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![[Royal Fowey Yacht Club ensign]](../images/g/gb~fowey.gif) image by Clay Moss, 4 March 2006
 
image by Clay Moss, 4 March 2006See also:
The badge is in effect the arms of the Duchy of 
Cornwall
with the supporters and motto removed. The device above the shield is a coronet 
of the heir apparent. His coronet is the royal crown with one arch omitted. The 
Fowey Club, founded in 1880, became a yacht club in 1894, at a time when there 
was a connection of sorts, between having the title royal, and a special ensign. 
In September 1894 the secretary of the club wrote to the Admiralty asking how a 
club acquired a royal title. The Admiralty passed the letter to the Home Office, 
observing that the club had no warrant for a special ensign. The Home Office 
file noted that the club might merit the honour even if it had no special 
ensign, and replied to the club secretary that an application, signed by the 
President on behalf of club, should be addressed to HM the Queen, and sent to 
the Secretary of State at the Home Office, giving the number and the names of 
members, the number of yachts owned by them, their tonnage, and also whether 
there was a club house and annual regatta. The application was refused because 
"the Prince of Wales made it a rule to honour only such clubs as had proved 
their stability."
In May 1903, the secretary of the club wrote to the Home Office that the club 
had now existed for nine years, had two hundred members, ninety-three yachts 
with a total tonnage of three thousand, five hundred and eighteen, been in a 
club house for five years, and held an annual regatta in August. The Home Office 
asked the club for a list of its members and its balance sheet. It appears that 
the application was forwarded to the King with the recommendation that it should 
be refused, as an entry in the file dated 5 July noted that, "HM the King 
approved of the request being refused." Arthur Quiller-Couch, an author who 
wrote under the pseudonym ' Q ' was Rear-Commodore of the club. He wrote to Sir 
Godfrey Lushington, Permanent Secretary at the Home Office, asking, " Where do 
we fall short ? Why have the Cruising Club, and the Norfolk and Suffolk lately 
been granted the title ?" He was told that applications were being granted only 
where special claims existed. The Admiralty refusal to grant special Blue 
Ensigns was universal.
Fowey is in Cornwall, and it seems that the Duke of Cornwall was approached 
about the matter. In August 1905 the club received a letter from Marlborough 
House, residence of the Prince of Wales, who was the Duke of Cornwall, granting 
the club the right to carry the coronet of the Duchy of Cornwall over the shield 
as its insignia. On 31 October 1905 the Admiralty issued the club with a warrant 
for a "Red Ensign with whatever device HRH may approve." In November 1905 the 
club applied for the title royal and was again refused. Another application in 
April 1907, when the club had two hundred and twenty members, and one hundred 
and seven yachts with a combined tonnage of five thousand, was granted with the 
note, "little different, but approved."
[National Archives (PRO) HO 144/598/B16959]
David Prothero, 28 November 2005
The crown is the coronet of the Heir Apparent, in this instance, in his role as 
Duke of Cornwall. He wears a coronet with two arches, as opposed to the Imperial 
State Crown, as worn by The Queen which, for example, has four arches. A 
standard ducal coronet does not have arches.
Sources:
(1) Prince of Wales web site 
www.princeofwales.gov.uk, consulted 04 March 2006
(2) British Monarchy web site www.royal.gov.uk, 
consulted 04 March 2006
(3) National Museum of Wales web site 
www.museumwales.ac.uk, consulted 01 March 2006
Colin Dobson, 4 March 2006
The Heir Apparent's coronet is quite different from a ducal coronet. The symbols on the Heir Apparent's coronet's top edge are four cross pattees separated by fleur-de-lys (the same as those on the St Edward's and Tudor crowns), whilst those on a ducal coronet are eight strawberry leaves. The Heir Apparent's coronet has a single arch, traditionally worn with the arch going from ear to ear. The arch does not dip at the top, but otherwise is the same as that on the main crown, with nine pearls on each side and an orb at the top. The orb normally differs from the main crown as it has a green mound with gold banding and cross pattee, but this is occasionally done as all gold, as in the Prince of Wales's personal standard for Wales, where the green orb wouldn't show against the green shield so gold is used instead. More details on British crowns at Crowns on Flags and British Flags and Emblems.
The crown as shown on the flag here is pretty much correct, but I think there 
are a few too many pearls on each arch. They are very small and I am finding it 
hard to count them but I think there are more than the normal nine. Also the 
central jewel is a sapphire, surrounded by two emeralds, with a ruby at each 
end. This is the same arrangement for all jewelled UK crowns. Note that all 
coronets below the rank of Heir Apparent do not have jewels, just gold 
representations of them.
Graham Bartram, 4 March 2005