Town Coat of Arms On Brooklands Tap Pub Sign - Sale, UK
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member dtrebilc
N 53° 25.092 W 002° 19.481
30U E 544881 N 5919005
This coat of arms is displayed as a pub sign for the Brooklands Tap pub. The area of Sale called Brooklands is named after Samuel Brooks, a Manchester banker and businessman who, in 1856, bought land in this area from the Earl of Stamford.
Waymark Code: WMJRFB
Location: North West England, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 12/24/2013
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member puczmeloun
Views: 3

The coat of arms was granted to the Urban District Council of Sale by The College of Arms by letters patent dated 23 September 1920. At this time Sale was part of the county of Cheshire.

Until the Industrial Revolution Sale was a small community mainly consisting of farmland. Things changed with the arrival of the railway which connected the town to the much large city of Manchester. Sale then grew rapidly as a dormitory town, where many people lived in Sale and commuted to work in Manchester.

By 1935 the town had grown large enough to be granted Municipal Borough status and it remained so until 1974. In that year there was a major council reorganisation in the whole of the UK and Sale became part of the much larger Metropolitan Borough of Trafford, within Greater Manchester. Much, but not all of the council administration then moved to the nearby town of Stretford but some functions still remained in Sale's town hall.

The gold "garbs" or wheatsheaves on a blue field were county emblems, appearing in the arms of Cheshire County Council and the Earldom of Chester. The three black lozenges on white were from the arms of the Massey family of Sale. The crest above the shield was a black "moorcock" representing Sale Moor. The Latin motto adopted was Salus et felicitas or "health and happiness": the first word was a pun on the name of the town. The arms continued in use by the borough council on incorporation in 1935. An additional grant of heraldic supporters was made on 15 August 1945 to commemorate the tenth anniversary of borough status.

The unicorn represented Ashton-upon-Mersey, and was derived from the arms of the Carrington family. The badger or "brock" stood for the Brooklands area. Both supporters wore collars made of sallow twigs, another reference to the town's name.
Bearer of Coat of Arms: Town

Full name of the bearer: Sale Urban District Council

Where is Coat of Arms installed (short description) ?:
The pub sign of the Brooklands Tap


Material / Design: Painting (enamel) on metal

Blazon (heraldic description):
Azure, on a pile argent between two garbs Or, three lozenges sable, and for a Crest on a wreath of the colours, upon the battlements of a tower argent a moorcock sable combed and wattled gules beaked and legged Or. On the dexter side a unicorn argent, armed and unguled Or, maned and tufted azure, and on the sinister side a badger proper, each gorged with a wreath of salllow twigs also proper.


Address:
Brooklands Tap Hope Road Sale Cheshire United Kingdom M33 3YA


Web page about the structure where is Coat of Arms installed (if exists): [Web Link]

Web page about the bearer of Coat of Arms (if exists): [Web Link]

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