This is a digital copy of a book that was preserved for generations on library shelves before it was carefully scanned by Google as part of a project
to make the world's books discoverable online.
It has survived long enough for the copyright to expire and the book to enter the public domain. A public domain book is one that was never subject
to copyright or whose legal copyright term has expired. Whether a book is in the public domain may vary country to country. Public domain books
are our gateways to the past, representing a wealth of history, culture and knowledge that's often difficult to discover.
Marks, notations and other marginalia present in the original volume will appear in this file - a reminder of this book's long journey from the
publisher to a library and finally to you.
Usage guidelines
Google is proud to partner with libraries to digitize public domain materials and make them widely accessible. Public domain books belong to the
public and we are merely their custodians. Nevertheless, this work is expensive, so in order to keep providing this resource, we have taken steps to
prevent abuse by commercial parties, including placing technical restrictions on automated querying.
We also ask that you:
+ Make non-commercial use of the files We designed Google Book Search for use by individuals, and we request that you use these files for
personal, non-commercial purposes.
+ Refrain from automated querying Do not send automated queries of any sort to Google's system: If you are conducting research on machine
translation, optical character recognition or other areas where access to a large amount of text is helpful, please contact us. We encourage the
use of public domain materials for these purposes and may be able to help.
+ Maintain attribution The Google "watermark" you see on each file is essential for informing people about this project and helping them find
additional materials through Google Book Search. Please do not remove it.
+ Keep it legal Whatever your use, remember that you are responsible for ensuring that what you are doing is legal. Do not assume that just
because we believe a book is in the public domain for users in the United States, that the work is also in the public domain for users in other
countries. Whether a book is still in copyright varies from country to country, and we can't offer guidance on whether any specific use of
any specific book is allowed. Please do not assume that a book's appearance in Google Book Search means it can be used in any manner
anywhere in the world. Copyright infringement liability can be quite severe.
About Google Book Search
Google's mission is to organize the world's information and to make it universally accessible and useful. Google Book Search helps readers
discover the world's books while helping authors and publishers reach new audiences. You can search through the full text of this book on the web
at jhttp : //books . qooqle . com/
600026666-
. -/■ / r
W ■■,/.' V:
VI
I,
iiiiuium
600026598
44- ttf'f
UcA. .&>&//. -^r
2\0^. <L
3
& yfa
4u m .*&
■Iff ~
rjj)
/ ■ ; y v >' V / / V v 7 / /. /v ;
WP TAJ
(•: x p (, a n a t o .« r ;p s xi x g r c e a
y
Heraldic 3fUtt$tratton0,
COMPRISING THE ARMORIAL BEARINGS
OF THE PRINCIPAL
FAMILIES OF THE EMPIRE; WITH PEDIGREES
AND ANNOTATIONS,
BY JOHN BURKE, ESQ.
AUTHOR OP THE PEERAGE AND BARONETAGE, DICTIONARY OF. TAB LANDED GENTRY, ETC.
AND
JOHN BERNARD BURKE, ESQ.
OF THE MIDDLE TEMPLE, BARRISTER- AT-LAW.
wviCo^K^ ®^ -
LONDON:
E. CHURTON, 26, HOLLES STREET.
1844.
d. 3,
3
C. WHITTINGHAM, TOOES COURT, CHANCERY LANE.
■&&:-
A
firm
r
[/If JT ST Y
first Wart
■■--,
■4t A:--
TT70RKS devoted altogether to the display of Armorial Bear-
ings are met with frequently on the Continent. In Germany
more especially, where the inheritance of a Shield of manifold
Quarterings has ever been essential in the formation of Alliances,
and indispensable in the attainment of Honours, the collections
are voluminous and authoritative, while in England, although
the pride and pomp of Heraldry are hardly less regarded, there
has hitherto been no attempt whatsoever to produce a Uniform
Collection of Heraldic Engravings, if we except the slight and
ill executed etchings that ever and anon disfigure our antiquarian
and genealogical literature; why or wherefore, it is now unne-
cessary to enquire, — sufficient to refer to the existence of such a
desideratum, and to state that the " Heraldic Illustrations" have
been undertaken to supply it.
CONTENTS.
Dedication.
Engraved Plates of Amis.
Pedicures and Annotations, Explanatory of tin: Engravings.
Mottoes, Tr\nsl\ti.d and Ei.i( idated.
Index.
HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS.
©is mopal ^igbnefts
prince Albert, of £>ajce Cobutg (Botya, 2&. <5 ;
THE Family of Saxe-Coburg is one of the most ancient and illustrious of the Sovereign
Houses of Europe. Its Princes, who frequently commanded armies and acquired great
military renown, were as eminent in peace as the munificent Patrons of Art, Science, and
Literature. Originally Counts of Wettin, they became, by inheritance, Margraves of
Meissen and Landgraves of Thuringia : and of the latter potent Race sole Representatives
at the decease of Hermann, Landgrave of Thuringia and Emperor op Germany.
The Reigning Duke of Saxe Coburg Gotha is Chief of the Saalfeld Branch of the
Ernestine Line of the House of Saxony. In that Line the Electorate vested at the
decease of Albert III. in 1422, and remained until John Frederick, the Magnanimous,
was deprived of his dominions by the Emperor Charles V. who conferred them, with
the dignity of Elector of Saxony, on Duke Maurice of Meissen, Representative of the
Albertine branch, and direct Ancestor of the present Kino of Saxony. Thus, but for
the misfortunes of the Elector John Frederick, (Prince Albert's immediate Progenitor)
the Chief of his House — the Grand Duke of Saxe Weimar — would now be invested
with the Sovereignty of Saxony. His Royal Highness Prince Albert bears for
flnmt. — Quarterly, first and fourth, the Royal Arms of the British Empire, differenced
by a label of three points, on the centre point a cross gu. Second ana third, barry of
ten, or and sa. a bend trefle* vert, for Saxony. The Quarter inos are very numerous
and splendid, including Thuringia, Meissen, Cleve, Berg, Anhalt, Henneberg,
&c.
Crrottf. — The various Cognizances of the House of Saxony.
Supporters.— Two lions ramp, or, crowned ppr. each charged on the shoulder with
a label, as in the Arms.
/HottO.— Treu und FesU
Coltraft t$e Great, Count de Wettin, 1 Margrave of Meissen and Margrave of Lower
Lusatia, son of Thimo, Margrave of Meissen, and grandson of Theodric II. Count de
Wetteo, Representative of that distinguished Line, (by Matilda, his wife, dau. and heir of
Eckard, Margrave of Meissen,) d. in 1156. This Prince joined the Crusade, and on his
return assumed the religious habit : he first granted to the city of Leipsic the privilege of
holding two annual fairs.
4ttt<>. the Rich* d. in 1 189. Dietrich, Margrave of Lusatia. Henry, m. Sophia, dau. of
=f- Leopold IV. of Austria.
r-J 1
• 6
H. R. H. PRINCE ALBERT.
filbert the Proud, poisoned in 1195.
Cf)eO&rtf, Margrave of Meissen, m. Jutta, dau. of Herman,
Landgrave of Thuringia, 3 and was poisoned in 1222.
T
&tnrp the Illustrious,* Margrave of Meissen and Thuringia, d. in 1288.
_i_
8Itett the D*g«n«race,=y=Margaret, dau. of the
Landgrave of Thurin- I Emperor Frederick II.
gia, d. in 1314. | 1st wife.
Theodric, Margrave of
Meissen, d. in 1283.
Frederick, d. in 1316.
JPrrtrertcfc with the Bitten Cheek, Margrave oi
Meissen and Thuringia, d. in 1324, leaving the
reputation of a great and excellent Prince.
^Elizabeth, dau. of Otho
/on Arnshaug.
JfriUttitk the Serious, aided John,
France, in his war with Edward III.
land, d. in 1349.
ifW=Eliza
e Vo
fW=a
J
Diesman, a distinguished
soldier, killed in 1307
by an assassin.
King of=pMechtild, dau. of the Emperor Lewis VI.
of Eng- I 1329.
JPrdimcfc the Severe, acquired Coburg by his=j= Catherine, dau. of Count Henry de Henneberg.
marriage in 1347, d. in 1380.
y
jTrrteticft I. the Warlike, purchased the town and castle of Saalfeld, and became
possessed, by gift of the Emperor Sigismund, in 1422 (the Ascanian line of the Electors
of Saxony becoming extinct with Albert III.) of the Duchy of Upper Saxony and the
dignity of Elector and Arch Marshal of the Roman Empire. He a. in 1428.
. 1
ifrefcerult II. the Good, Elector of Saxony,
d. in 1464.
William, Duke of Thuringia, d. without male
issue in 1483. This Prince refuted the
Crown of Bohemia.
4£nt*tt, s ©lector of &aionn, d. in i486.
Albert 3 the Courageous, one of the most cele-
brated warriors of his time, d. in 1500.
iTreUrmc* the Wbe*
the patron of Luther,
d. unm. in 1525.
JfOJUn the Constant,
Elector of Saxony,
d. in 1532.
J
George the Rich, d. in
1539.
ftem*? ^ Pious, d. in
1541.
J
Jotyl jfttbttitk the Magnanimous, 7 Elector of Saxony, distin-
guished for his unbending integrity and many sufferings,
dispossessed by the Emperor of his dignities and dominions,
which were conferred on Maurice his cousin. He formed the
plan of the celebrated seminary at Jena, which was afterwards
completed by his son : m. in 1597, Sibylla, dau. of John,
Duke of Cleve, and sister of Anne of Cleve, Queen of
Henry VIII. King of England, d. in 1554.
1 .
Maurice, Elector
of Saxony, d. in
1553.
augltftltft, Elector
of Saxony* d. in
1586.
John Frederick II. Founder of the
House of Saxe Gotha, b. in 1567, d.
in 1595.
T
i
Jo|)1t QSItUtant, Founder of the House
of Saxe Weimar, one of the suitors
of Queen Elizabeth. He m. Doro-
thy-Susanna, dau. of Frederick III.
Elector Palatine, and d. in 1573.
Christian I. Elector
of Saxony, d. in
1591.
John Casimuy=Arma, dau. of the Elec-
d. in 1633, tor Augustus of Sax-
s.p. ony, 1st wife. Mar-
faret, Princess of
Brunswick, 2nd wife.
John Ernest,
d. in 1638
«. p.
Frederick William, of
Altenburg, whose
line became extinct
in 1672.
Jo(lt, Duke of Wei-=y=Dorothea Maria, dau.
mar, d. in 1605, in
his 36th year.
of Prince Joachim
Ernest of Anhalt.
Christian II.
Elector of
Saxony, d.
in 1611.
William, Duke
of Saxe Wei-
mar, died in
1662.
Other
Albert of
Eisenach,
d. s. p. in
1644.
SnU0ttbePt0tiSr^Elixabeth Sophia,
Duke of Saxe
Gotha, d
1675.
only dau. of
John Philip,
Duke of Alten-
burg.
