
This page is part of © FOTW Flags Of The World website
Havre-Saint-Pierre, Quebec (Canada)
Last modified: 2021-01-09 by rob raeside
Keywords: saguenay | havre-saint-pierre | 
Links: FOTW homepage |
search | 
disclaimer and copyright | 
write us | 
mirrors
 
 image by 
Masao Okazaki, 22 December 2020
See also:
The municipality
  The municipality of Havre-Saint-Pierre (3,150 inhabitants in 2006; 2,822 
  sq. km) is located in the Minganie MRC (seated there), facing the Anticosti 
  Island. The place was settled in 1857 by six Acadian fisher's families from
  the Magdalen Islands. The parish of Saint-Pierre-de-la-Pointe-aux-Esquimaux was established in 1872, the municipality of the same name being 
  established the next year. The place was locally known, more simply, as 
  Pointe-aux-Esquimaux, recalling that a group of Inuit once lived there.
  The municipality was renamed Havre-Saint-Pierre in 1927, referring to the 
  harbour made by several long islets, originally known as Rade des  Esquimaux 
  (1735) and Navre des Esquimaux (1870), and to the fishers' patron saint, 
  St. Peter. The first mass  was celebrated in the place by Father Charles 
  Arnaud on 29 June (St. Peter's Day) 1857.
Ivan Sache, 22 July 2012
Description of the flag
Photos of this flag were posted in September 2019 by Luc Vartan Baronian in 
the FOTW Facebook group:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/flagsoftheworld/permalink/3866571010024259
The logo to draw the flag was downloaded from the city's website:
https://www.havresaintpierre.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-Logo_MunicipaliteHSP-1.png
Masao Okazaki, 22 December 2020
 
 image by 
Ivan Sache, 22 July 2012
Based on: http://airrally.com/2/story_2009_01.htm 
 
The flag of 
  Havre-Saint-Pierre is white with the municipal coat of arms in the middle:
  http://airrally.com/2/story_2009_01.htm - Photo, 10 August 2009
  http://airrally.com/_IMG/_STORY/2009_rally/_SMALL/part06_032_AUG10.jpg 
  
The coat of arms of Havre-Saint-Pierre is quartered yellow-blue by a
  thin red cross, representing faith. Blue represent sea, yellow represents 
  the sun, and green represents flora. The first quarter is charged with a 
  shovel and pickaxe crossed per saltire, representing the local iron and 
  titanium mine*.  The second quarter is charged with a white orignal and 
  black birds, representing hunting. The third quarter is charged with a 
  white fish, representing fishing. The fourth quarter is charged with the "bonne 
  femme"** against a background of green trees, representing the natural 
  environment. The chief of the shield is superimposed with a white scroll 
  inscribed in black letters "TERRE DIGNE DE RICHESSES" (Land Worth 
  Resources). The motto expresses the inhabitant's pride for all these 
  resources. The base of the shield is superimposed a white scroll inscribed 
  in black letters "HAVRE-SAINT-PIERRE". The ends of the scroll support the
  wild berries from the local plains known as "chicoutai" or "plaquebière"***.
  http://www.havresaintpierre.com/fr/s.php?s=565042668&sn=armoiries -
  Municipal website
*The Tio aboveground mine, located 40 km of 
  Havre-Saint-Pierre, has been exploited since 1950 by the "Rio Tinto" mining 
  group (under the "Rio Tinto, Fer et Titane" commercial brand). The mine 
  includes the world's biggest known deposit of ilmenite, a crystalline iron 
  titanium oxide (FeTiO3). The mine is expected to be exploited for at least 
  the next 50 years.
**The "bonne femme" (woman) is part of a group of 
  monoliths standing on the Niapiscau island, Mingan archipelago. Different 
  local stories explain that a beautiful but nasty girl was changed into a 
  stone statue by the devil.
  http://www.aqua-bio.net/Voyages/Minganie/imagepages/image13.html 
  - Photo
  
***Cloudberry, Rubus chamaemorus L.
Ivan Sache, 22 July 2012