- The Governor General of Canada
The contents of this Register are intended for research purposes only. The heraldic emblems found in the Register may not be reproduced in any form or in any media without the written consent of the Canadian Heraldic Authority and/or the recipient.
Roger Ouellette
Moncton, New Brunswick
Grant of Arms
July 15, 2010
Vol. V, p. 533
[ previous page ]
Blazon
Arms
Per bend sinister grady Or and Azure semé of grains of buckwheat Or, in dexter chief an escallop Azure;
Crest
Issuant from a circlet of purple violets and fiddleheads proper, a porcupine couchant Sable;
Motto
QUI S’Y FROTTE S’Y PIQUE;
Symbolism
Arms
The division of the shield alludes to a staircase and, by extension, to the parish of Saint-Jacques-du-Hautpas (in English, “St. James of the High Steps”) in the neighbourhood of the Jardins du Luxembourg in Paris, from where the family’s original Canadian ancestor, René Ouellet (Hoélet), came. The shell, an attribute of St. James, also refers to this church. The buckwheat grains refer to Mr. Ouellette’s birthplace, the Madawaska region in the north of New Brunswick, where buckwheat is cultivated on a large scale.
Crest
The porcupine is a symbol of Madawaska, as the Malecite word Medaweskak means “land of the porcupines”. It thus recalls that Béloni Ouellette, Mr. Ouellette’s ancestor, left the county of Kamouraska in Quebec to come to Madawaska when he married in 1873. The purple violet is the floral emblem of New Brunswick. The fiddlehead is the only plant native to Canada that has attained commercial success as a vegetable. In North America, the major part of the harvest is made in New Brunswick, where they have been consumed for centuries.
Motto
Meaning “Whoever touches it is pierced by it”, the motto alludes to the symbolism of the crest.