Bernard, the
celebrated
military com-
mander, so
distinguished
at Lutzen, d.
in 1639.
John George,
Elector of
Saxony, d.
in 1656.
=P
John George.
Elector of
Saxony, d.
iu 1680.
T
H. R. H PRINCE ALBERT.
John Ernest, Duke
Frederick
Albert,
of Saxe Weimar,
I. Duke
d.s.p.
d. in 1683, great-
of Saxe
in
great-great-
Gotha,
1697.
grandfather of the
d. in
Ktigmnp:
Granlt Bute of
1691.
His line
&ax* Weimar.
is ex-
tinct.
Henry,
d.s, p.
in
1710.
Bernard, Duke
of Saxe Mein-
ingen, great-
grandfather of
Queen fltJr-
lat&e and of
her brother
the reigning
Bute of
&axt&Uin?
mgeit.
I
Christian
ofEisen-
berg, d.
in 1707.
K
I
Ernest,
great-
great-
grand-
father
of the
present
Of
&aie
fllten*
tmrg.
<Prs
neat,
Duke
of
Saxe
Saal-
feld.
d. in
1729.
John
George
III.
Elector
of Sax-
ony, d.
1691.
J
Christian-Ernest, Duke of
Saxe Saalfeld, d. unm.
1757.
. Sophia, m. to
the Duke of
Mecklenburg
Schwerin.
. Amelia, ».
to Alexander,
Margrave of
Brandenburg
Anspacb.
Jpranrts^joflta*, governed
jointly with his brother
during that Prince's life-
time, d. in 1764.
I
John George IV.
Elector of Sax-
ony, K. G. d.
in 1694.
Frederick Augustus I.*
Elector of Saxony,
elected King of Po-
land, d. in 1733.
. €£niest?4Fretoerfe1t,
Duke of Saxe Coburg-
Saalfeld, m. Sophia-
Antoinette, sister to
the celebrated Prince
Ferdinand of Bruns-
wick, and d. in 1800.
2. Christian. 4. 4f rf&eririt?jF00f80, Field
3. Adolphus, Marshal of the Empire and
killed in Commander of the Allied
the first Si- Army in the beginning of
lesian war. the war with revolutionary
France. This distinguished
Commander d. in 1815.
Frederick- Au-
gustus II.
elected
King of Po-
land, d, in
1763.
j
i
4fr81ir<0 jftrttvitk anions, Duke of Saxe Coburg-
Saalfeld, m. a Princess of the House of the Counts
Reus* of Plauen. 9
r !_,. _
Frederick-Christian, Elector of
Saxony, d. in Dec. 1763.
€?rn«t*ant1|ui!^
Ctarltf'&ftDttf,
Reining Bttkt
sf&axttofcourg
f&otfa, K.G. b.
2 Jan. 1784, m.
2nd!y, in 1832,
Mary, dan. of the
late Duke Alex-
ander of Wirtem-
temberg.
Louisa,
dau. of
Augus-
tus
Duke
of
Saxe
Alten-
burg,
m. in
1817,i/.
1831.
Duke Ferdi-
nand -Geo. -
Augustus,
General of
Cavalry in
the Austrian
service, m.
in 1816 An-
tonie Mary
Gabriele,
Princess of
Kohary,and
has two sons,
iiaitfc.ltCitg
of Itortu?
gal, and Au-
gustus, and
one dau.
Victoria, fe.
in 1822, m.
in 1840 to
&0Uf«,
Dufer of
Jlemotir*.
UeopoIlJ,
liing of
tfie UtU
8 tans, b.
16 Dec.
1790, m.
1st, the
Princess
Charlotte
only dau.
of <&f0.
IV. King
of Great
Britain ;
and
2ndly,
Louisa,
dau. of
Louis
Philippe,
King of
the
French.
J uliana- Henrietta-
Ulrica, m. to the
Grand DukeCon-
stantine of Rus-
sia.
/Hana=Uoutea=
Virtoria, b. in
1786, m. 1st, in
1803, Emich
Charles, Prince
of Leiningen, by
whom her Royal
Highness had a
son, Charles-Fre-
derick, present
?5rtnce of Ht tit*
Itgm.andadau.
the Princess of
Hohenlohe Lan-
genburg. Her R.
H. m. 2ndly, in
1818, H. R. H.
the Dufce Of
Itettt, by whom
she had an only
child
Frede-
rick-
Augus-
tusIII.
King of
Sax-
ony, «/.
in
1827.
Antho-
ny-Cle-
ment-
Theo-
dore,
King of
Sax-
ony,
d. t. p.
6 June
1836.
Maximi-
lian- Ma-
ria-Jo-
seph, d,
3 Jan.
1838.
CFrnrst auguetug (Tfjarkfl,
Hereditary Prince, b. 21
June, 1818, to. 3 May,
1842, Alexandria, dau. of
Leopold, Grand Duke of
Baden.
T
aibrrt jFvantiz &ugu«ttt*=f Vittoria, Queen of
CTftarlr* Emanuel,
Prince of Saxe-Cobourg-
Gotha, K.G. fe. Aug. 1819,
m. 10 Feb. 1840.
Great Britain and
Ireland.
jFrcfcrrick Augustus.
present Hiltg Of
^aiong.
Victoria- Adelaide-Mary - Lou isa ,
Princess Royal, b. 21 Nov.
1840.
Albert {Ptotoarto, Prince of Wales and
Duke of Cornwall, 6. Nov. 1841.
The Princess Alice-Maud-
Mary, b. 25 April 1843.
If. R. H. PRINCE ALBERT.
NOTES.
1 Some writers deduce the House of Saxony from Witter ind, the celebrated Saxon opponent of
Charlemagne, and, though the proof they adduce is not absolutely conclusive, yet as Dietrich, or Jiiecdoric,
Count of Wet ten, was the undoubted progenitor of the Electors of Saxony, and as Wittekind's descendants did
certainly possess the Castles of Zbrbeg and Wettin, this presumed descent 13 most probable. Meissen, the
Margravate acquired by Theodric 11. Count of Wettin, in right of his wife, Mathildis, sister and heir
of Herman, Margrave of Meissen, was anciently inhabited by the Hermanduri and Suardones, and subse-
quently by the Sorabi or Winithi, a great Sclavonian Tribe, whom the Emperor Henry I. subdued. He
annexed the territory to the empire, and its governors were appointed by his successors until Oth o HI. made
Eckhard, son of Gunther, first Proprietary Margrave of Meissen. This Eckhard was father of Mathildis,
wife of Theodric II. Count of Wettin, ancestor of Prince Albert.
1 Surnamed the Rich from the silver mine discovered at Freyberg in 1170.
* In 1039, the Emperor Conrad II. conferred various Lordships in Thuringia on his kinsman, Lewis, the
Bearded, son of Charles, Duke of Lorraine, and grandson of Lewis IV. of France. Lewis was rather of
Lewis II. surnamed the Leaper, whose son Lewis HI. Landgrave of Thuringia and Hessen, d. in 1149,
leaving a son and successor, Lewis IV. surnamed Ironside, Landgrave of Thuringia, who m. Judith, dau. of
the Emperor Conrad III. and dying in 1172, was s. by his son Lewis V. surnamed the Pious, Landgrave of
Thuringia, who d. s. p. in 1192, and was s. by his brother Hermann I. Landgrave of Thuringia, who was
involved in war with Albert the Proud, Margrave of Meissen. He m. 1st, Sophia, dau. and heiress of
Frederick V. Palatine of Saxony, and 2ndly, Sophia, dau. of Otto, Duke of Bavaria, and d. in 1215,
leaving issue, I. Lewis VI. the Saint, Landgrave of Thuringia, who m. Elizabeth (canonized in 1235), dau.
of Andrew II. King of Hungary, and dying in 1227, on his way to Palestine, left a son, Hermann II. who
d.$.p. 11. Henry Raspe, Landgrave of Thuringia, elected Emperor in 1246, d. 1. p. in 1248. Hi.
Jutta, m. 1st to Theodric, Margrave of Meissen, and 2ndly, to Poppo X11I. Count of Henneberg.
4 Henry the Mwtrioug, one of the roost powerful Princes of his time, inherited the Landgravate of
Thuringen, in right of his mother, Jutte, daughter of Hermann, Landgrave thereof, descended from Lewis the
Bearded, son of Charles, Duke of Lorraine, and grandson of Lewis IV. of France.
* These Princes, after governing their country conjointly, according to their father's will, for more than
twenty years, finally determined on a partition of their dominions, by which Ernest obtained the greater part
of Thuringen, with the Electoral dignity, and Albert, who was one of the most distinguished warriors of his
time, acquired Meissin. In this partition originated the distinctions of the Ernestine and Albertinb line,
which still subsist in the House of Saxony.
9 At the decease of the Emperor Maximilian, in 1519, Charles, King of Spain, and Francis I. of France
offered themselves as candidates for the imperial diadem. The Electors, however, objecting to both as
foreigners, wished to place the crown on the head of Frederick the Wise, but that Prince — then far advanced
in years — declined the dignity, and gave his support to the King of Spain.
7 This Elector, a zealous supporter of the Reformation, suffered much from the consequent hostility of the
Emperor Charles, who, at length, deprived him of the Electoral dignity, and all his dominions, and conferred
them on his cousin, Duke Maurice of Meissen, who agreed to give up Weimar, with some other towns and
districts, to the children of tbe deposed Prince.
* Frederick Augustus I. (the opponent of Charles XII. of Sweden) had, by the Countess of Konigsmark,
an illegitimate son, Madrice, Count de Saxe, the celebrated Marshal of France, Commander-in-chief at
Fontenoy.
* The two eldest daughters of Duke Francis of Saxe Coburg Saalfeld are both dead—one was married to
Count Mensdorf, an Austrian nobleman, and the other to Duke Charles Alexander Frederick of Wurtemberg.
PLATE I.
Ooppet, of tbe count? of Durham.
Tms quartered Coat is borne by Augustus M. Hopper, Esq. son of Walter
C. Hopper, of Belmont, Esq. by Margaret, his wife, daughter of the late Ralph
Shipperdson, of Piddinghall Garth, Esq. The family of Hopper is of ancient
standing in the County of Durham. (See Burke's Landed Gentry.) The
Arms of Carlos, which are quartered with the paternal bearing, were granted
in 1658 by Charles II. to Colonel William Carlos, his preserver in the Royal
Oak, and in his escape subsequent to the battle of Worcester, " in perpetuam
rei memoriam," as it is expressed in the Patent, the record of which is still
preserved in the College of Arms.
Arm*. — Quarterly, first and fourth, gyronny of eight sa. and erm. a tower or, for
HofPiR. Second and third, or, on a mount in base, an oak tree vert, over all, on a (esse
go. three regal crowns of the first, for Carlos.
