The British ship Sea Venture, carrying some 150 colonists bound for Virginia, was shipwrecked on shoals off Bermuda during a hurricane in 1609. A stylization of the scene—in which a ship in raging seas appears to be crashing into a cliff—was incorporated into the island’s first coat of arms, granted in 1635. The current coat of arms was granted to the colony of Bermuda on October 4, 1910. It includes the original shield, which is held by a red English lion seated within a larger white shield with a green grassy area at the bottom and, in a ribbon beneath, the Latin motto “Quo fata ferunt” (“Whither the fates lead”). This new arms (minus the motto) was incorporated into the flag, replacing a badge from the late 19th century.
The standard ensign for private vessels of British colonial territories was supposed to be red with the Union Jack in the corner but without any badge. In 1892 Canada received permission to use its arms as a badge on the Red Ensign displayed by private citizens. Yacht owners in Bermuda were soon using a defaced Red Ensign, although without official authorization. Eventually Bermuda began to display its defaced Red Ensign on land as an unofficial national flag. It became so popular that, in October 1967, British authorities finally gave legal sanction for its usage. Bermudian government vessels use a British Blue Ensign defaced with the flag badge.