
Last modified: 2022-02-19 by rob raeside
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![[Rosemère flag]](../images/c/ca-qcros.gif) image by 
Masao Okazaki, 
6 February 2022
 image by 
Masao Okazaki, 
6 February 2022See also:
Rosemère was hardly inhabited until 1880, when J.P. Withers, an officer of the Canadian Pacific Railway, settled in the place. Impressed by the abundance of wild roses, he coined the name Rosemère, built on "rose" and the old Anglo-Saxon word "mere", "a march", and got it registered in Ottawa.
Served by the railway, Rosemère became a popular place of leisure. Influential families from Montreal built summer residences and organized regattas on Rivière des Mille Îles (Thousand Islands River, a channel of Ottawa River). A country club and a golf were established in 1920 and 1922, respectively. The famous Thoncliffe restaurant was exploited until destroyed by a blaze in 1982.
The civil parish of Rosemère was established on 1 January 1947, separating from Sainte-Thérèse, to be elevated a town on 6 February 1958.
https://www.ville.rosemere.qc.ca
Town website
Ivan Sache, 12 
February 2022
The flag has the logo and name on a white field.
Dave Fowler, 31 January 2022
The logo is a revamping of the former one (dates not available). The smooth 
rose was kept as the central element to highlight Rosemère's natural and rural 
spaces. At its right, the apostrophe illustrates the concepts of safe blossoming 
and growth, and opens a dialogue with the grave accent of the "È".
The split 
of the rose in tow parts form a white counter-shaped "r" recalling the name of 
the town. The counter-shape can also illustrate Boulevard Curé-Labelle, which 
divides the town in two parts.
At the rose's left, the three waves represent 
Rivière des Mille Îles (Thousand Islands River, a channel of Ottawa River) 
feeding the flower. This moving water a source of vitality and natural balance, 
is a key element of Rosemère.
The navy blue color symbolizes water while 
recalling the excellent structure of the urban planning. The red color evokes 
dynamism, strength, courage and creative life. The association of the two colors 
highlights equity, justice and respect.
The smooth rose, aka prairie 
rose, meadows rose..., Rosa blanda Aiton) is one of the six rose 
species found in the wild in Quebec. The most frequent species in South Quebec, 
it is fund up to Bay James. The smooth rose is easily identified since it lacks 
thorns.
Rosa blanda was discovered in 1766 in Newfoundland by the 
British naturalist Joseph Banks (1743-1820). He brought back to England his own 
herbarium specimens and other, probably collected near Hudson Bay, which were 
formally described and named in 1789 by the taxonomist William Aiton 
(1731-1793).
In the early 2000s, the town of Rosemère and the Société 
d’horticulture et d’écologie de Rosemère searched a floral emblem for the town. 
Since the town was itself named for the abundancy of roses, Dr. Anne Bruneau, 
from the University of Montreal, was commissioned to survey the local population 
of wild roses. All of them belonged to the Rosa blanda species, which 
was proclaimed Rosemère's floral emblem in 2003.
https://www.ville.rosemere.qc.ca/logo-armoiries 
Town website