Last modified: 2016-05-20 by ian macdonald
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image located by Jonathan Dixon, 12 April 2016
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The City of Hawkesbury is a local government area at (and beyond) the
northwestern edge of the Sydney metropolitan area. Named for the Hawkesbury
River, it consists of outer suburbs of Sydney on and south of the river, and a
large rural and national park area to the north and west.
European
settlement began in the area with farms at Pitt Town Bottoms in 1794, causing
conflict with the Dharug people. The area became critically important to the
colony agriculturally for quite some time. In 1810, the five 'Macquarie Towns'
were established by Governor Macquarie - Windsor, Richmond, Pitt Town,
Wilberforce and Castlereagh, with Windsor and Richmond becoming the most
significant towns in the area.
The LGA was formed in 1981 by the merger
of Windsor Municipal Council (including Richmond) and Colo Shire Council. It was
given City status in 1989.
I've known for many years that the council
flies a sky blue - green - brown horizontal tricolour with their "crest" near
the hoist in the blue stripe. The photo at
http://nnimgt-a.akamaihd.net is better than any that I took on a windless
day last November.
However, it seems there is another flag used, perhaps
only in the Mayor's office (I haven't been able to get more details), where the
stripes form a canton and the "crest" is in the fly on a blue field: see
http://www.hawkesburygazette.com.au/story/3125670/gallery-the-hawkesbury-may-in-pictures/#slide=40
or less clearly,
http://www.hawkesburygazette.com.au/story/3352775/hawkesbury-mayor-re-elected-with-new-deputy.
The "crest" is described and pictured at
http://www.hawkesbury.nsw.gov.au/council/about-council/about-council/hcc-crest2. It is an oval logo, with the words "HAWKESBURY" "CITY COUNCIL" in a
white border. At the bottom, in the foreground, is a ship on the river in a
dark bluish shade. Above and behind the ship are, from left to right,
Governor Lachlan Macquarie, the spire of St Matthew's Church, Windsor
(designed by Francis Greenway), and some sort of vegetation (a fruit tree?).
A jet is shown streaming from the tree to the top of the emblem, representing
the progress and commerce of today and tomorrow.
Jonathan Dixon, 12
April 2016