Cttf t0. — First, a tower ppr. for Hopper. Second, a sword ar. hilt and pomel or, and
a sceptre of the second, crossed in saltire, enfiled with an oaken civic crown vert, fructed
of the second, for Carlos.
JKOtti. — Snbditus fidelis Regis et salus regni.
©pfeeg, ofiLontion,
The family of Sykes of London, now represented by John Stres, of London
and Highbury, Esq. merchant, is a branch of the Sykes's of Drighlington, co.
York, who derived their descent from George Sykes, of Vicar Lane, Leeds,
fourth son of William Sykes, of Leeds, living temp. Henry VII. The Escut-
cheon of Pretence is borne by Mr. Sykes in right of his wife, Catherine, daughter
and co-heir of John Jackson, of London, Esq.
flntt. — Ar. a chev. sa. betw. three heraldic fountains ppr. On an Escutcheon of
Pretence, for Jackson, Ar. on a chev. sa. betw. three hawks heads erased ai. as many
cinquefoils or.
Cttst. — An ox pass, charged on the shoulder with a fountain ppr.
jltotto. — Quod facio valde facio.
C&e Ci»0i)olm, <ZBtcf)le00 Castle, co. 3[M)etne0*.
Tins Clan was founded in the twelfth century by Harald, Thane or Earl of
Caithness, Orkney, and Shetland, one of the most formidable Northern Chiefs
of that period. In the risings of '15 and '45, the Chisholms adhered with
devotion to the Royal House of Stewart, and suffered severely in consequence.
(See Burke's Landed Gentry.) The Chief is always styled the " The Ciiis-
uolm," and bears, as such, the Supporters depicted in the Engraving. The
present Chieftain is Duncan Macdonrli. Chisiiot.m, of Erchless Castle.
PLATE I.
Mary, wife of James Gooden, of London, Esq. merchant, is only child and
heir of Alexander Chisholm, the Chisholm, who died in 1793.
Arm*.— Gu. a boar's head erased ar.
Crest — A dexter band, holding a dagger erect ppr. on the point a boar's head couped
Jbtlpporttr*. — Two naked men, wreathed about the loins, with clubs over their shoul-
ders, ppr.
/HottOCfl. — Vi aut virtute. And, above the Crest, Feros ferio.
armgtrong, of IBallpcumbet, ttUng'g County
The Armstrongs of Ballycumber, now represented by John Warneford Arm-
strong, of that place, Esq. descend from the family of Armstrong of Giltknock
Hall, in Eskdale, of which was the renowned John Armstrong, so celebrated
in the wars and minstrelsy of the Scottish border. The Arms are allusive to
the name and martial prowess of the family.
flritttf. — Gu. three dexter arms vambraced ar. hands ppr.
Ctfflt. — A dexter arm, vambraced in armour, ar. the hand ppr.
IBottO.— Vi et armis.
§tantit0i), of Durburg ipatfe, co, Lancaster.
Under the will of the late Frank Hall-Stan dish, of Duxbury, Esq. William
Standish Carr, of Cock en Hall, co. Durham, Esq. as representative of the
Standishes of Duxbury, succeeded to the estates, and assumed, by Sign Manual
in 1841, the surname and Arms of Standish only. The Duxbury family is
derived from Hugh Standish, second son of Ralph Standish, and grandson of
Thurstan de Standish, of Standish, living temp. Henry HI.
&rm*. — Az. three standing dishes, two and one, ar.
Crest. — A cock ar. combed and wattled gu.
Sir Thomas Standish, of Duxbury, Bart^pJane, dan. of Charles Tumor, of Cleve-
d. in Dec. 1758. land, Esq.
r- '
Thomas Stan-=pCatherine, widow of John
dish, son and Smith, of Heath, co. York,
heir, d. 23 Esq. and dau. and co-heir
Dec. 1746. | of Robert Frank, Esq.
William ^Margaret =pAnthony Hall, of
Wombwell,
1st husband.
Standish,
d. 3 Feb.
1776.
iFrank Standish,
of Duxbury, Bart.,
d. unm. 1812.
Other issue,
d. young.
Mt
ary, m. to
A.S.Lyar,
"I
Elizabeth, m. to
Charles Tur-
ner, Esq.
Flass, co. Dur-
ham, 2nd hus-
band.
Anthony Hall,=j=Anne, dau. of
Esq. b. 1731,
d. 1791.
Wm. Barfoot,
of Poole.
Other issue,
d. wnm.
The Rev. Ralph=
Carr, A.M.
:Anne Hall, d.
1774.
Anthony Hall,=pCharlotte Ray=Sir Wm. Purves
Esq. son and
heir.
H. Campbell,
Bart. 2nd hus-
band.
Ralph Carr, of=j=Mary, dau. of
Cocken Hall,
d. in 1834.
Samuel An-
drews, Esq.
Frank Hall Standish, of Duxbury Park,
Esq. who d. ttnm. in 1841, leaving his
cousin, W. S. Cair, Esq. his heir.
William Standish Standish, of Dux-
bury Park, Esq. now representative
of the Standish family.
AUGUSTUS M. HOPPER. ESQ.
CO DURHAM.
JOHN SYKES. ESQ.
HICHBURY. CO. MIDDLESEX.
THE CH1SHOLM.
LRCHLKSS CASTLE, INVtHKEs?
JOHN W.VKNEFOKD AKMSTRONG. ESQ
BALLYCCMBLl.
WILLIAM 3 T\Nl>ISH STaNDISH. ESQ.
ULXbt.HV /AKK.CO L\.\ c. A>1 LK.
Lnuii-:. KVirrl CLjrrMr 'i'-.fujiu--! J •!■•••;■.
PLATE II.
60a?e, ofTBrigtoL
These Arms were granted in July, 1840, to Peter Maze the younger, of
Berkeley Square, in the city and county of Bristol, Esq. sometime High Sheriff
of the said county.
flrn*. — Erm. on a bend eogr. az. betw. two eagles displ. another bend plain or,
charged with three lions pass. ppr.
Crtft — An eagle displ. erm. charged on the breast and on either wing with a cinque-
foil gu.
fMotiO, — Garde ta bien aim6e.
TBeat, of GQierton, co- i&ent.
These Arms were granted, a century since, 18 December, 1742, to Mawdistly
Best, of Park House, Esq. High Sheriff of Kent in 1730. His son, James
Best, of Park House, Esq. High Sheriff in 1751, had four sons: the eldest,
Thomas, was father of the present James Best, of Park House, Esq. and the
youngest, George, of Chelston Park, co. Kent, M .P. was father of the present
Thomas Fairfax Best, of Wierton, Esq. who impales the coat of Brett in right
of his wife, Margaret- Anna, daughter of J. George Brett, Esq.
flritt.— Sa. a cinque foil pierced, and in chief two cross- crossleta fitchle or ; impaling,
for Brett, Or, a lion ramp, within an orle of cross-crosslets gu.
CrtSt — A demi ostrich ar. issuing out of a mural crown, and holding in the beak a
cross-cro&slet fitchee or.
Coultimtt, of Collgn, co, Dumfries.
William Coulthart, of Collyn, Esq. is the representative of the ancient
Scottish family of Coulthart, of Largmore, co. Kirkcudbright. (See Burke's
Landed Gentry.)
8r«0. — Quarterly : first, ar. a fesse betw. two colts at full speed sa. Second, or, a
cbev. chequy sa. and ar. betw. three water bougets of the second. Third, sa. an inescut-
cbeon chequy ar. and az. betw. three lions' heads erased ar. Fourth, quarterly ar. and
sa. a cross per cross indented counterchanged.
Supporters. — Dexter, A war horse, completely accoutred for the field, ar. Sinister ,
A hart of the last, attired and ducally gorged or.
tifrff t. — A nag's head caparisoned ar.
/HottO. — Virtute non verbis.
ailan, of IBlacfefoell Grange, anu TBlacfctoell,
co* SDurfcatm
The ancient family of Allan of Blackwell Grange, a scion, originally, of the
Allans of Buckenhall and Brockhouse, co. Stafford, quarters the Arms of Pem-
BERTON, HlNDMARSH, KlLLINGIIALL, HERDEWYK, LaMBTON, and DoDSWORTH.
PLATE II.
flrmt.— Quarterly : first, sa. a cross potent, quarter pierced, or, charged with four
guttes de sang, in chief two lions' heads erased of the second, all within a bordure engr.
erminois, for Allan. Second, ar. a chev. erm. betw. three griffins' heads sa. for Pem-
berton. Third, gu. in a marsh a hind lodged ppr. for Hindmarsh. Fourth, gu. a bend
raguly ar. betw. three garbs or, for Killinohall. Fifth, or, a maunch sa. betw. three
martlets gu. for Hardewyk. Sixth, sa. a fesse betw. three lambs pass. ar. a trefoil gu.
on the fesse for cadency, for Lahbton. Seventh, ar. a chev. sa. charged with three
bezants, betw. as many bugle horns, stringed, of the second, for Dodsworth.
CtWt. — A demi lion ramp ar. docally crowned gu. holding in the dexter paw a cross
potent or, and supporting with the sinister a rudder of the second.
JRottO. — Fortiter gerit crucem.
The right to these quartering^ is shown in the following pedigree :
f&atqavtt tLamtton, dau. and=pJoJn tttlltngtaU. of Middleton St. George, co. Durham,
co-heir of William Lambton, | Esq. descended from the marriage of John de Kyllyng-
of Great Stain ton, Esq. hall, with Agnes, dau. and heir of Jofjlt tit ftfrftftDgft.
r - 1
John Killinghall, Esq. =?= Mary, dau. of Kobevt sBotogtoortt), of Barton, co. York, Esq. : the
16 Oct. representation of the Dodsworth family devolved on the Killing-
baptized
1640.
Robert Killinghall, of
Middleton St. George,
Esq. only son and heir.
John Killinghall, of Middleton St. George,
Esq. last male heir, d. $. p. 1718.
William Pemberton, Esq. only surviving
son and heir, b, 8 Jan. 1718.
halls at the decease, in 1680, of Thomas Dodsworth, Esq.
$©tUtam IJetnbcrtOlt, Esq. descended from the=r=Elizabeth Killing
marriage of Richard Pemberton with Alice,
dau. and co-heir of Jofjn fttlttanattfj.
hall, bapu
May, 1679.
29
Jamr* flllait, of Black-^Elizabeth Pemberton,
well Grange, Esq. bapt. 12 July, 1710.
William Pemberton, of Middleton
St. George, Esq. only surviving
son and heir.
I
George Allan, of Blackwell
Grange, Esq. d. in 1800.
Robert Allan, of Barton,
Esq. d. in 1806.
William Pemberton, of
Middleton St. George,
Esq. the last male heir,
d. unm. 11 March,
1801.
J
T
George Allan,
of Blackwell
Grange, Esq.
M.P. d.$. p.
in 1828.
flltlte, elder sister and
co-heir, m. John
Wright, Esq. of
Bolton-on-Swale.
