
Last modified: 2012-05-26 by rob raeside
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When the system of defacements to the blue ensign was introduced in 1865, the instruction was that the ensign should be defaced with the 'seal or badge' of the colony. In the Falkland Islands, the circular picture of a ship and a cow/bull/bullock was the seal from 1846 until 1925. So it was used on the first blue ensign sometime after 1865 and probably continued in use until 1948 when the 'sheep above a ship' was used on the flag. But between 1925 and 1948 the seal of the colony was a shield with a port quarter view of a sailing ship on a blue background, overlaid in the lower left half of the shield by a seal (the marine mammal) on a brown background. Was this ever used on a flag?
David Prothero, 13 July 1997
The 'Bullock Triumphant' was approved 1876. It was based on the existing seal which had been designed when, 'wild cattle were the dominating feature of the Colony'. I have an idea that it was also a punning reference to a Captain Bullock who was involved in the early history of the Falkland Islands.
David Prothero, 9 January 2000
The governor's flag of the Falkland Islands contained the badge on the Union Flag.
Steve Shea, 19 August 1997
![[Falklands Islands Company flag]](../images/f/fk~fic).gif) image by António Martins-Tuválkin, 20 December 2005
 
image by António Martins-Tuválkin, 20 December 2005
[Click here for an image of the original flag.]
I recently moved into my late grandfathers house in Stanley, Falkland 
Islands. I found this flag in the loft. I have searched the net for the motto 
and have had no luck. I have no idea of the origins of the flag. Can you help?
Chris Harris, 16 November 2003
It is probably connected with Samuel Fisher Lafone who in 1846 purchased that 
part of East Falklands south of the isthmus at Darwin Harbour. He ran into 
difficulties and was bought-out by the Falkland Islands Company in 1851. It is 
difficult to see, but I think that the same arms appear on the 10p stamp issued 
in January 2001 to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the Falkland Islands 
Company. See 
http://www.falklands.gov.fk/pb/fi/anniversary.htm and
http://www.fihplc.com/companyprofile/index.php?section=1&sub=2.
David Prothero, 17 November 2003
From this site (http://www.falklands.gov.fk/pb/fi/anniversary.htm) 
we find the house flag of the Falkland Islands Company - blue with a blue 
diamond outlined white, with in the center a white F. "It is not known when the 
Company's house flag was introduced but it certainly existed in 1868 when it was 
mentioned by Cobb."
Jarig Bakker, 17 November 2003
The series of stamps can also be found at
http://www.stamptraders.com/falkland/Gallary8.html as
http://www.stamptraders.com/falkland/gallary/2002-1.jpg. Indeed, this stamp 
shows the said arms, but it doesn't show any reason to connect them specifically 
with Samuel Fisher Lafone. 
This series also includes the 20p stamp we 
list as Stamp #00483, which is listed as a 2002 
stamp, rather than a 2001 stamp, and indeed, other sites list the series as 
being from 2002 as well. It would appear the stamp's year correctly would be 
2002. The company website (http://www.the-falkland-islands-co.com), 
mentions a Royal Charter issued in 1852, which might explain the year of the 
celebratory issue. 
Concerning the actual flag of the Falkland Islands 
Company, it's from the same 
http://www.falklands.gov.fk/pb/fi/anniversary.htm 
source, and appears on the 20p stamp in the same 
series, which is the Flags On Stamps stamp #00483 mentioned above. 
Peter Hans van den 
Muijzenberg, 25 March 2012