Symbols of office
Great Seal
Authorized in 1730, the Great Seal of Nova Scotia was the first of its kind in Canada.
The seal is engraved on either side with the royal arms and the provincial arms. The purpose of the seal is to manifest the authority of the Crown at the provincial level and permits documents to be ‘signed and sealed’ at Halifax.
Using seals to indicate ‘sovereign will’ is a tradition passed down from the British colonial system of government. The keeper of the Great Seal is the Minister of Justice who receives it from the Lieutenant Governor upon being sworn into office. The Seal is returned by the Minister when the Lieutenant Governor leaves office.
Respect for, and protection of, the Great Seal and its associated powers is enshrined in a provincial statute known as Lieutenant Governor and Great Seal Act.
The Lieutenant Governor's Flag
The Lieutenant Governor has a personal flag called the vice-regal flag. This flag is flown on vehicles and at Government House when the Lieutenant Governor is in residence and also on any building or Canadian vessel where the Lieutenant Governor is present. The flag consists of a Royal Union flag with the shield of the Nova Scotia arms in the centre circumscribed by 18 green maple leaves. The general format for the Lieutenant Governor's flag dates from 1869.
The Seal of the Lieutenant Governor
The Privy Seal of the Lieutenant Governor (commonly referred to as the Seal of the Lieutenant Governor) is used on many official documents, from Commissions appointing Honorary Aides de Camp, to appointment documents making an individual a Notary Public, and other documents requiring an embossed seal. The Seal of the Lieutenant Governor is always impressed on a red wafer (label) that is affixed to the document being sealed. The current Seal of the Lieutenant Governor was adopted in 2009 and bears the emblem of the Office of the Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia in the centre. Prior to 2009 the Privy Seal of the Lieutenant Governor consisted of the Lieutenant Governor's initials and name.
The Royal Key
Emblem of the Office of the Lieutenant Governor
Vice-Regal Recognition Badge
Upon assumption of office, the Lieutenant Governor is presented with two vice-regal Recognition Badges. The full-sized badge is a star shaped badge measuring six centimetres across, made of sterling silver, enameled in Canada's national colours, red and white, and defaced in the centre with a gold maple leaf surmounted by a Royal Crown. The badge is worn on the left side of a suit, dress or blouse. The lapel-sized badge measures three centimetres in height and is circular in shape, with red and white enamel, and a single gold maple leaf in the centre surmounted by a Royal Crown. The lapel badge is suitable for less formal functions, and can be worn on the lapel, similar to the way that the Order of Canada and Order of Nova Scotia lapel pins are worn by recipients of those orders.
The vice-regal Recognition Badge was established by a vice-regal warrant on 27 January 1999 and the first badges were presented on 3 October 1999 by then Governor General Romeo LeBlanc. The first Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia to receive the vice-regal Recognition Badge was The Honourable James Kinley in 1999. If a Lieutenant Governor has a spouse the spouse is entitled to wear a similar badge, the main difference being that the maple leaf in the centre of the full size badge and lapel badge is silver in colour.

Government House Bookplate
