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 image provided by Household Division Yacht Club, 
18 August 2015See also:
Blue ensign defaced with badge.
The Household Division, originally Household Brigade, is a section of the 
Army which carries out special escort and guard duties for the sovereign. It 
consists of two cavalry regiments the ‘Life Guards’ and the ‘Blues and Royals’, 
and the five infantry regiments of the Guards; Grenadier, Coldstream, Scots, 
Irish and Welsh.
The Household Brigade Yacht Club was formed in 1932 and 
granted a defaced Blue Ensign in 1934. In 1969 the name of the club was changed 
from Brigade to Division.
David Prothero, 17 June 2014
 image provided by Household Division Yacht Club, 
18 August 2015
image from
World Flag Database 
located by Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 4 October 2014
Flying Colours offer the burgee for sale at
http://www.flyingcolours.org/product/yacht-club-flags/household-division-yacht-club-burgee.html,
and this matches the image in the World Flag Database. It's a 3:5 burgee, with three flywise stripes 
of really dark blue B+++ over very dark red R++ approximately in the ratios 
of 2:3:2. The badge of the household division, half the length of the hoist 
in size, is placed vertically centred on the stripes, being mostly on the red 
stripe but sticking out into the blue stripes. (Horizontally, it's placed so
that a line from a hoist corner through the flyward tip of the badge will 
reach the opposite edge of the burgee at the length of the hoist away from 
the hoist. I have no idea whether this is the intended construction, though.)
The badge is a Garter Star, bearing a St. Edward's[?] 
crown on a grey field that is surrounded by a red ring edged gold, which 
bears in gold the text "Septem Juncta in Uno +", all-caps, meaning "Seven 
Joined in One".
All this to say that Lloyds (1961) Register of 
Yachts - Ensigns and burgees of yacht clubs and distinguishing flags of 
yachtsmen, shows this ensign and this burgee as well. However, it's from a time when the name was 
"Household Brigade Yacht Club", and its badge is slightly different:
Inside the edge of the Garter Star, a Seal of the Prophets is drawn, inside 
which what appears to be a rope ring lies around the central disk, all of 
these in the colours of the star. Circle on the disk is blue edges white, and 
its motto is in silver "Una in Juncta Tria.", all-caps. On the burgee, the 
motto is just "In Juncta Tria.", all-caps, with the word "IN" closest to the 
hoist. 
The burgee is also depicted slightly differently, with the ratio 
of the stripes 7:13:7, and the badge 27:11, meaning it falls wholly on the 
red stripe. Beyond me to illustrate, of course, but fortunately 
Fellows auctioned a flag brooch with more or less this pattern, which is 
still shown by LiveAuctioneers:
http://www.liveauctioneers.com/item/26515896_benzie-of-cowes-an-enamel-flag-brooch. There we see the simpler design of the Garter Star, and the motto "Tria
Juncta in Una", all-caps. The crown here appears it be a Tudor crown,
however, and the red stripe is only 3/10th of the hoist in width. 
First the bit about the motto: As it happens, this was 
already asked and answered in the Great War Forum,
http://1914-1918.invisionzone.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=49957. "Tria 
juncta in un_o_" was the motto of the Brigade of Guards until 1949. It was 
then changed to "Quinque juncta in uno", and finally in 1959 to "Septem 
juncta in uno". 
In that same time frame, 1953-1958, according to
gb-crown.html, Tudor crowns were 
replaced by St. Edward crowns. All this does not tell us when exactly the 
changes to the badge took place, and when the flags followed suit. I 
find it likely, however, that the designs in Lloyds (1961) tries to depict have the 
motto "Tria juncta in una" (though maybe they ought to be "Uno"), and that 
the differences are caused by the small size and printer's reversal. Unless 
we find further evidence of more fancy Garter Stars, I assume the badge had a 
simple garter star, as on the brooch, and obviously originally had the Tudor 
crown, which in 1932 would have been the crown of choice. To determine 
whether this was actually the current flag, 1961-ish, we'd have to know 
whether the badges changed every time the motto changed, and whether the flag 
is defined as including the badge.
Reeds Maritime Flags Handbook at
http://books.google.com/books?id=0WqrAAAAQBAJ, depicts the modern style in 
all aspects but one: It shows a blue ring with silver details. A mistake, or 
actually the most recent change?
The stripes of the burgee are a 
different matter. I must say that I like the version of the brooch, which 
makes the badge stand out more, but it stands alone in that depiction. Both 
physical items have the badge larger than the red stripe, though, which would 
seem conclusive, but then Yacht Club Burgees, Colin Stewart, [ste57] agrees 
with Lloyd's, as does The Dumpy Pocket Book of Sailing Dinghies and Yachts 
[ele60] (further details too small in both cases), as does Reeds. If the 
badge doesn't actually fit within the red stripe, why do all written sources
depict it so? I don't know what to make of that.
Peter Hans van den 
Muijzenberg, 4 October 2014
 image by Clay Moss, 
16 June 2014
The badge was perhaps altered when the Household Brigade Yacht Club, formed 
in 1932, changed its name to Household Division Yacht Club, in 1970. The Brigade 
badge did include a Latin motto in yellow on a red circle.
HO 144/18452 
1933 Household Brigade Yacht Club Badge.
Brigadier-General R.McCalmont to 
Admiralty. Asked if permission was needed for use of Household Brigade badge on 
burgee of recently formed yacht club.
8 Feb 1933. Admiralty reply. Concerned 
only with ensigns. Would need to be agreed with Home Secretary, as badge 
included a crown. Permission of HM required.
1 Mar 1933. HM approved use of 
crown.
2 Mar 1933. War Office to Home Office. No objection to use of badge of 
Brigade of Guards as badge on yacht club burgee.
Home Office Minute. 
Crown should not appear on burgee of a yacht club that is not royal.
27 Feb 
1933. Old Home Office ruling that grant of title 'royal' has been held to convey 
the right to use the crown in the burgee. No yacht club other than a Royal one 
has permission to use the crown in that way.
The defaced ensign was 
granted in 1934.
David Prothero, 18 August 2015
 image by Clay Moss, 
16 June 2014