Last modified: 2020-06-20 by rob raeside
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contributed by Albert S. Kirsch
Source: Flagscan
In the latest issue of Flagscan, page 16, is shown a Canadian service flag exactly modeled on (or is it the reverse?) the US service flag, right down to the colors: a blue maple leaf on a white field within a wide red border. The drawing dates from World War I.
Is it still in use, as the US version is? If not, when did it die out? Does/did
it have a gold leaf for a soldier killed in action?
Albert S. Kirsch, 31 January 2006
Al asked if the leaf on the Canadian Service flag displayed a gold leaf
if a soldier was killed as in the USA Service Flag. The answer is contained
in the ad from which the colorized illustration was taken, unfortunately the
text was deleted. It states the leaf was red for those who have fallen.
Dave Martucci, 19 July 2009
images by Eugene Ipavec, 19 July 2009
images by Eugene Ipavec, 19 July 2009
The illustration referenced above shows the flag in two sizes, ~2:3 and
~3:5/4:7, the latter with a thinner border and larger leaf, probably just
artistic randomness.
Eugene Ipavec, 19 July 2009
image by Dave Fowler, 2 January 2018
I photographed this World War One-era service flag, for a family with four
sons serving, at the Canadian War Museum in Ottawa, in September 2017.
Dave Fowler, 2 January 2018
Here's also a three maple-leaf specimen:
https://greatwarcentre.files.wordpress.com/2016/05/2014-01-24-01.jpg.
Picture caption reads: "[Canadian Service Flag], 1917. Collections CCGW
(Canadian Centre for the Great War/)/CCGG (Centre Canadien de la Grande Guerre)
(official website:
https://greatwarcentre.com) 2014.01.24.01"
"Like the Service on the
Front pins, which identified those who had served in the CEF (Canadian
Expeditionary Force/Corps Expéditionnaire Canadien) while in plain clothes, the
women of Canada also devised their own ways to recognize their service and those
of their families. The flag shown above, a Canadian Service Flag, was modeled on
the American “service at the front” flag, which was made available for the first
time in 1917 when the United States entered the war.
The responsibility
of the Women’s War Committee in Ottawa, the Canadian version first appeared in
1917, and was to be hung in the front window of any family that had members
serving on the front. The green maple leaves shown here mean that this household
had three family members serving, all of whom were still alive. A red maple leaf
meant that a member of the family had died in service.
An editorial in
the Toronto Star dated April 17, 1918 notes that “these little flags will be
mute, but eloquent evidence of the fact that we are one people, and that far
more home in Toronto are sharing the hopes and anxieties of the war than anyone
had supposed”.
As we can see, the flag was seen as a way to bind people
together, and to draw attention to the contribution of specific families to the
war effort. However, it also speaks of the community left behind by those who
went to Europe to serve, who had no other way to acknowledge their own
contribution (because surely sending your family members to war is also a
contribution) other than this little flag."
Important to notice is that
the CEF fought under the "Canadian Red Ensign 1868-1921" (https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corps_exp%C3%A9ditionnaire_canadien)
Esteban Rivera, 3 January 2018
The Canadian War Museum has in its Second World War Supply Line Discovery
Boxes a (reproduction) two-leaf service flag, red over blue. I take it they were
again being used at that time. They probably existed unfortunately in
quantities; it's just that this was the one I encountered on-line.
https://www.warmuseum.ca/s3/supplyline/assets/swwdiscoverybox/AL7.2-Eng-ServiceFlag.pdf
Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 19 May 2020