Selkirkshire

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SELKIRKSHIRE (County Council)

Incorporated into : 1975 Borders (1996 Scottish Borders)

Coat of arms (crest) of Selkirkshire

Official blazon

Argent, on a mount in base a stag lodged reguardant, in front of an oak tree, all Proper.

And in an Escrol under the Shield this Motto "Leal to the Border".

Origin/meaning

The arms were officially granted on July 8, 1927.

The arms are very appropriate to "the Shire of the Forest". They show a stag at rest in Ettrick Forest, a favourite Royal hunting ground. This device has a long association with the County, and was used by the Selkirkshire Volunteers; there is an example on a regimental medal dated 1807.

The arms are also said to be connected with Sir Waiter Scott, who refers to it and to the motto in a letter of 1827 addressed to the Friendly Society of Selkirk, whose flag he had been asked to design.

The stag and forest motif also appears, in a somewhat different form, in the 1799 colour of the Selkirkshire Yeomanry Cavalry.

The motto, which appears on the 1807 medal, typifies the Borderer's love of his country and is reminiscent of that used by Lord Polwarth - "True to the End"; the Polwarth family has a long connection with the County.


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Literature: Urquhart, 1979