Last modified: 2005-09-24 by rob raeside
Keywords: wicklow | oak | lion | church | gaa |
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Flag divided dancette blue over green, with in the blue field two oak branches on either side of a lion guardant facing the fly, and on the green field a white church-like structure.
This flag is of the county council - the elected body responsible for local administration. It is flown at council offices but it does not represent the county and is not used by the general population.
Vincent Morley, 1 November 1997
The Gaelic Athletic Association flag uses the county colours, vertically divided blue and yellow, with a stylized representation of the county council flag on a shield.
image by Laurence Jones, 28 August 2005
I have unearthed the following information on the flag of Bray Town Council
(formerly Urban District Council), County Wicklow, Ireland.
Towards the end of 1955 the Bray Urban District Council decided to replace the
seal with an official coat of arms. This, it was felt, would give the town "a
distinctive character and prestige". At the meeting it was also stated that it
was intended that it would be used for a municipal flag which would be flown on
special civic occasions. The then Wicklow County Manager, Mr. M Flannery was
closely involved in designing the arms. The design was agreed at a council
meeting on February 14th 1956, and the following arms granted by the Chief
Herald of Ireland on 1st June 1956:
Per chevron gules and azure, a chevron rompu or charged with a martlet sable,
in the dexter chief a bell in the sinister a lion passant of the third, in base
a mermaid with comb and mirror proper.
The broken or "rompu" chevron across the centre of the shield represents the
bridge over the Dargle River. The chevron is charged with a black martlet. This
is taken from the arms of the Brabazon family. The Brabazons, who became Earls
of Meath, gained land at Bray on the dissolution of the Abbey of Saint Thomas
and played a large part in the development of the town. The bell represents the
ruined church of Raheenacluig on Bray Head. The lion is from the O'Toole arms.
The family had a castle at Powerscourt, and were associated with the Bray area
for centuries. The arms are completed by a mermaid from the O'Byrne arms. The
O'Byrnes maintained Gaelic ways of life in Wicklow for many centuries, the area
only being brought under English at the beginning of the seventeenth century.
The municipal flag, a banner of the arms, was officially unfurled at Bray T