Robert Allan,
of New bottle,
Esq. d. 27
Dec. 1813.
John Allan,
of Black-
well, Esq.
Jotjlt ftllan ttffirigfjt, Eso^. Commander R.N.
only surviving son and heir.
William Allan, of Black-
well Grange, Esq.
Robert Henry Allan, Esq. F.S.A. Mayor
of Durham 1843-4.
Other issue.
GQalfeer, of Norton tttUa, i&empgep. co. Worcester.
These Ensigns have been confirmed by the College of Arms to George James
Alexander Walker, of Norton Villa, Esq. and his cousin, the Rev. Thomas
Walker, Prebendary of Wolverhampton, and Rector of Abbots Moreton, co.
Worcester, descendants of an ancient Staffordshire family.
8rnt0.— Per pale az. and vert, on a fesse dancettee, betw. three mural crowns or, a
crescent gu. betw. two torteaux.
Creftt. — A lion's gamb erect and erased gu. charged with a mural crown or, betw.
two plates in pale.
/Hotto. — In Domino confido.
THOMAS FAIRFAX BEST. ESQ.
VIVBTON.
WILLIAM COULTHAKT. ESQ.
COLLYN, CO. DCMFRILS.
ALLAN OF BLACKWELL. GRANGE.
AND BLACKWELL..
GEORGE JAMES ALEX. WALKER. ESQ.
NORTON VILLA.
L-z.1 ii.F\.*w.rl liM.r*. t. .'*'■ U-IU- . , : »r*« '. /'iwi \v.>-.i .' .y*r< V.'Ai
PLATE III.
Dungcombe, of amount Desert, co< Cork.
This Family, of Saxon origin, was first settled in Devonshire, and subsequently
in the city of London. Towards the close of Queen Elizabeth's reign (a. d. 1590),
Edward Dunscombe, Esq. son of Captain Clement Dunscombe, and grandson
of William Dunscombe, born in London in 1475, by Miss Clement, his wife,
established himself in Cork, and founded the Mount Desert Family, now repre-
sented by Nicholas Dunscombe, of Mount Desert, Esq. (See Burke's Landed
Gentry.)
flfHtf. — Ar. a chev. betw. three talbots' heads erased.
Crtft. — Out of a ducal coronet or, a horse's hind leg sa. shoe ar.
i&OttO.— Fidelitas vincit.
Cemple, of ©totoe, co< 'Bucftingfmm*
The Temples of Stowe, whose male Representative is Sir Grenville Temple
Temple, Bart., and from whom the Dukes of Buckingham maternally derive,
deduce their descent from Leofric, Earl of Chester, in the time of Edward
the Confessor, and consequently bear the Black Eagle displayed on a field of
gold — the Arms of the Heptarch kingdom of Mercia — in the first quarter of
their shield of quartering^ : the bars charged with martlets is the paternal Coat
of Temple. The present Baronet, Sir Grenville Temple, is entitled to quarter,
in addition, the Ensigns of Sheppy, Everton, Heritage, Spencer, Deverell,
Lincoln, Warsted, Heritage, and Lee.
9rnt0. — Quarterly, first and fourth, or, an eagle displ. sa. for Leofric, Earl of Mercia ;
m second and third, ar. two bars sa. each charged with three martlets or, for Temple.
Crff t — On a ducal coronet or, a martlet gold.
JHfttO. — Tern pi a quam dilecta.
Cobbe, of BetDfatiDge, co. Dublin.
Robert Cooke, Clarenceux King of Arms, certified these " to be the arraes and
creste of Thomas Cobbe, of Swarraton, in the countie of Southampton, gentleman,
descended to him from his ancestors, and allowed, ratified, and confirmed to and
for the said Thomas Cobbe and his posteritie in the tyme of the Visitation
of Hampshire in 157.5." A younger son of this ancient Hampshire family,
Charles Cobbe, D.D. an eminent divine, became Archbishop of Dublin, and
founded the House of Cobbe, of Newbridge, now represented by Charles
Cobbe, of Newbridge, Esq. High Sheriff of the county of Dublin in 1821.
Arm*.— Gu. a fesse ar. in chief two swans ppr.
Crffl.— Out of a ducal coronet gu. a peliean ruining itself ppr.
HUttO. — Moriens cano. Ovtr the Crt$t — In sanguine vita.
PLATE III.
Ctoemtoto, of Cftesftite*
These Ensigns are borne by John Twemlow, of Hatherton, Esq. as a descendant
of the Twemlows, of Arclyd. (See Burke's Landed Gentry, Article Twemlow
of Peatswood.) The first quarter exhibits the ancient, the second, the modern
Arms.
ftmtf. — Quarterly, first and fourth, ar. a chev. or betw. three squirrels sejant gu. ;
second and third, az. two bars engr. or, charged with three boars' heads, two and one,
erect, couped, sa.
Cttft. — On the stump of a tree erect a parrot ppr.
HSottO. — Teneo tenuere raajores.
(ZEttang, of asbbill, co. JUmertcfe.
The first and second quarters are for Evans, the third for Williams, and the
fourth for Morrice. The present Eyre Evans, of Ashhill Towers, and Mil town
Castle, Esq. derives his right to the two latter quarterings from his mother.
ftfOtf. — Quarterly, first, ar. three boars' heads couped sa. for Evans. Second, gu. a
Hon ramp, reguard. or. Third, gu. a lion ramp, within a bordure or, for Williams.
Fourth, or a lion ramp, reguard. sa. for Morrice.
Crfftt. — A demi lion reguard. or, holding betw. his paws a boar's head couped sa.
IBottO.— Libertas.
>f=pMary, <
f. co. G
The Right Honourable tirtorge £baitft, of=7=Mary, dau. of John Eyre, of Eyre Court,
Bulgadden Hall, co. Limerick, M.P. d. co. Galway, Esq.
in 1720. '
George Evans, 1st Eyre Evans, of Port- Mary, dau. of Thomas=pThomas Evans,
Baron Carbery. rane, co. Dublin, Waller, Esq. *.«!»««« r»««*L
Esq. M.P.
of
Mil town Castle, co.
Cork, Esq.
Eyre Evans, of Mil town Castle, co. Cork,=j=Mary, only dau. and heir of Ct)Oina0
Esq. son and heir, m. in 1756; d. in wUUfautf, of Ringawney, co. Long-
1773. ford, Esq. who descended from an heiress
of IHorr ice.
Eyre Evans, of Miltown, Castle, co. Cork,=pAnne, eldest dau. of the late Robert Maun
and Ashhill Towers, co. Limerick, Esq,
High Sheriff of the latter county in
1810, now living.
sell, of Limerick, Esq. formerly of
Rurabo House, in the East Indies, and
Member of the Supreme Council at
Madras.
Eyre Evans, Rev. Robert George Tho- Thomas Wil- John Henry Frede- Three
m. and has Maunsell mas Evans, liams Freke rick Evans, daugh-
Evans, Capt. 74th Evans, Esq. Evas, Lieut 21st ters.
married. Regiment. Lieut. 74th Esq. Fusileers.
Regiment.
- LATE. Ill
DL'NSCUSIUE OF MOUNT DESART.
CO. CORK.
SIR CKENVILLE TEMPLE TEMPLE. BART.
CHARLES COHDE. ESQ.
KLVBRIDCE. CO. DL'BUK.
JOHN TWEMLOW, ESQ.
EYRE EVANS. ESQ.
*SH HUA. CO. UHtTLVCX .
'. :.'■ . U !J. » >r,-.-.i .,\iv:i,l-...\. '■" :ut,'.V-
PLATE IV.
Ring, of lLortooot) $ou$e, co, ©usser.
These Anns were granted by Camden to the family of King, of London, and
are now borne by John King, of Loxwood House, co. Sussex, Esq.
flnft*. — Sa. on a chev. betw. three crosses crosslet or, as many escallops of the field.
Ctff t— A dexter arm embowed in armour, holding a broken spear, all ppr.
Cbattnicfc, of ^tointon ©all, co. lancastcr.
The Armorial Bearings of the old Lancashire family of Chadwyke, of Chad-
wyke, slightly differenced, were confirmed by the Herald's College to the
present Elias Chadwick, of Swinton Hall, Esq. and the other descendants
of his father, the late Elias Chadwick, of Swinton Hall, Esq. derived from a
younger branch of Chadwick, of Chadwick.
ftrttt. — Gu. an inescutcheon or, within an orle of martlets ar. all within a bordure
engr. of the second, charged with eight crosses crosslet sa.
Crtft. — In front of two crosses crosslet fitchle in sal tire, the flower and stem of a white
lily, all ppr.
IRottO. — In candore decus.
a&oubtap, of Cocfeaimp §qmz, jTifesbirc.
Colonel Sir Robert Moubray, Knt. K.H. of Cockairny, represents the
great House of Moubray, of Barnbougle, derived from the marriage of Philip
de Moubray, younger brother of William de Mowbray, ancestor of the Dukes
of Norfolk, with Galiena, daughter of Waldeve, Earl of Dunbar. Sir Robert
is son of the late Robert Moubray, of Cockairny, Esq. by Arabella, his wife,
daughter of Thomas Hussey, of Wrexham, Esq. and great-grandson of John
Moubray, of Cockairny, Esq. who is described in Nisbet's Heraldry, as
undoubted heir, in a direct and uninterrupted male line, of William Moubray,
of Cockairny, who had a charter of those lands from his nephew, Sir John
PLATE IV.
Moubray, of Barnbougle, in 151 1. The Coat impaled by Sir Robert, is that of
Hobson, in right of his wife, Laura, fourth daughter of William Hobson, of
Markfield, co. Middlesex, Esq.
ftrutfi. — Gu. a lion ramp, crowned ar. within a bordure engr. of the last, impaling for
Hobson, sa. a cinquefoil erm. a chief chequy or and az.
Qtlttt. — A demi lion ramp. ar.
^Upportm.— Dexter, a knight in court dress. Sinister, a woman habited ppr.
iRottoeS.— Over the Creet, Fortitudine. Under the Arms, Let the deed shaw.
IBeeU&am, atebfielD, i&imbolton, co. ^untingDon.
These Arms were confirmed to the present John Beedham, of Ash field, Esq.
who is married to Anne, daughter of Elizabeth, (wife of Josiah Claughton, of
Hasland House, co. Derby, Esq.) one of the co-heirs of the last lineal
descendant of a branch of the ancient family of Brailsford, co. Derby.
ftCTttff. — Az. on a chev. engr. erm. betw. three birds ar. beaked and legged gu. as many
human hearts of the last.
Cttftt. — On a mural crown ppr. a bird, wings expanded ar. beaked and legged gu.
resting its claw on an escutcheon of the second, charged with a human heart of the third.
^SottO. — God be in my bede.
