Armoria civica
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ALGOA REGIONAL SERVICES COUNCIL / STREEKSDIENSTERAAD ALGOA
Province: Cape Province.
Formed: 1987, incorporating Dias Divisional Council (1978 Port Elizabeth DC, Bathurst DC, Albany DC, Alexandria DC), Winterhoek DC (1978 Humansdorp DC, Uitenhage DC, Kirkwood DC, Willowmore DC, Steytlerville DC)
Incorporated into: Western District Council (1995).

Algoa Regional Services Council

These arms may be blazoned:

Or, semy of crosslets humetty gules, a pale wavy azure charged with a shovel or; upon a chief azure an eight-spoked wheel between two anchors or.

Crest: the caravel São Gabriel with sails set bearing the cross of the Order of Christ, the main mast bearing a banner of the arms of Portugal.

Mantling: Or and azure.

Motto: Deo adjuvante labor profecit (With the help of God we will profit from our labour).

About the arms:
The field semy of (sprinkled with) crosslets symbolises the aim of Christian mission which underlay the exploratory journeys of the Portuguese Order of Christ, and the largely Christian character of modern South Africa.

Bartolomeo Dias’s 1488 journey aboard the São Gabriel was the first to reach Algoa Bay, where he planted a wooden cross on a small rocky island now called St Croix or Santa Cruz island. He gave the bay a name meaning “Bay of the Rock”, which was changed in Portugal to “Bahia de Lagoa” or Bay of the Lagoon, and which eventually became Algoa Bay. Da Gama also planted a stone cross or padrão at Kwaaihoek, just to the east of Algoa Bay, which also falls into the area of the ARSC.

The caravel was taken from the arms of the Dias Divisional Council. Unfortunately the banner on the main mast, showing the arms of King João II of Portugal, is shown in red and white only, whereas the cross-like emblem in the middle is in fact in blue and white, and the red border is semy of gold (yellow) castles.

The crosslets, aside from their Christian symbolism, represent the council’s health service, caring for the sick, injured and infirm, and for the ambulance service provided by the council.

The wavy pale represents the rivers in the region and the council’s responsibility for water supply. The shovel symbolises road construction and maintenance, as well as honest labour.

The wheel represents progress, transport, traffic and roads.

The anchors are held to represent steadfastness and calm. These are the only charges taken over from the arms of the City of Port Elizabeth; it is ironic that the anchors (which in the city’s arms are “proper” or in their natural colours) were added last to the arms of Port Elizabeth as a mark of difference from the arms of the city’s founder, Sir Rufane Donkin. They also symbolise the safe anchorage of Algoa Bay.

About the region:
The region controlled by the Algoa RSC was part of the Eastern Cape Province during an interim period from May 1994 to July 1995 prior to the holding of local government elections following the changeover from the apartheid regime. During this period the Ciskei and Transkei administrations also continued to function in the eastern part of Eastern Cape, although they had formally been abolished.


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  • Source: illustration provided by the Western District Council.
  • Scan courtesy of the Evening Post.


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    Comments, inquiries: Mike Oettle

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