Windsor’s Scottish Heritage – Culture – Traditional Dress: Canadian Tartans

Windsor’s Scottish Heritage – Culture – Traditional Dress: Canadian Tartans

Introduction
History & Immigration
Culture
People
Multimedia
Resources

 

  Print this Page
Religion

Early Christianity & Saints:
St. Andrew
St. Ninian
St. Columba
St. Mungo
The Medieval Church
The Kirk of Scotland
Contemporary Scotland
Local Churches:
St. Andrew’s Presbyterian

Holidays

Jan. 25: Burns’ Night
Oct. 31: Hallowe’en / Samhain
Nov. 30: St Andrew’s Day
Dec. 31 – Jan. 2: Hogmanay

Languages and Education

Languages:
Standard English
Scots
Scottish Gaelic
Canadian Gaelic
Education:
Education in Scotland
Impact on Canadian Education

The Clan System
Cuisine

History
Haggis
Bannocks
Cock-a-leekie Soup
Stovies
Hot Whisky Toddy

Music and Dance

Pipes
Scottish Society of Windsor Pipe Band
Scottish Country Dance
Royal Scottish Country Dance Society
Highland Dance
Highland Dance Videos

Folklore

Sea Creatures:
Selkies, Finfolk, and Mermaids
The Lock Ness Monster
The Hill Folk:
Trows, Changelings, Fairies, and Others
The Fairy Flag of Dunvegan
Other:
Arthurian Legend
The Brahan Seer
Henry Sinclair & the Holy Grail
The Baldoon Mystery
Wild Haggis

Sports and Games

Football (Soccer)
Golf
Curling
Shinty
The Highland Games:
History
Caber Toss
Stone Put
Hammer Toss
Weight Throw
Sheaf Toss
Haggis Toss

Traditional Dress

History of the Kilt
Tartans
Canadian Tartans
Women’s Clothing

Local Festivals & Games
St Andrews Societies

of Windsor
of Detroit

Scottish Club of Windsor

 

Text Size:
S |
M |
L

Culture > Traditional Dress > Canadian Tartans

Dress: Tartans & Kilts
Canada’s Tartans:

Tartans of Canada

The regional tartans of Canada, with the national maple leaf tartan in the centre. Clockwise from bottom left (light blue
and pink) are the tartans of Yukon, Northwest Territories, British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec,
New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, and Newfoundland and Labrador.

Alberta:

Tartan of Alberta

The idea for Alberta’s official tartan began in 1961 at the Edmonton Rehabilitation Society, a charitable organization that
taught handicapped students how to operate handlooms. The tartan was designed by Alison Lamb, the Society’s executive director,
and Ellen Neilsen, the weaving instructor, and was officially adopted by the province in an act of legislature in March 1961.
Green represents the province’s forests, gold is for its wheat and sunshine, blue is for the lakes and skies, black is for the
oil and coal, and pink is for the provincial emblem, the wild rose. Its International Tartan Index number is 2055.

British Columbia:

Tartan of British Columbia

BC’s official tartan was designed by Earl K. Ward in 1966 to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the 1866 union of Vancouver
Island and British Columbia. Entered in the Lyon Court Book No. 18 in January 1969, the tartan was officially adopted in 1974
through the BC Tartan Act. The white accents represent the province’s official flower, the Pacific Dogwood, while gold is for
the sun and the crown in the provincial flag. Blue is for the Pacific Ocean, red is for the maple lead, and green is for the
province’s forests, which cover an area twice as large as New York and New England combined. Its International Tartan Index
number is 808.

Manitoba:

Tartan of Manitoba

Manitoba’s official tartan was designed in 1962 by Hugh Kirkwood Rankine, who was born in Winnipeg to Scottish immigrant
parents. Rankine became interested in tartan during a leave in Scotland during the Second World War. He learned how to weave
when he returned home, and eventually produced what he called a “history in cloth.” This tartan was officially adopted by the
province in “The Coat of Arms, Emblems and the Manitoba Tartan Act” on May 1 of that year. The act also declared April 6 as
Manitoba Tartan Day, in recognition of “the role that Scottish Manitobans have played and continue to play in Manitoba’s
cultural heritage.” The red in the design originates from the Earl of Selkirk’s Red River
Settlement, while the blue was adopted from the Clan Douglas tartan. The green accents represent the ethnic mosaic that makes
up Manitoban society while the gold pays homage to the province’s agricultural history. Its International Tartan Index number
is 144.

