- The Governor General of Canada
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John Gerard Dunlap
Ottawa, Ontario
Grant of Arms, Flag and Badge, with differences to John Timothy Andrew Dunlap and Joanne Elizabeth Dunlap
July 15, 2003
Vol. IV, p. 293
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Blazon
Arms
Argent a double-headed griffin sejant affronté per fess Gules and Sable, holding in its claws a sword point in base Argent hilted Or;
Crest
Issuant from waves Argent, a wall Gules charged with a trillium proper between two thistles Or, and issuing therefrom a hand proper grasping a sword Argent hilted Or;
Motto
CONCUSSUS SURGO;
Symbolism
Arms
The design follows the basic pattern of arms that have been used by people named Dunlop or Dunlap, being a red double-headed eagle on a white shield. Here it has been changed to a double-headed griffin; the griffin is a symbol of the legal profession, in which the petitioner and both his children have made their careers. A griffin, holding a sword and a balance, has been used as a symbol of the Advocates' Society, on whose board Mr. Dunlap served. The colour black has been added to the griffin to indicate the red, black and white colours of the Ottawa Rough Riders football team, for which Mr. Dunlap played and which he owned in the 1970s. The sword is held in the form of a cross to indicate the family's Christian faith.
Crest
The crest combines elements found in crests used by armigers named Dunlop and Morrison, thus honouring both Mr. and Mrs. Dunlap's heritage. The waves around the wall make an illusion to the family home on the island of Cape Breton for almost two hundred years. The thistles mark the Nova Scotian and Scottish roots of the family, and the trillium indicates that Mr. Dunlap served as Agent-General of the Province of Ontario in the United States of America.
Motto
This phrase means "When struck I rise" and is taken from the emblem book Devises héroïques by Claude Paradin, published in 1563. This was chosen by Mr. Dunlap as a statement of resilience and determination, with an implied reference to his time as a football player, which required getting up after being knocked down.