
This page is part of © FOTW Flags Of The World website
Axholme, Lincolnshire (England)
English Town
Last modified: 2022-03-12 by rob raeside
Keywords: axholme | lincolnshire | 
Links: FOTW homepage |
search | 
disclaimer and copyright | 
write us | 
mirrors
 image 
located by Jason Saber, 2 February 2022
 image 
located by Jason Saber, 2 February 2022
See also:
The Flag
Tweeted by Councillor Tim Mitchell on 21 January 2022:
"We've officially 
unveiled the new Isle of Axholme flag today! The concept/design of local 
historian Robert Fish along with students from The Axholme Academy - it reflects 
the heritage and topography of the Isle."
Tweeted by Robert Fish:
Some 
of those who have seen the photo of the Isle flag from yesterday's release have 
asked what it represents. Four years ago I began writing my series of books on 
Axholme and I got to thinking that such a defined and special place should have 
a more 'public' identity. A flag seemed to be a start. Thanks to the Friends of 
the Isle group that has now become a reality. Below is the justification and 
symbolism.
	-  The 4 blue stripes across the flag represent the Isle’s four 
	boundary rivers -Trent, Don, Idle and Torne
- Taken together with the green, the stripes also represent strip farming 
	from the Isle’s past (though the dominant blue references the Isle’s watery 
	landscape pre-drainage).
- Looked at in the 4 quadrants there are 12 ‘mini’ stripes that represent 
	the Isle’s 12 parishes.
- The gold cross with red surround is a reversal of that from the 
	Lincolnshire flag (the Axholme flag only uses the colours found on the flag 
	of the mother county – red, blue green and yellow).
- The yellow cross represents the fields of wheat as does the wheatsheaf 
	(though is taken from the arms of the Sheffield family who owned a 
	significant section of the Isle).
- The red shield on which the sheaf sits is taken from the background of 
	the Mowbray shield, landowners before the Sheffields.
- The cross could also be seen represent the Isle two main thoroughfares 
	The A161 from north to south and the A18 (now also the M18) from east to 
	west that split the Isle into the sections.
Jason Saber, 2 February 2022