Todmorden: Difference between revisions

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The obelisk forming the crest represents Stoodley Pike, erected to mark the Peace of Amiens.
The obelisk forming the crest represents Stoodley Pike, erected to mark the Peace of Amiens.
{|align="center"
|align="center"|[[File:todmorden.jj.jpg|350 px|center]] <br/>The arms as used on a [[Jaja|JaJa postcard]] +/- 1905
|}


[[Literature]] : Information taken from [http://www.civicheraldry.co.uk www.civicheraldry.co.uk]
[[Literature]] : Information taken from [http://www.civicheraldry.co.uk www.civicheraldry.co.uk]

Revision as of 16:54, 10 August 2011

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Heraldry of the World
Civic heraldry of the United Kingdom
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TODMORDEN (borough council)

Incorporated into : 1974 Calderdale

Todmorden.jpg

Official blason: ARMS: Or on a Fesse wavy Azure between a Rose Gules in chief and a Rose Argent in base both barbed and seeded slipped and leaved proper a Shuttle in bend sinister and a Spindle in bend of the fourth.
CREST: On a Wreath of the Colours upon a Mount Vert an Obelisk proper.
MOTTO: 'WE PROSPER BY INDUSTRY'.

Origin/meaning :
The arms were granted on December 31, 1896. The arms were granted to Todmorden Borough, but are currently used by the town council.

The wavy fess represents the River Calder which, at the time the arms were granted, was the boundary between Yorkshire and Lancashire. The boundaries were later altered, and the area of the borough lies wholly in Yorkshire, but the red and white roses commemorate its former division between the two counties. The emblems on the fess stand for the textile industry.

The obelisk forming the crest represents Stoodley Pike, erected to mark the Peace of Amiens.

Literature : Information taken from www.civicheraldry.co.uk