea, possibly because of its similarity to the [[British ensigns|British White Ensign]].

Revision as of 09:55, 18 August 2005

The Australian Federation Flag, also known as the New South Wales Ensign, was the result of an 1830s attempt to create a flag to represent Australia as a nation.

Australian Federation Flag

The flag was proposed in 1831 in the NSW Calendar and Post Office Gazette by Captain Jack Nicholson, Sydney's Harbour Master, who also designed it. The flag was based on the Colonial Flag of 1823, which Captain Nicholson helped design. Like the Colonial Flag, the Federation Flag features a combination of the Union Jack and the Southern Cross, but the cross is blue, not red, and there are five stars, not four. The flag's appearanced varied greatly depending on where it was made: different manufacturers produced Federation Flags with darker or lighter shades of blue for the cross background; using five-pointed stars instead of eight; or positioning the stars in different places. The flag looks similar to the Eureka Flag, which was designed in 1854, and some expert historans have advanced the view it was based on earlier designs used in the colonies including the Federation flag.

The Federation Flag proved immensely popular, and was widely used on the East Coast of Australia for over 70 years. It was never officially adopted, but was flown unofficially by Federation-minded Australians and used as a makeshift ensign by the merchant marine. In 1884 Lord Derby of the Colonial Office banned the use of the Flag at sea, possibly because of its similarity to the British White Ensign.

File:Ausfedflag-warmemorial.jpg
Photograph of an old (probably 19th Century) Federation Flag.

In the 1880s and early 1890s it was used as a symbol of the political movement towards Federation, with groups like the Australian Natives Association and the Australian Federation League using it to promote national consciousness of their push for Federation, under the slogan "One People, One Destiny, One Flag".

The flag was a favourite of Australia's first Prime Minister, Sir Edmund Barton, who asked that a variant be considered for approval along with the competition-winning[1] Blue Ensign. The Colonial Office rejected the Federation Flag, issuing Barton a mild rebuke[2]. The Australian government received approval to fly the Blue Ensign in 1903, but the Australian Federation Flag was still being flown by Australian citizens as late as the 1920s.


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