Frederick Brownell
'''Frederick Gordon Brownell'''
Family and early life
Brownell was born in Bethlehem, in what was then the Orange Free State province in South Africa on 8 March 1940. He matriculated from St. Andrew's School in Bloemfontein in 1957. He undertook his voluntary military service at the Air Force Gymnasium with 1 Motorboat Squadron before going to Rhodes University in Grahamstown to read for a Bachelor of Arts degree in History and Social Anthropology, which he obtained in 1961. He subsequently completed an Honours degree in history at the University of South Africa in 1965 and was awarded a Master of Arts degree from the same university in 1977 for a dissertation entitled "British Immigration to South Africa 1946 – 1970".He married Christine de Villiers, whom he met whilst at Rhodes University, on 29 September 1962 in Pretoria and together they had three daughters.
Career
Brownell joined the Department of Immigration on 2 January 1962 as an Administrative Officer. His responsibilities included a tour of duty as Assistant Attache and Consul to the South African Embassy in London between 1965 and 1969.He then joined the Department of National Education / later Arts, Culture, Science and Technology as Assistant State Herald in the Bureau of Heraldry on 1 August 1977. He was promoted to State Herald on 1 May 1982 and retired from that position in 2002.
Brownell designed many coats of arms, badges and flags, including the arms of Namibia|arms] and the flag of Namibia in 1990. In 1993/1994, he designed the current South African flag, with a three-armed converging cross of the sort called a pall in heraldry, to symbolise the convergence of different cultures into one for the future South Africa. He later designed arms for the new provincial governments in South Africa. He was awarded the Order for Meritorious Service by President Nelson Mandela in 2000 for his role in the design of the South African flag and the Vexillon Award for excellence in the promotion of vexillology in 1995 and 2015, the only recipient to have won it twice. He also published many articles and several books on heraldry and flags. He was also involved in the field of honours and awards.
Final years and death
Shortly after his retirement Brownell and his wife moved to the Newlands Park retirement home, south east of Pretoria. He continued to be an active member of the Southern African Vexillological Association and completed the SAVA Journal series on South African Military Colours. Furthermore, in September 2015 he was awarded the degree of Doctorate of Philosophy in the Faculty of Humanities at the University of Pretoria for a dissertation entitled Convergence and Unification: The National Flag of South Africa in Historical Perspective, based on the process of, and his role in, the designing the current South African flag.In early 2019, he was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. He died at his home surrounded by his family on 10 May 2019.
Awards and Commendations
Brownell was the recipient of the following:- Order for Meritorious Service (OMSS), Class II: Silver
- Southern Cross Medal (1975) and bar
- Military Merit Medal (MMM)
- General Service Medal
- Unitas Medal
- John Chard Decoration (JCD)
- Republic of Venda Police Star of Merit
- Republic of Venda Prison's Service Establishment Medal
- Knight of the Most Venerable [Order of the Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem]
- Cross of Merit of Robert Caluwe
- Gold Commemorative Medallion of the South West Africa Territory Force
- William Harvey Medal of the South African Blood Transfusion ServiceArchives News Literary Prize
- Vexillon Award of the International Federation of Vexillological Associations
- Fellow of the International Federation of Vexillological Associations
- Fiat Lux Award by the family of St. Andrew's School
- South African National Defence Force Emblem for Voluntary Service
- Honorary Life Member of the Southern African Vexillological Association
- Laureate of the International Federation of Vexillological Associations