READ  Windsor's Scottish Heritage - People - Scots of Windsor's Past: MacDonald Family

New Brunswick:

Tartan of New Brunswick

The official tartan of New Brunswick was commissioned by William Aitken, Lord Beaverbrook, in 1959 and designed by the
Loomcrofters company in Gagetown, a “pretty village on the Saint John River.” It was officially adopted as the provincial
tartan by an Order in Council in the same year. The “beaver brown” colour was included to honour Lord Beaverbrook, a press
baron who immigrated to the province with his parents from Scotland at the age of thirteen. The colour red was chosen to
signify the courage and loyalty of the New Brunswick Regiment and the early Loyalist settlers. Forest green pays homage to
lumbering while meadow green represents agriculture. Blue symbolizes the coastal and inland waters, and the gold accent
symbolizes the province’s potential wealth. Its International Tartan Index number is 1880.

Newfoundland and Labrador:

Tartan of Newfoundland and Labrador

The official tartan of Newfoundland and Labrador was designed in 1955 by Louis Anderson, who turned its production over to
Sam Wilansky, a clothing store owner in St. John’s. The Minute of Provincial Affairs petitioned the Lord Lyon to record the
tartan in 1972, and it was entered in the Lyon Court Books the following year. Its colours are green for the pine forests,
white for the snow, gold for the sun, brown for the minerals of the Iron Isle, and red to commemorate the Royal Standard of
the province’s British origins. Its International Tartan Index number is 1543.

North West Territories:

Tartan of the North West Territories

Janet Anderson-Thomson decided that the North West Territories needed an official tartan after she attended an RCMP ball in
1966 and noticed that the piper was “terribly drab”. She suggested the idea to Stuart Hodgson, Commissioner of North West
Territories, who gave her the go-ahead. Anderson-Thomson then enlisted the help of Hugh MacPherson of Edinburgh, who produced
three draft designs for an official committee to choose from. MacPherson wove each draft with colours suggested by
Anderson-Thomson: green for the forests, white for the frozen Arctic Ocean, blue for the Northwest Passage, gold for mineral
wealth, and red-orange for the Arctic prairies with a thin black accent symbolizing the tree line. The tartan was registered
at the Court of the Lord Lyon in 1972, and officially adopted by the 48th Session of the Territorial
Council in January 1973. Its International Tartan Index number is 662.

Nova Scotia:

Tartan of Nova Scotia

Nova Scotia’s tartan is the oldest official provincial tartan in Canada, designed in 1953 – almost by accident! Mrs. Bessie
Murray, the President of the Halifax Weavers’ Guild, designed a trade display on sheep rearing for a breeders’ convention in
Truro. In the display, a shepherd wore a completely new tartan that Mrs. Murray had designed to avoid any potential show of
favouritism. Her new tartan earned so much admiration and popularity that it was adopted as the official provincial tartan in
1963. The colours represent the blue of the sea and the sky, the dark and light green of the evergreens and decidious trees,
the white of the granite rocks and coastal surf, the gold of Nova Scotia’s Royal Charter, and the red of the lion rampant on
the provincial crest. Its International Tartan Index number is 1713.

READ  Windsor's Scottish Heritage - People - Scottish Canadian Politicians: John Strachan

Ontario:

Tartan of Ontario

Unofficial Tartan of Ontario (1965-2000)

Up until 2000, the accepted, but unofficial, provincial tartan was a fairly simple sett designed in 1965 by Rotex Ltd. The
Ontario tartan then found a champion in Bruce-Grey-Owen Sound MPP Bill Murdoch, who introduced the Tartan Act in 2000. He
commissioned Jim MacNeil, Chair of Scottish Studies at the University of Guelph, to design a new tartan that would appropriately
represent Ontario. Although parliamentary inaccuracies delayed the official adoption of MacNeil’s complicated sett by six years,
the province was finally awarded with a tartan that reflected its rich landscape and heritage.

Ontario Coat of Arms

Based loosely on the tartan of Sir John Sanfield MacDonald, Ontario’s first premier, the three shades of green represent
Ontario’s forests and fields, the two blues represent its huge expanses of water, white represents the sky, and red represents
the First Nations people. Its International Tartan Index number is 6627.
The unofficial tartan used between 1965 and 2000 was known as the Ensign of Ontario, and was inspired by the Provincial
Coat of Arms: yellow is for the three maple leaves that appear on the green shield; red is for St. George’s Cross; black is
for the bear sitting atop the shield; and brown is for the moose and the deer.

Prince Edward Island:

Tartan of Prince Edward Island

Designed by Jean Reed of Covehead, York, the official tartan of Prince Edward Island was selected through a
government-sponsored contest, and was officially adopted on June 16, 1960. Mrs. Reed explained that she used the colours “red
for the warmth and glow of the fertile soil, green for the gield and tree, yellow and brown for Autumn and white for the surf
or a summer snow.” 1 Its International Tartan Index number is 918.

Québec:

Tartan of Québec

Québec Coat of Arms

Quebec is the only province whose tartan has not been officially adopted or registered with the Lord Lyon. Known as the
Plaid du Québec, it was designed in 1965 by the clothing manufacturer Rotex Ltd, the same
company that designed the Ensign of Ontario. Its colours are derived from the province’s coat of arms: the blue is taken from
the background in the upper division of the shield, red is from the background of the centre division, green is for the three
maple leaves of the lower division, gold is for the crown and lion passant, and white is for the scroll containing the
province’s motto, Je me souviens. Its International Tartan Index number is 1949.