Captor, of CoDmortien $>all, co. Lancaster,
The present James Taylor, of Todmorden Hall, Esq. as representative
through his mother, of the senior branch of the ancient Lancashire family of
Crosslet, of Scaitcliffe, quarters the Arms of Crosslet.
fltlttt. — Quarterly first and fourth, per pale ar. and or, an escarbuncle az. on a chief
nebulle of the last, a ducal crown betw. two escallops of the second for Taylor ; second
and third, per pale or and az. in chief a Tau gu. betw. two crosses potent filchee of the
second.
CtCf t — A demi lion az. charged with a bezant, holding betw. his paws an escutcheon
or, charged with a Tan gu.
iBottO.—- Natale solum dulce.
9nn)onfi 4fm§ Ifg, of Scaitcliffe, Esq^Betty, elder dau. of Abraham Gibson, of
purchased in 1795, the estate of Tod-
morden Hall ; d. in 1810.
Briggroyd, co. York, Esq.
Anne Crossley, of Todmorden Hall, only^pJames Joseph Hague Taylor, Esq. rf. 8 Jan.
dau. and heir. I 1810.
James Taylor, of Todmorden Hal], Esq.=p Betty, second dau. of James Maden, of
magistrate for Lancashire, and for the
West Riding of Yorkshire ; living 1843.
Greenshouse, in the Forest of Rossen-
dale, co. Lancaster, Esq. m. 22 June,
1831; d. 19 Feb. 1838.
Issue.
JOHN' KIKG. ESQ.
LOXVOOD BOUSE S US 8 EX.
ELIAS CHADWICK. ESQ.
8WINTON HALL. LANCASHIRE.
COLONEL SIR ROBERT MOU WRAY, KT K.H
COCK'lRvr HOUSE. FIFL Mlirl
JOHN DEEDHAM.ESQ.
4SHFIELU KIMBOUTO.V HUKTS
JAMES TAYLOR. EbQ.
TODMOHDtN HALL. LAM A sill lit
I. :«l":i.! lwrir ' .Mnrfim, '.'X <.\l\ : .":rt
PLATE V.
&rle*Dtar, of Cfjarbotougf) ipatfe, co, Dorset.
John Samuel Wanley Sawbridge-Erle-Drax. of Charborough Park, co.
Dorset, and of Ellerton Abbey, co. York, Esq. son of Samuel Elias Saw-
bridge, of Olantigh, co. Kent, Esq. and grandson of John Sawbridge, Esq.
Lord Mayor of London in 1775, and M. P. for the city, succeeded to the
estates in right of his wife, Jane-Frances, only daughter of Richard-Erle-
Drax-Grosvenor, Esq. and assumed in consequence the name and arms of
Erle-Drax. The marshalling of the Shield, which is quarterly, first and
fourth, Drax, second Erle, and third Sawbridge, with Grosvenor, Drax,
and Erle on the Escutcheon of Pretence, will be explained by the following
Pedigree:
ftattf.— Quarterly, first and fourth, chequy or and az. on a chief gu. three ostrich
fcatheis in plume, issuant of the first, for Drax ; second, gu. three escallops ar. a bordure
«ngr. of the last, for Erle ; third, or, two bars az. each charged with abarruletdancettee
ar. a chief indented of the second.
St tNcttttttOtt Of ^rrtfnce.— Quarterly, first and fourth, az. a garb or, for Grob-
viwor j second, Drax ; third, Erle.
Gmtft«— First, a demi wivern or, for Drax. Second, a demi lion ramp. az. holding
in hit paw a handsaw erect or, for Sawbridge.
JttSti*.— Mort en droit.
The Right Honourable Ctoiltaf Cfrle, ofW=Elizabeth, dau. of Sir William Wyndham,
Charborough, co. Dorset, a general in
the army, and governor of Portsmouth
Castle, grandson and heir of Sir Walter
Erie, of Charborough, KnU d. in 1720.
of Orchard, co. Somerset, Bart.'
Frances Erie, of Charborough, co. Dorset,=j=Sir Edward Ernie, of Maddington, co.
only dau. and heir. Wilts, Bart.
I J
Elizabeth Ernie, of Charborough, only dau.=HtfltrQ BrAX, of Ellerton Abbey, co. York,
and heir. Esq. M. P.
Edward Drax, of Charborough, Esq. ro.=r=Mary , dau. of Awnsham Churchill, of Hen -
16 April, 1762. bury, Esq.
Sarah Frances Drax, of Charborough, only=p«tct>artr tifcofbeitor, Esq. IV I. P. (ne-
dau. and heir, m. 1 1 March, 1788 ; d.
15 June, 1822.
phew of Richard, Earl Grosvenor (who
assumed the additional surname and
arms of Erle-Drax.
Richard Edward Erie- Joljn &at*Utl MSBwUfr
Drax, of Charborough £atobtftgr, Esq
Park, and Ellerton Ab- assumed the nam
bey, Esq. d, vnm, 13 arms of Erle-Drax
- R.1828.
Park, and Ellerton Ab- assumed the name
bey, Esq. d, vnm, 13 arms of Erle-Drax.
Aug. 1828. js
^1tIfg,=j=Jane - Frances Eric - Drax,
. who I sister and heir of R. E.
le and Erle-Drax, Esq.
• I
PLATE V.
jFleeming JFtper, of tfte fcBergg, co- ©taf&rti.
William Eleeming Fryer, Esq. son and heir of Richard Fryer, of the
Wergs, Esq. late M. P. for Wolverhampton, bears his paternal Arms quar-
tered with the Coat of Fleming, in right of his mother, the heiress of the
ancient family of Fleming, of the Wergs.
flrutft. — Quarterly, first and fourth, or, semee of oak leaves vert, betw. two (launches
az. each charged with a castle ar. for Fryer ; second and third, erm. on a chev. engr.
gu. betw. three crosses patee fitchle sa. a Cornish chough betw. two crescents ar. for
Fleeming.
Crrttf. — First, a castle ar. entwined by a branch of oak fructed ppr. thereon a cock
sa. combed and wattled gu. for Fryer. Second, on a mount vert, a cross patle fitchee
or, thereon perched a Cornish chough ppr. for Fleeming.
HtcDattr Jf ra?fT, Esq. late M. P. foPy/Barg JpUnmng, only child of William
Wolverhampton, son of the late Richard j Fleeming, Esq. and niece and sole heiress
Fryer, of Wednesfield, Esq. I of John Fleeming, Esq. of the Wergs,
I m. in 1794.
William Fleeming Fryer, Esq. son and heir.
"Brisbane, of TBrigbane, co, apt-
General Sir Thomas Makdougall Brisbane, of Brisbane, co. Ayr, Bart.
G. C. B. G.C. H. LL.D. and F. R. S. is Representative of the Brisbanes of
Brisbane, confessedly the chief of the name. In 1826, Sir Thomas assumed,
by Sign Manual, the surname of Makdougall before his patronymic, having
married Anna Maria, daughter and heiress of Sir Henry Hay Makdougall,
Bart., and Quarters, in consequence, the Arms of Makdougall, with his
paternal Coat.
flrotf. — Quarterly, first and fourth, a chev. chequy or and gu. betw. three cushions
of the second, in the collar point a representation of one of the gold medals conferred on
General Sir Thomas Brisbane by his late Majesty, for Brisbane : second and third, az.
a lion ramp. ar. crowned with an antiaue crown or, armed and langued gu. within a
bordure of the second, charged with six /raisers of the first, for Makdougall.
©Wit*.— First, a stork's head erased, holding in its beak a serpent wavy ppr. for
Brisbane. Second, a lion issuing guard, ppr. holding in his dexter paw a cross crosslet
fitchee gu. for Makdougall. Third, a goat's head erased ar. armed or, for Hay.
&upportm.— Two talbots ppr.
JStottoe*. — Over the Brisbane Crest, Certain ine summo. Over the Makdougall Crest,
Fear God. Over the Hay Crest, Spare nought.
PLATE V.
Sttome, of Castle 3ltt>tne, co. jFermanafffc,
The Engraving represents the Anns of Irvine, quartered with Mervyn ;
bearing on an Escutcheon of Pretence, D'Arcy, Judge, Nugent, and Cuming.
The descent of the Quartering^ is as follows :
fltms. — Ar. a fesse gu. betw. three holly leaves ppr. quartering Mervyn.
ftlt fHttttcJwn of pretence.— Quarterly, i. D'Arcy ; u. Judge; hi. Nugent,
and iv. Cuming.
Crift-— A dexter arm in armour fesseways, issuant out of a cloud, hand ppr. holding
a thistle, also ppr.
IKottO. — Dum roemor ipse mei.
C|riStO|trr Jfrfefae, of Castle Irvine, son=pEleanor, dau. and co-heir of 8uftleg j&n-
of Col. William Irvine, who was heir of ] bjn, of Trelick, co. Tyrone, Esq. m.
Sir Gerard Irvine, Bart. Aug. 1718.
William Irvine, of Castle Irvine, 6. 15 July,=j=Sophia, dau. of Gorges Lowther, of Kilrue,
1734, M. P. for co. Fermanagh. co. Meath, Esq. M.P.
I 1st wife. 2nd wife.
Sir Gorges Marcus D'Arcy=j=$5h>abetf> Jutrge U'flrt8,=Sarah -Catherine, dau. of
-*---■ on iy fa LJl9 aQ d ne j r f Thomas Napper, Esq. of
Judge D'Arcy, of Dun- Shropshire,
mow, co. Meath, and
Grangebeg, co. West-
meath, Esq. descended
from heiresses of Jtlfrge,
ftaftttt, and Cuming.
Irvine, of Castle Irvine,
6.26 Nov. 1760, assumed
the additional surname of
D'Arcy.
^onte, of^otft.
The Rev. Francis Orpen Morris (eldest son of Captain Henry Gage Morris,
R. N. by Rebecca Newenham-Millerd, his wife, daughter of the Rev. Francis
Orpen, Vicar of Kilgarvon, grandson of the late Lieutenant-Colonel Roger
Morris, of York, by Mary, his wife, daughter of Frederick Philipse, of New
York, Esq. and great-grandson of Roger Morris, Esq. by Mary, his first wife,
daughter of Sir Peter Jackson, Knt.) bears the quartered Coat as a descendant
of an ancient Welsh Family which derived from Cadwgan, son of Elystan
Glodrydd, Prince of Ferlys, Founder of the IV Royal Tribe of Wales.
fttHM. — Quarterly, first and fourth, gu. a lion ramp, re guard, or; second and third,
ar. three boars' heads couped sa.
Crtft. — A Hon ramp, reguard. or.
fsfOttO.— Marie et Man faventibus.
i
GEN. SIR THOMAS MAKDOUGALL BRISBANE. BABl. CC.B
BRISBANE.
Wis:
IRVINE. BART.
CASTLE IBVINE. CO. FEKMANACH.
