Winged wheel

[9][10] However other meanings have included representing railroads, steam power, tourism, speed and progress.

This led to the winged wheel's adoption by the US Army's 2nd Surgical Hospital, where it represented the unit's role in evacuating the wounded.

When this company was merged into Underground Electric Railways Company of London (UERL) in 1912 the logo was combined with the "disc and bar" of the UERL to form the basis of the modern London Underground roundel.

[14] A triple-winged wheel was adopted as the logo of the Cyclists' Touring Club (CTC) in 1886, possibly taking inspiration from earlier logos of the League of American Wheelmen and the Swift Cycling Club.

A winged wheel symbol has been used in other contexts as various as the coat of arms of Panama and of the city of Edmonton in Canada, the flag of Knoxville, Tennessee, the badge of the Ohio State Highway Patrol, and the logo of Rotary Watches.

A two-winged wheel on a Deutsche Bahn (German railways) building in Dresden
The God on the Winged Wheel coin , a silver drachm , with a deity seated on a winged wheel, probably struck during the Achaemenid Empire . 4th century BCE, British Museum
The three-winged Cyclists' Touring Club logo
A winged wheel in the fourth quarter of the coat of arms of Panama