Saskatchewan:

Tartan of Saskatchewan

Saskatchewan’s tartan was created in 1961 by Mrs. Frank Bastedo, wife of Frank Lindsay Bastedo, former Lieutenant Governor
of Saskatchewan. The colour palette represents Saskatchewan’s identity as the “breadbasket” of Canada: the predominant gold
represents prairie wheat, brown represents summerfallow (a century-old farming practice used to conserve soil moisture), yellow
is for rapeseed flower and sun flower, green is for the forests, red is for the provincial flower, the Western prairie lily,
white is for snow, and black is for oil and coal. Its International Tartan Index number is 1817.

Yukon:

Tartan of Yukon

The official tartan of Yukon was designed by Janet Couture of Faro in 1965. It was first proposed during the Canadian
Centennial as the territorial tartan in 1967, but both the Territorial Council and the Scottish Tartan Registry rejected it.
The government rejected it due to concerns about the legal implications of a private individual holding the design’s copyright,
while the tartan registry rejected it on the grounds that it was simply a plaid rather than a true tartan. The design was
resubmitted to the Lord Lyon for approval with minor changes in 1984; later that year it was officially adopted as the
territorial tartan.
Its unique colour palette represents the poetic beauty of the Yukon landscape, and carries a lyrical description: “The
crystalline blue background represents Yukon’s sparkling, glacier-fed waters and its clear mountain skies. Magenta reflects
the colours of the Yukon’s floral emblem, the firewood of late summer. Green is symbolic of Yukon’s great expanses of
wilderness forest and purple symbolises the majestic thrust of mountains into the northern sky. White represents the purity of
the winter snow that crowns the peaks and blankets the alpine meadows. The yellow represents the long, soft evenings of the
midnight sun and the Yukon’s famous deposits of gold.” 2 Its International Tartan Index number
is 2129.

READ  Windsor's Scottish Heritage - People - Famous Scottish Canadians: Kiefer Sutherland

Maple Leaf Tartan:

Maple Leaf Tartan

Designed in 1964 by David Weiser in anticipation of the centenary of Dominion, the Maple Leaf Tartan is the unofficial tartan
of Canada. The Commercial Division of the Office of the High Commissioner for Canada said of the design, “In creating the Maple
Leaf Tartan fabric, David Weiser captured the natural phenomena of these leaves turning from summer into autumn. The green is
the early colour of the foliage. Gold appears at the turn of autumn. Red shows up at the coming of the first frost. The two
tones of brown find their way throughout the leaf creating a prolific profusion of colour.” Its International Tartan Index
number is 2034.

Even Essex County has its own official tartan!

Essex County Tartan

The Essex County tartan was designed in 1983 by Mrs. Edythe Bakes of Leamington, Ontario. Born in 1902, Mrs. Bakes grew up
near Orillia, where, as a young woman, she designed and made her own clothing. She moved to Essex County when her husband,
Arthur, took a position as Branch Manager at the H. J. Heinz Company. Mrs. Bakes was quite interested in the history of Canadian
tartans and decided to design one for the county of her residence. Once she had completed it, she offered it to Essex County
Council, which officially registered it with the Canadian government and the Museum of Tartans in Scotland. In 1985, the Women’s
Institute took up the responsibility for marketing the tartan, and, according to Mrs. Bakes’ wishes, donated the proceeds from
the sale of the tartan to local charities, including the Leamington District Memorial Hospital, the Salvation Army of Leamington
and Essex, and the Essex Food Bank. The original tartan cloth is on display at the Essex County Civic Centre, and can be
purchased through the County Administration Office.
Mrs. Bakes designed the tartan using colours chosen to represent specific aspects of the Essex County. The golden yellow is
for Essex’s lush harvest – the golden grains, corn, soy, barley, oats, and wheat; green represents its spring fields; blue is
for the skies and waters; white represents the fish and salt mines; black showcases its automotive heritage; and the colour red
pays homage to Leamington’s nickname, the “Tomato Capital of the World.” Its International Tartan Index number is 1840.
See the entry for the Essex County Tartan at the Scottish Register of TartansPlease note this link will open in a new window or tab

Cf. The Scottish Register of Tartans: http://www.tartanregister.gov.uk/tartanDetails.aspx?ref=3388
Heritage Canada, the Government of Canada: http://www.pch.gc.ca/pgm/ceem-cced/symbl/o6-eng.cfm

[ top of page ] [ site map ]

The opinions and interpretations in this publication are those of the author and
do not necessarily reflect those of the Government of Canada.
Copyright © 2009 Windsor Mosaic Website. All rights reserved

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top