
Last modified: 2011-12-31 by rob raeside
Keywords: dover | newfoundland and labrador | 
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 image by Eugene Ipavec, 6 April 2011
 
image by Eugene Ipavec, 6 April 2011See also:
The municipal crest holds many significant meanings to the Town of Dover. It 
signifies how the community was built by hard working people and represents our 
focus on a high set of standards as a community. The green in the flag 
represents the forestry, the blue represents the fishery both past and present, 
there are 5 peaks in the water each peak has a meaning as well they are as 
follows education, religion, heritage, family and freedom and the logo in the 
flag is for the Dover Fault." - from: =
http://townofdover.ca/aboutus.html
The photo of the flag can be seen on town's website:
http://www.townofflatrock.com/flag
About the town:
Dover is a small incorporated fishing and lumbering 
village located in a small cove at the head of Freshwater Bay, Bonavista Bay, 
Newfoundland, Canada. Settled in the early 1890s it was originally known as 
Shoal Bay, presumably from its many shallow covers and inlets in the area. From 
the 1950s to the 1970 Shoal Bay was referred to as Wellington (Dover Post 
Office), whereas the local residents called it Dover. The first census taken of 
the community was in 1891 when seventeen people were counted, both lumbermen and 
fisherman. By 1901 the population had grown to sixty-six people and by 1921 it 
had grown to 203. Now it has 688 inhabitants. Near Dover is geological feature 
called the Dover Fault, a major break in the Earth's crust. It is the dividing 
line for Gondwana and Laurentia that was formed by the Iapetus Ocean." - from 
Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dover,_Newfoundland_and_Labrador 
Valentin Poposki, 
26 March 2011