
Last modified: 2006-10-28 by rob raeside
Keywords: cheshire | chester | garb | earl of chester | knutsford | birchwood | 
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![[Cheshire County Council flag]](../images/g/gb-e-chs.jpg) located by Colin Dobson, 21 November 2005
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located by Colin Dobson, 21 November 2005
See also:
I went to Chester this morning to find out about the flag of Cheshire. The 
County Council offices have been moved to the town of Winsford, several miles 
away and now a bedroom suburb of Manchester. However, the staff at the Chester 
City Tourist Office, (the former city hall) were very helpful. The Cheshire 
County Council flag apparently exists in two variants, one just with the shield 
and garb and the other with the lettering as well,. There doesn't seem to be any 
formal regulation as to which is official; I was told that apparently when the 
flags were first ordered after the local government reorganization in 1974 they 
did not have any lettering beneath the logo, but when a reorder took place 
sometime during the 1980s they suddenly appeared with the lettering. She said 
that she wasn't sure whether there had been any action on the part of the County 
Council with respect to this, or whether it was just a unilateral action on the 
part of the flagmaker (i e, somebody got it wrong and there was too much apathy 
and inertia to complain). I myself was too apathetic to go next door to the main 
library to check council records on microform as to this point.
Ron Lahav
A white flag, bearing the logo of Cheshire County Council, which can be seen 
on their home page and each of the other main pages of their web site
http://www.cheshire.gov.uk/aboutcheshire/Crest.htm. This particular page 
shows the Council's Coat of Arms, which states: "Cheshire is the only example in 
the United Kingdom of the county and the county town both possessing a complete 
achievement of heraldic honours."
The wheatsheaf and shield on the Council's logo appear to have been taken from 
the Coat of Arms and restyled. Note from the photograph, the logo appears on 
both sides of the flag the correct way around, so it is a double sided flag.
Colin Dobson, 21 November 2005
I find the use of a "logo" flag by the present county council of Cheshire 
rather sad. By definition, their coat of arms is also a banner, viz: Azure a 
sword palewise point in chief between three garbs or, and thus this is already 
the council's flag. Of course the so-called county council's administrative 
boundaries differ radically from those of the County Palatine; there is 
therefore a need for a flag to identify the people of the latter (rather than 
the taxpayers of this rump "county"), particularly those in the districts once 
annexed by Greater Manchester and Merseyside and now left county-less. It seems 
to me that the best design would be: Azure three garbs or, as used by the County 
Palatine since Earl Hugh Kyvelioc: I propose this as a regional flag for general 
use within the County Palatine of Chester.
Andrew Gray, 24 September 2006
One of the alternative titles of the Heir to the English throne (I'm not sure 
if it also appertains to the United Kingdom as a whole) is Earl of Chester, and 
when Princess Diana was still Princess of Wales she opened the main hospital in 
the county in Chester. The hospital is named after her - it's the Countess of 
Chester Hospital.
Ron Lahav, 22 March 2004
![[Birchwood town flag]](../images/g/gb-e-bwd.jpg) located by Valentin Poposki, 10 November 2005
 
located by Valentin Poposki, 10 November 2005
Source: www.birchwoodtowncouncil.org.uk
A green flag with the town council shield on yellow disk in green ring near the hoist, and the words Birchwood Town Council in the fly.
The website of
Newton Newton Flags shows the flag of Knutsford Town Council as a blue sheet 
bearing the town's arms, crest and motto on a white oval. Details of the coat of 
arms can be found on Robert Young's
Civic 
Heraldry site.
Laurence Jones, 10 October 2005