THE REV FRANCIS ORPEN MORRIS.
laMcut Fdwnrd. Cbunoh 26 ItoiW ?uvci.Caveivilil* £«vt% r * •
PLATE VI.
C&e Dufee of ©utbetiann, ». $.
His Grace George Granville, second and present Duke op Sutherland,
K. G. bean a Coat of eight Grand Quarterings, marking the representation
of the great houses from which he derives.
arm*.— Quarterly of eight.—
I. Quarterly, first and fourth, Barry of eight ar. and gu. over all a cross patonce,
sa. for Gower ; second and third, Az. three laurel leaves or, for Leyebon.
II. Barry of eight ar. and gu. over all a cross patonce sa. for Gowbr.
III. Gu. three organ rests or sufflues or, for Gran villi, Earl of Bath.
TV. Ar. a lion ramp. gu. betw. three pheons' heads sa. for Egerton, Duke of
Bridgewater.
V. Ar. on a bend as. three bucks' heads cabossed or, for Stanley.
VI. Gu. two lions passant ar. for Strange, of Knockyn.
VII. Barry often ar. and gu. over all a lion ramp, or, crowned, per pale of the first
and second, for Brandon, Duke of Suffolk. On a canton chequy or and az.
a fesse gu. for Clifford, Earl of Cumberland.
VIII. Royal Arms; quarterly, first and fourth, France; second and third, England,
to mark the Duke of Sutherland's descent from Henry VII.
Over all, on an eseutcheon of pretence, surmounted by an earl's coronet,
gu. three mullets within a bordure or, charged with a double tressure, flory
and counter-flory of the field, being the arms of the ancient Earls of Suther-
land, to mark their descent from King Robert Bruce.
Crfftft. — First, a wolf passant ar. collared and lined or. Second, a cat-a-mountain
sejant guardant ppr.
Supporter*. — Two wolves ar. each collared and lined or.
idottO.— Frangas non flectes.
The descent of the Quarterings is deduced in the annexed Pedigree : —
PLATE VI.
Sing Renrp VII.
7
Mary, Queen Dowager of France, =Cf>arItt Vrontoon, Duke of Suf
dau. and in her issue, co-heiress
of her brother King fettin>
V1I1.
POLE. K. G.
Lady Eleanor Brandon, dau. and==£eitt$ Clifford, Eabl op Cum-
co-heir. | berland.
J
Lady Margaret Clifford, only dau.==Henry Stanley, Earl of Derby, K.G.
and heir. | d. 1593.
jferbtnan&O J^tanlcp, Earl of= Alice, dau. of Sir John Spencer,
Derby, Baron Strange of Knoc-
kyn, d. in 1595.
Sir CflOinafi <8*0tDet\== Frances, dau. and co-
of Sittenbam, co. heir of Sir jfo|n
York, Bart. Etbff on, Knt.
of Althorpe.
Lady Frances Stan-==$of)n$Fgfrton,EAaL
ley, dau. and co- j of Bridgewater.
heir.
Sir William Leveson-sfLafyg Anne (Brail* John Egerton. second=Lady Elisabeth Ca-
Gower, of Sitten-
bam and Trentham,
Bartd. in 1691.
Sir John Leveson-=
Gower, Knt. first
Baron Gower, d. in
1709.
biiU, eldest dau.
and eventually co-
heir of John, Earl
of Bath.
tLady Catherine Man-
ners, dau. of John,
first Duke of Rut-
land.
Earl of Bridgewa-
ter, d. in 1686.
John Egerton, third*
Earl of Bridge-
water, K. B. d. in
1701.
v en dish, dau. of
William, Duke of
Newcastle.
Lady Jane Poulett,
dau. of Charles,
Duke of Bolton.
JobnLeveson Gower,==Lady Evelyn Pierre- Scrope Egerton, first=Lady Rachel Russell,
second Earl Gower,
d. in 1754,
point, dau. of Eve-
lyn, Duke of King-
ston.
Duke of Bridge-
water, (L in 1745.
sister of Wriothes-
hr, Duke of Bed-
ford.
Granville Leveson-Gower, second~lA&8 iLQUtfta CPgerton, dau. and
Earl Gower and first Marquess [ eventually co-heiress of Scrope,
of Stafford, K.G. d in 1803.
first Duke of Bridgewater.
George Granville Leveaon-Gower,==#Ufabdt)» Countess o? Sutber-
second Marquess of Stafford, j land in her own right,
and first Duke of Sutherland,
K.G. 4. in 1833. I
Getrttt <BranbilU, weonfr an* » ratnt
Butt of Jbutberlanfc, It. <B.
i
/ / flicivr, i
$ht Most Jfitobk <&ior$* l&xmmi&tWebMmi-t&e'xm;
d the <6arhr.
I»'-.Uila«, L '.* --..! < !: ti-'.iti, .:• , :f- i:» t- .'*
PLATE VII.
Itmrris, of Corfc, 3|relant>,
Thb Family of Harris, of Cork, descends from William Harris, a Quaker,
who died at Park's Grove, co. Kilkenny, in 1658, and is believed to have
been son of Sir Thomas Harris, who, in 1654, made an unsuccessful attempt
to surprise the Castle of the Foregate, Shrewsbury, in order to favour the
restoration of Charles II.
flril. — Barry of ten az. and erm. three annulets or.
Crtft — A. hare, holding, in the fbrepawa, two ears of wheat ppr.
JBottO. — Sola virtus invicta.
Eaffles, of Liverpool-
Thb present Rev. Thomas Raffles, LL. D. and D. D. of Liverpool, heir
male and representative of the late distinguished Sir Thomas Stamford
Raffles, Lieut.-Governor of Java, bears on an escutcheon of pretence, the
arms of Hahc reaves in right of his wife, an heiress of that family.
flrBKI.— Erminois, an eagle with two heads displayed gu. charged on the breast with
an eastern crown or, a chief vert, thereon a cross crosslet, fitchee of the third : an
escutcheon of pretence, quarterly or and vert, on a fesse erm. betw. three stags courant
coonterchanged, a fret gu.
Crtft. — Out of an eastern crown or, a griffin's head purpure, beaked and gorged
with a collar gemel, gold.
48ottO. — In Cruce triumphans.
Cietenti, of IRatfc <£ael I&ouse, co. Dototu
Jambs-Dowsett Rose-Cleland, of Rath Gael House, Esq. quarters the
Anns of Rose, Ben net, Allen, Murdoch, and Cleland.
ftnRf. — Quarterly, first, As. a hare salient ar. with a hunting-horn vert, hanging
•bout the neck, garnished gu. for Cleland. Second, Sa. on a pale ar. three roses gu.
seeded and slipped ppr. for Rose. Third, Gu. a bezant betw. three demi-lions ramp.
ar. for Bennet. Fourth, Ar. a chev. betw. three roses gu. stalked and leaved vert, for
Alls*. Fifth, Ar. two ravens hanging paleways sa. with an arrow through both their
beads fesseways ppr. for Murdoch. Sixth, Az. a hare saliant ar. betw. a hunting-horn
and rose both of the second for Cleland.
Ctfftft. — First, A falcon standing on a sinister hand glove ppr. for Cleland.
Second, A rose gu. seeded and slipped ppr. betw. two wings erm. for Rose.
J^ttpaortm. — Two greyhounds ppr. collared or.
£Uft0e9. — Je pense a qui pense plus {under the Arms), Non sibi (over the Cleland
Crest). Flourish {over the Rote Crest.)
CttBM K0*f, of Cbarlestown, South Caro-^SUtrtft) BcttHet, an heiress, m. 1704.
lina, America, Esq., settled there about 1700. I
Rirhard Rose, of Abingdon, co. Berks, Esq.^Elisabeth, only child and heir of Q&tlliaill
died 14 Jan. 1784. fllUn, of Grove, Wantage, Berks, Esq.
Richard Rose, of Abingdon, Esq. died in 1768.=j= Agnes, dau. and eventual heir of Jfofjn Clf?
lairtJ, of Whithorn, co. Wigton, Esq. (de-
scended from Cleland of that Ilk) by his
wife, Margaret ^ttt&OCf), an heiress.
I
James- Dowsett Rose-Cleland, of Rath Gael House, co. Down, Esq. High Sheriff in \80G,
B.=j=*
PLATE VII.
Cole, of TBrantirum, co, asKmagimn,
Owen Blaynet Cole, of Brandrum, co. Monaglian, Esq. (descended from
Edward Cole, of Twickenham, Esq. born in 1579,) impales the arms of
Monck, having married Lady Frances Monck, daughter of the Earl of Rath-
downe.
flrmft. — Ar. within a bordure sa. bezantee, a bull gu. and for augmentation (to mark
the descent, through the Blayneys, of Mr. Cole, of Brandrum, from the noble noose of
Drogheda), on a canton erm. a nag's head ppr. over which on a chief or, three estoiles
gu. Impaling gu. a cbev. betw. three lions' heads erased ar. for Monck.
Ctfft — A demi dragon vert, bearing in the dexter paw a javelin armed or, fea-
thered ar.
JSlottO. — Deum cole Hegem serfs.
©OUison, ofKnotoie Ml, co. ftGattoirtu
William Henry Bowbn Jordan Wilson, of Knowle Hall, Esq. bears a
shield of six quarterings, and an escutcheon of pretence in right of his wife,
the dan. and co-heir of Richard Le Hunte, of Artramont, co. Wexford, Esq.
Aim*. — Quarterly, First, Sa. a wolf saliant or, in chief a rose ppr. betw. two estoiles
gold, for Wilson. Second, Gu. a lion ramp, regard, or, for Fitzoerald. Third, Ar.
on a fesse sa. three cross-crosslets of the field, for Newsham. Fourth, As. on a chev.
betw. three fleurs-de-lis ar. as many estoiles gu. for Shepperd. Five, Az. three
mullets pierced or, for Harries. Sixth, quarterly first and fourth, Gu. a lion ramp,
within an orle of cross-crosslets fitchee or ; second and third, Az. three Catherine
wheels or, on a chief of the second, a greyhound courant, sa. for Jordan. On an
escutcheon of pretence for Lx Hunte, vert a saltire ar.
Crest. — A wolfs head.
4tott0.— Fortiter et fideliter.
Jfofyt Wiilwm, Esq. 6. in 1593, Captain of=T=jBargaret jpttfgeral&.
Dragoons.
John Wilson, Esq. 6. in 1625, Major of Ca-=j=Christina, dau. of Van Broderode, a Syndic, in
▼airy to Charles II. Holland.
to=f=Cathe
of(
General Mackay, at Killecrankie. of Chadshunt, co. Warwick, Esq
John Wilson, Esq. 6. 1703, Lient.-Colonel of=j=Elizabeth, only dau. of Christopher Williams,
the 48th Foot. I of Havoedwen, co. Carmarthen, Esq.
William Wilson, Esq. 6. 1737, Captain of the=pJane Anne Eleanor, dau. and heir of the Rev.
