Spanish Colonial America (Canada)
Copyright (c) 1995-97 All Rights Reserved
by P. Cawley
The flag of Spain flew on the west coast of
Canada between 1789 and 1795.
Spain claimed the west coast of North America by virtue
of the Treaty of Tordesillas (1494). Spanish explorations and landings
on the west coast of Canada in 1592 and 1774, however, were not consolidated
by any settlement.
In 1789, fearful of Russian intentions to move down the
coast from Alaska, and concerned by British trading activity that followed
Cook's visit in 1778, spain asserted its sovereignty in the region by establishing
a fort at Friendly Cove at the entrance to Nootka Sound on the west coast
of Vancouver Island. Spain withdrew from Nootka in 1795.
A contemporary print in Jose Cadero's Atlas para el
riaje de las goletas "Sutil" y "Mexicana"...en 1792
(in the British Columbia Provincial Archives), shows the Spanish Fort
at Friendly Cove as the National flag adoped by Spain in 1785. The length
of the flag is about three times the width. The flag has three horizontal
stripes: the yellow centre stripe is wideth of each of the red stripes
along the top and bottom of the flag (similar to the modern Spanish flag.)
a circle with the arms of Leon (a red lion) and Castile (a yellow castle)
is set in the yellow stripe towards the hoist.