Chesterfield: Difference between revisions

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[[Literature]] : Image and information provided by Laurence Jones.
'''[[Literature]]''': Image and information provided by Laurence Jones.


[[Category:United Kingdom Municipalities C]]
[[Category:United Kingdom Municipalities C]]
[[Category:England]]
[[Category:England]]
[[Category:Granted 1955]]
[[Category:Granted 1955]]

Revision as of 15:06, 9 September 2022

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  • Overseas possessions
  • Total pages in the British section : 16,285
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CHESTERFIELD

Additions : 1974 Chesterfield RDC (partly), Staveley UDC

Arms (crest) of Chesterfield

Official blazon

Arms : Gules a Device representing a Pomegranate Tree as depicted on the ancient Common Seal of the Borough the tree leaved and eradicated proper flowered and fructed Or.
Crest : On a Wreath of the Colours issuant from a Mural Crown Gules masoned Or a Mount Vert thereon a Derby Ram passant guardant proper.
Supporters : On the dexter side a Cock and on the sinister side a Pynot or Magpie proper each ducally crowned Or.
Motto: 'ASPIRE'

Origin/meaning

The arms were officially granted on November 10, 1955.

The arms are derived from the design of the Borough's Common Seal, which bears a pomegranate tree decoratively treated. This emblem was in use by Chesterfield in the reign of Elizabeth I, and may have been derived from the pomegranate of Granada which Henry VIII had adopted as a badge on his marriage with Katherine of Aragon. It has however been claimed that the pomegranate was in use by Chesterfield long before Tudor times. For some unknown reason in the 17th century the pomegranate was discarded in favour of arms - Gules on a gold fess a lozenge azure - but the pomegranate was restored to the Seal in 1893.

The mural crown is a common symbol of civic government and the ram links the arms with the County.

The supporters each with a ducal crown commemorate the Revolution plot of 1688 at the Cock and Pynot Inn (now the Revolution House) at Old Whittington and the association of the Earl of Devonshire and other with that plot. The supporters are depicted on a base representing the rocks and moorland around the Town. The motto is both encouraging and refers to the famous "crooked spire" of the Parish Church.

Arms (crest) of Chesterfield

The arms as used on a JaJa postcard +/- 1905
Arms (crest) of Chesterfield

The arms on a Wills's cigarette card, 1906

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Literature: Image and information provided by Laurence Jones.