3rd Dragoon Guards. I Q&tUtaut ftartif*, of Bryn Hyfrid, co.
I Pembroke, Esq.
r
The Her. William Wilson, of Knowle Hall,=j=Martha, third dau. and co-heiress of Barrett
Hector of Harrington, co. Northampton, Esq. ISotoetl Jfovtall, of Neeston House, co.
b. 1774. Pembroke, Esq.
I '
gfflltUtam ftenttt ©Otoetl JfOttran IE&tf*01t. of Knowle Hall, co. Warwick, Esq. m. in 1831,
Louisa-Editha, dau. and co-heir of Kief) ar to He fttWte, of Artramont, co- Wexford, Esq.
HARRIS OP CORK.
THE REV? THOMAS R AFFLES. LLD. D.D.
LIVERPOOL.
JAMES DOWSETT ROSE CLELAND. ESQ
RATH L-AEL HOUSE. CO. P OVW
OWEN BLANEY COLE. ESQ.
DKAKD1CM. Ca MONACKAK.
W H. U. J. WILSON. ESQ
KKOVLF. H4LL. CO WAMW1CK.
/ S t'+ck**- -.
^-mrlrr.-. Y..twnTd :'ir;;-f. T ';i,' J2i>L.- ■' »r--t . '.' tC .'?ih$\ ;..;uK .< l»* A :
PLATE VIII.
Cftattington, of Hancasfwe.
The Ensigns borne by Captain William Henry Warrington, late of the 3rd
Dragoon Guards, are those of the ancient family of Warrington of Aigberth,
co. Lancaster, quartered with the Arms of Strudwick.
fltm. — Quarterly, first and fourth, per chev. or and as. three lions ramp, counter-
changed, for Warrington. Second and third, per pale era. and sa. a lion ramp, or,
holding in the paws a cross pattee fitcble of the last, for Strudwick.
Crtft. — Out of a ducal coronet gu. a demi eagle displ. or.
The Her. George SBatTUigton, Rector of==Mary, only dau. and heir of ftttirtt &tfUu
Plemaley, co. Derby, and Vicar of Hope, co.
Flint, grandson of John Warrington, of Aig-
berth, Esq.
tot eft, Esq. descended from the Baronetical
families of Hanmer and Broughton.
George Henry Warring-
ton,who m. tne heiress of
Carew, of Carew Castle
and Crowcombe, and as-
assumed, in 1811, the
name and arms of C«*
Hanmer \\"ar- :
rington, Esq.
Major 4th
Dragoon Gds.
Consul-gene-
ral at Tripoli.
Mane Elizabeth,
only dau. of
Charles Price,
Esq.
Thornhill War-
rington, Esq.
Capt. 8th
Light Dra-
goons.
Other
issue.
I. Hanmer 2. William Henry
Georre Warrington,
Wamng- Capt. 3rd Dra-
too. goon Gds.
3. Charles Thoni-
hUl, 11th Light
Dragoons, d. in
1839.
4. Frederick.
5. Herbert, H.M.
Vice-consul at
Tripoli.
Osman,77th
Regt.
Hen-
ry-
TBraceftriDge, of a&ottiiiie Douse, co. asoattoicfu
Walter Hen rt Bracebridge, of Chetwode Priory, co. Bucks, Esq. now
residing at Morville House, near Warwick, lineally descended from the
marriage of Peter de Bracebrigg, of Bracebrigg, co. Lincoln, with Amicia,
grand-daughter and ultimately heiress of Turchill de Arden, Earl of
Warwick, bears the ancient Coat of Bracebridge, differenced by a crescent
of cadency, and quartered with that of Turchill de Arden ; and impales (in
right of his wife, Mary-Holte, only dau. of the late Abraham Bracebridge, of
Atherstone, Esq. the head of the family) the Arms of Bracebridge, without
the crescent, and with the quarterings of Holte and Brereton.
Armlft. — Quarterly, first and fourth, vair6 ar. and sa. a fesse gu. charged with a
crescent for difference, for Bracebridge; second and third, chequy or and az. a chev.
erm. for Turchill de Am din ; impaling, first and fourth, vair6 ar. and sa. a fesse gu.
for Bhacebridoe ; second, ax. two bars or, in chief a cross formee fitcbie of the
second, for Holte ; third, ar. two bars sa. for Brereton.
Ctmt.— A staff ragulee ar.
iHttta.-8f ae CBafc bill.
PLATE VIII.
fteler toe Urates
fcngg, of Brace-
brigg : from
which marriage
derived
: Amicia, grand dau. Sir CljatUft f^oltr, of Aston, co. Warwick, Bert.
and heir of Curs great grandson of Sir Robert Holte, Bart, by
fjjill toe 3rtof1t, Jane, his wife, dau. and eventual heiress of
Earl of Warwick. IftmtOII of BtetetOII, co. Chester.
Walter Bracebridge,==Harriet, dau.
Esq. 2nd son of
Abraham Brace-
bridge, of Ather
stone, Esq.
ofH.Streat-
field, Esq.
Abraham Bracebridge, of=Mary - Elizabeth, only
Atherstone, Esq. elder
son of Abraham Brace-
bridge, of Atherstone,
Esq.
dau. and heir of Sir
Charles Holte, Bart.
Harriet Anne,
tn, to Henry
Ogle, Esq.
Elizabeth,
d. tmm.
^fflalter Rent» 18taee«=Mary.Holte Brace-
fetitoge, of Morville
House, Esq.
bridge, only dau.
Charles Holte
Bracebridge,
Esq.
jTortje*, of Cullonen, co, 3|ntierne00*
The Family of Forbes, of Culloden, derive, through the Tolquhon branch,
from the noble House of Forbes, and bear its Arms, with the addition of
three unicorns' heads. The present representative is Arthur Forbes, of
Culloden House, Esq. great-great-grandson of the Right Hon. Duncan
Forbes, fifth Laird of Culloden, the celebrated Lord President of the Court
of Session.
ftrnttf. — As. on a chev. betw. three bears' heads ar. muzzled gu. as many unicorns'
heads erased sa.
CTmt. — An eagle displ. or.
/SlottO. — Salus per Christum.
Cattiale*
These Arms were borne by William Cardale, of Dudley, a. d. 1670, son of
William Cardale, of Hagley, and grandson of William Cardale, living in
1590. The existing representatives are John Bate Cardale, and Edward
Thomas Cardale, of Bedford Row, Esqrs. sons, by Mary Anne Bennett, his
wife, grand-daughter and co-heir of Say, of the late William Cardale, Esq.
who was son of William Cardale, of Bedford Row, Esq. who died in 1816,
and grandson of Fernando Cardale, Alderman of Worcester, son of John
Cardale, who was the eldest 6on of William Cardale, of Dudley. The Rev.
Joseph Cardale, Vicar of Bulkington, co. Warwick, and of Hinckley, co.
Leicester, fourth son of William Cardale, of Dudley, was father of the Rev.
George Cardale, D. D. Vicar of Rothley, co. Leicester, whose only son was
the Rev. George Cardale, Rector of Miilbrook, co. Bedford.
Arm*. — A*, a chev. ar. betw. three linnets ppr.
Carduorum semine pascatur.]
Crest. — A linnet ppr.
JSIattO. — Studendo et contemplando indefessus.
[Carduelis, a linnet, diet. qd.
The family of Cardonnay (varied from Cbardonneret Carduelis) Seigneur de Courtieres, &c.
General ite de Rouen, maintained their right to the same charges on a field gu. in 1668. Vid*
NobUiart de Normandie, Cardonnay.
\
Dpson, of ©DUUoto ©all.
The Arms borne by Thomas Fournis Dyson, of Willow Hall, co. York, and
Everton, co. Lancaster, Esq. are Dyson and Edwards quarterly, the latter in
right of his descent from the family of Edwards, of Northowran, co. York.
Arm*.— Quarterly, first and fourth, per pale or and as. the sun, also per pale sa. and
gold, for Dyson. Second and third, per bend sinister erm. and ermines, a lion ramp,
or, for Edwards.
Ctestt. — First, for Dyson, on a mount vert a paschal lamb ar. with a banner and flag.
Second, for Edwards, a demi lion per bend sinister, erm. and ermines.
/SlOttO. — Cruci dum spiro fido.
WILLIAM. HIKBT. WARRINGTON. ESQ.
LATE CAFT.* 8* DRAGOON GUARDS.
WALTER. HENRY. BRACEBRIDGE. ESQ.
MORVILLE HOUSE. CO. WARWICK.
ARTHUR FORBES. ESQ.
CULLODEK. CO. INVERNESS
T.P. DYSON. ESQ.
WILLOW HALL. HALIFAX-
:.im«!fir,>'.»»r.ui/ i
PLATE IX.
TBafter, of TBapfortrtmrp, to. $ert0*
William Robert Baker, of Bayfordbury, Esq. High Sheriff of the county
in 1836, is son of the late William Baker, of Bayfordbury, Esq. grand-
son of William Baker, Esq. member for Hertfordshire in five successive
parliaments, and great-grandson of Sir William Baker, Knt. who purchased
the manor of Bayford.
flrBtf. — Per pale erm. and gu. a greyhound courant betw. two ban invected, in
chief two quatrefoils, and another in base, all counterchanged.
Crtf t — A cockatrice per fesse, indented erminois and pean, combed and wattled gu.
gorged with a collar az. and in the beak a quatrefoil slipped vert.
Cutrie, ofBtw!) $tli, Co* 9&iMtm.
This famfly, settled at Dunse, co. Berwick, in 1571, derived from Cuthbert
Currie, a Cadet of the family of that Ilk, in Annandale, and has always
borne the same arms as the Chief of the house. The present Isaac Currie,
of Bush Hill, Esq. is son of the late William Currie, Esq. banker of Lon-
don, by Madeleine Lefevre, his wife, grand aunt of the Right Honourable
C- Shaw Lefevre, Speaker of the House of Commons.
flrmt.— Gu. a aaltire ar. in chief a rose of the second, barbed and seeded ppr.
Crtf t— A cock gu.
Cratofurti, of i&etotMD, co. agr.
REPRESENTATIVE OF CRAWFURD OF CRAWFURD, OF LOUDOUN AND OF CR09BY.
Colonel Crawfurd, of Newfield, as male representative of the great Scottish
house of Crawfurd, bears the supporters and quartered coat—first and fourth,
Crawfurd, of Crosby ; second and third, Crawfurd, of Crawfurd.
Reginald de Crawfurd, living in the beginning of the twelfth century, is
supposed, from the strongest presumptive evidence, identity of Arms, &c. to
have sprung from a younger son of the old Earls of Richmond.
Arm. — Quarterly, first and fourth, Erm. two tilting spears saltirewise, gu. for
Crawftrd of Crosby ; second and third, gu. a fesse erm. for Chawfurd of Crawfurd.
