
Last modified: 2019-08-06 by rob raeside
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![[Royal Temple Yacht Club ensign]](../images/g/gb~yrtem.gif) image by Clay Moss
 
image by Clay MossSee also:
The Royal Temple Yacht Club uses a plain blue ensign, 
undefaced. Blue ensign granted 27 April 1898.
David Prothero, 7 June 2014
Established 4 March 1857, at Ramsgate, Kent, as Temple Yacht Club.
1857 ? 
No warrant, plain Blue Ensign, blue burgee: T Y C in white.
18 May 1897. 
Granted title ‘royal’.
27 April 1898. Warrant for plain Blue Ensign. Blue 
burgee: in hoist, white Pegasus superimposed on yellow foul anchor surmounted by 
crown, horizontal red-edged white T in fly.
1907. T removed from burgee.
 David Prothero, 13 February 2015
![[Royal Temple Yacht Club burgee]](../images/g/gb~ytyc.jpg) image located by David Prothero, 13 February 2015
 
image located by David Prothero, 13 February 2015
Source: Hounsell Brothers Flag Book c1873.
![[Royal Temple Yacht Club burgee]](../images/g/gb~yrtyc.jpg) image located by David Prothero, 13 February 2015
 
image located by David Prothero, 13 February 2015
Source: Album des Pavillions Nationaux, 1923.
The Dumpy Book of Ships and the Sea (1957) 
shows the burgee blue with an anchor surmounted by a 
crown. The anchor is overlaid with what looks like a winged horse, facing the 
hoist. Colours are uncertain, but probably yellow or white.
James Dignan, 12 February 2008
Blue burgee: close to the hoist, white Pegasus superimposed on yellow foul 
anchor surmounted by a full colour crown.
David Prothero, 7 June 2014
![[Temple Yacht Club]](../images/g/gb_yttyc.jpg) image located by Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 2 March 2018
 
image located by Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 2 March 2018
I've now found an image of the 1898-1907 burgee in Lloyd's Yacht Register [LLoXXb]? 
1902-1903.
Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 2 March 2018
![[Temple Yacht Club]](../images/g/gb~ytemp.gif) image provided by Peter Edwards, 2 March 2018
 
 image provided by Peter Edwards, 2 March 2018
Temple Yacht Club (United Kingdom)
Est: 1857.
Location: Temple 
Steps, Inns of Court, London.
Burgee: Pennant. 1:2 (image). Blue field superimposed by a 
yellow Pegasus facing hoist.
Notes: The Ramsgate, Kent location was opened in 
1896. The clubhouse was requisitioned as a shore base by the Royal Navy and 
commissioned as HMS Fervant on 10 October 1939 (to 1945?). "The coat of arms of 
the Inner Temple is, in blazon, Azure a pagasus silent argent."
Sources: 
Image, Lloyd's Register of Yachts, 1880, Pl. 11.
http://www.rtyc.com/about-us/rtyc-history 
http://www.fors.vision/areas-we-watch-over/hms-fervent  
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inner_Temple 
Peter Edwards, 1 
March 2018
Temple Steps, London, as I understand it, was on the Victoria Embankment, 
thus on the River Thames. This was the location they sailed from. (https://www.rtyc.com/about-us/rtyc-history/)  
Likely, it wasn't where they gathered socially.
Unfortunately, a London 
club would be unlikely to have been established at Ramsgate, as we now have it 
for the RTYC. According to the history page the traffic in London gradually 
drove the races further down-river, eventually to Ramsgate. The Headquarters 
remained in London, though: e.g. 1902 they were the Hotel Cecil.
The burgee pennant matches the burgee of the RTYC, where the burgee bears a 
crowned fouled anchor with superimposed a similar Pegasus, just turned to white, 
likely for contrast.
The opening of the Ramsgate, Kent, location in 1896 
was apparently a whole rebirth. New location in 1896, Royal Charter in 1897, 
blue ensign in 1898.
I first interpreted blazon as "a Pegasus segreant 
argent" - a white winged horse, rearing with its wings extended - which seemed 
to match the burgee. But I have now looked up the Inner Temple. This is "The 
Honourable Society of The Inner Temple": an Inn of Court, a professional 
organisation of judges and barristers. The charge in those arms tends to be 
depicted with at least some of its hooves together. So, I'm now inclined to read 
it as "a Pegasus salient argent" (a jumping white winged horse). The Pegasus of 
the club just doesn't match it that closely.
A summary of events:
- 1857: Founded; no information on the burgee as yet. 
(RTYC history page)
- 1873 ca.: Really Dark Blue burgee bearing white letters 
"T.Y.C.". (Hounsell Brothers Flag Book, presumably Flags and Signals of All
Nations [hou73].)
- 1880: Blue burgee bearing a yellow Pegasus facing the 
hoist (Lloyd's Yacht Register [LLoXXb]? 1880)
- 1896: Clubhouse in Ramsgate (burgee may have changed to indicate the location)
- 1897: Royal 
Charter (burgee may have changed to indicate the charter)
- 1898 - 1907: Blue 
ensign; blue burgee bearing in the hoist a white Pegasus 
superimposed on yellow foul anchor surmounted by a crown, in the fly a 
horizontal red T fimbriated white.
- 1907- present day: T removed from 
burgee: Blue burgee bearing a white pegasus facing the hoist on a yellow crowned fouled anchor (Album des 
Pavillions Nationaux, 1923)
Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 2 March 2018
There’s no doubt that the Temple Yacht Club is the predecessor of the Royal 
Temple Yacht Club.
My quote of the blazon was only to justify my use of 
“Pegasus;” both it and "winged horse" are used in the RTYC post. I have always 
thought of a Pegasus as a winged unicorn - which the image on this burgee is 
not. 
As for an “iron clad sequence of burgees” this is difficult, but I 
suggest: 
    Temple YC established - 1857
    
TYC burgee - 1857 to 1874
    Pegasus burgee - 1874 to 1897
    
Horizontal red T burgee from 1898 - 1907
    Pegasus + Crown + 
Anchor burgee - 1907 to date.
Peter Edwards, 2 March 2018