Cmt. — A phoenix rising from flames, gu.
ft»JWM>rttn.--Two stags gu.
ffcittaw.— God shaw the right. Abovt the Crest, I bide my time.
PLATE IX.
Cempest, of Cong, co, £oriu
John Plumbe-Tempest, of Tong Hall, co. York, Esq. and of Haughton,
co. Lancaster, Colonel of the First Royal Lancashire Militia, bears the
arms of Tempest and Plumbe quarterly, as depicted in the Engraving;
quartering in addition, the ensigns of Leggard, Hebdbn, Ryb, Bolliicg,
Mirfield, Tong, Saville, Cholmley, and Frank, heiresses of which families
his ancestors had married.
flrtM.— Quarterly, first and fourth, Ar. a bend betw. six martleta sa. for Tcm pest ;
second and third, Era. a bend raire betw. two cotiaes sa. for Plumbe.
CtOrtf .— First, A griffin's head erased per pale, ar. and sa. beaked gu. for Tempest.
Second, on a mount vert, a greyhound sejant ar. collared gu. spotted or, for Plumbe.
flftotto.— IdBtof m tfloto fpnai.
Sir go%n C emprtt, of Tong Hall, co. York, Bt.=pHenrietta Catharine, dan. and heir of Sir fttHI?
CftolmlfB, of Newton Grange, co. York,
Knt.
representative of the marriage of Henry Tem-
pest, eighth son of Sir Richard Tempest, of
llrncewell, Knt. with Ellenor, dau. and heir
"t'GTfjrif topQer f&iVfoltl, of Tong Hall, Esq.
r. '
Sir George lempest, of Tong Hall, Bart: d»ed=pAnne, dau. and heir of QfttDflrft frank, of
in 1745. | Campsal, Esq.
I 1 »
Sir Henry Tempest, Bart. John Tempest, of Nottingham,==Elisabeth, fourth dau. of Wil-
TEsq. Captain in Churchill's | liam Scremahire, of Cotgrare,
Dragoons. I Notts. Esq.
i i '
Sir Honry Tempest, d.s.p. ©Itfabftt) CfHtpfft, dau. and««CfcOttaf IHttntfe, Esq. son and
heir of William Plumbe, of
Wavertree Hall and A ugh ton,
Esq.
1819. eventual heiress.
Jfo|ti plumbe Cempwt, of Tong Hall, Esq.
#uerin, of JBorton jFit? fcHarren,
The Rkv. J. Guerin, of Norton Fitz Warren, co. Somerset, derives from
a noble French family, established at Champaign, Isle of France and
Auvergne.
2irm0.— Or, three lions ramp. sa. langued armed and crowned gu.
Cvffit. — A demi lion, as in the Arms.
.- :.at± . :x
WILLIAM BAKER, ESQ.
BATFOKDBUET, HEITS.
, b'.:-e Mr rrtft-
RAIKES CURRIE. ESQ.
COLONEL CH.VWFUKD. OF NEWFIELD. CO. AYR.
lEPKLSLKTATIVk OF CHAVI'UKb. Of (HAVFl'RD. AND CROSBT.
lie
JOHN PLUMDE TEMPEST. ESQ.
TONC HALL. CO. YOKK
THE REV J C-UEUIN
NORTON tlTZWAUUt.N. CO. MJMKK^U
PLATE X.
£>tbbett marc, of (Ebinbuttf).
Samuel Hibbert- Ware, M.D. of Edinburgh, whose patronymic is Hibbkrt,
assumed, by sign manual, in 1837, the additional name and arms of Ware.
as representative of the eldest branch of the family of Sir James Ware,
the historian of Ireland, and now bears the ensigns of Ware and Hibbert
quarterly.
flnaf . — First and fourth, Or, two lions passant as. witbin a bordure of the second,
charged with escallops of the first, for Ware. Second and third, harry of eight or and
vert, a pale counter-changed, for Hibbert.
Cre* tf . — First, A dragon's head or, pierced through the neck with a broken tilting-
spear ppr. for Ware. Second, A hand holding a millrind ppr. for Hibbert.
£IottO. — Sola sains serrire Deo.
The Descent is thus deduced : —
re,
Sir James Ware, Knt. the Historian, 6. 26=pEliiabeth, dan. of Jacob Newman, of Dublin.
Not. 1594, eldest son of Sir James Ware, ] Esq. m. 31 Dec. 1620; d. 9 June, 1651.
Knt. Auditor-General of Ireland.
Jam** Ware, Esq. Auditor-General of Ireland,=pBarbara Stone, second wife, «i. 24 Nov. lb'67.
ame« ware, r^sq. Auaiior-uenerai oi ireiana,=^=£
6. 9 Aug. 1622 : d. 6 May, 1689.
r-- I
James Ware, Esq. son and heir, d. in 1 755. ze=Miss Fitzgerald, of the co. of Westmeath.
Robert Ware, of Dublin, Esq. d. 18 July, 17 79.== Miss Anne Thomas, of a Welsh family.
I '
Sarah Ware, only child to leave issue, b. in==Samuel Hibbert, of Manchester, afterwards of
1751, m. 30 May, 1780. Clarendon House, Chorlton, Esq.
Samuel Hibbert Ware, M.D. of Edinburgh. Other issue.
CalDtocU, of Hiniep ©Hoo&*
James Stamford Caldwell, of Linley Wood, co. Stafford, Esq. M. A. bears
the quartered Coat of Caldwell and Stamford.
flrntf . — Quarterly, first and fourth, per pale, sa. and vert, a stag's head couped ar.
in chief three cold wells ppr. for Caldwell ; second and third, ar. two bars at. on a
canton gu. a gauntlet grasping a broken sword ppr. hilt and pomel gold, for Stamfohi>.
Creft. — A lion couchant ar. gorged with two bars, the upper sa. the lower vert,
holding betw. the paws a cold well ppr.
JRottO. — Niti, facere, experiri.
Kmif CalHtofllof Linley Wood, Esq. a ma-^Elisabetb, dau. and co-heir of Ctjomaft &\am
gistrate and deputy-heutenant for Stafford-
thire. Recorder of the borough of Newcastle-
onder-Lyme, d. 16 Jan. 1838.
toils, of Derby, Esq. by Hannah, his wile,
eldest dau. of John Crompton, of Chorley
Hall, co. Lancaster, Esq.
Jamrf fctaorfdrti CaDtof 11, of Linley Wood, Esq.
a
PLATE X.
Coiqufcoun, of tfcat 3lfe anil L1100.
The present Chief of the ancient house of Colquhoun, Sir Jambs Colquhoun,
of that Ilk and Loss, co. Dumbarton, Bart, bears —
arm*— Ar. a ssltire engrailed sa.
Crfft— A hart's head gu.
&UfPtVUT%— Two greyhounds ar. collared sa.
^lOttOCf .— A bent the Crest, Si je puis. Undtr the Arms, Cnock Elachan, being the
war cry of the clan.
The Arms of the Colquhouns are stated to hare originated thus : — Daring the reign of one of
the early Kings of Scotland, when the turbulent nobles were accustomed to rebellion, and feuds
and cml wars were of frequent occurrence, the castle of Dumbarton was in the hands of the
insurgents, who refused, when summoned, to gire it up. Colquhoun of Luss, being a steady
loyalist, receired a message from the King, requesting him to retake the castle, and wrote for
answer, ' If 1 can.' Accordingly, after due consideration, he assembled his clansmen and
retainers, for a grand stag hunt, fully armed and equipped, as was the custom at that period on
such occasions, the hunt being appointed to take place somewhere in the neighbourhood of
Dumbarton. The garrison were politely invited to witness the hunt, and having no suspicion
that any ruse was intended, they nearly all left the castle. Colquhoun of Luss, in the mean time,
taking advantage of their absence, quickly returned, and succeeded in taking the castle. In com-
memoration of this feat the King granted the Bearings, which hare erer since been used by the
Colquhouns of Luss.
8)ubantJ, of 3p0iep, co. Wiwttoitk.
This family, originally Hubald, derived from Hugh Hubald, who held
Ipsley of Osbernus at the time of the Conquest. The chief line, the Hubands
of Ipsley, were created Baronets of England in 1660, but are now extinct.
The male representation of the family at present vests in Gborgb Huband,
Esq. M. A. Capt. 8th Hussars, son, by Frances, his wife, eldest daughter of
Arthur Chichester Macartney, Esq. of the late Willcocks Huband, Esq. the
lineal descendant of Anthony, son of Nicholas Huband, Esq. a younger son
of the Ipsley family.
flrutf . — Sa. three leopards' faces jessant-de-lis ar.
CtCft. — A wolf passant or.
#t0tt0. — Care lupum.
TBurnell, of IBeaucftieff atrtep ami GSJinfebourne ijwrtl.
Bkouohton Benjamin Peggb-Burnell, of Beauchieff Abbey, co. Derby,
and Winkbourne Hall, co. Notts, Esq., whose patronymic was Steade,
assumed, on inheriting the estates of his uncle, Peter Pegge Burnell, Esq. in
1839, the surname and arms of Peoob and Burnell. He is son of the late
Thomas Steade, of Woodseats, Esq. by Miliscent, his wife, daughter of Strelley
Pegge, Esq. of Beauchieff Abbey, and representative of the ancient family of
Steade, possessed of Onesacre, co. York, temp. Edward III.
fl nttf.— Quarterly, £ rat ^ fourth, per fesse indented or and ar. a lion ramp. sa. a
bordure gu. charged with eight plates, for Bu knell. Second and third, ar. a cber.
betw. three wedges sa. for Peoob.
Creftf. — First, a lion's gamb erect and erased sa. in the paw a bunch of violets ppr.
for Bornbll. Second, the sun rising in splendour, the rays alternately sa. or, ana ar.
for Peoge.
JBsttO.— Caritas fructum habit
CSS
SAMUEL HIBBIRT WARZ.M.D.
EDINBURGH.
JAMES STAMFORD CALDWELL. ESQ.
UNLET WOOD. STAFFORDSHIRE.
^£ifl££St^
SIR JAMES COLQUHOL'N. BART.
OF THAT ILK AND Ll'SS.
HUUAKD OF IFSLEY.
CO VARVICK.
H II PEGGE BUKNELL ESQ.
HK\i;CIIIhKK AHMET CO DkKHT
PLATE XL
C&aucer.
Gsoffrt Chaucer, of Woodstock, co. Oxon, the father of English poetry,
was a citizen of London, where he was born in the year 1328. He was a
gentleman, and appears to have studied at both the Universities of Cambridge
and Oxford, and subsequently to have travelled abroad. His arise though
is attributable to his connexion with John of Gaunt, Chaucer having mar-
ried in 1360, the sister of Catherine Swynford, the mistress, afterwards wife
of the prince. He first held the place of Valettus, or Yeoman to Edward III. ;
then that of Gentleman of the King's Privy Chamber, and subsequently,
after returning from Genoa, when he was accredited to manage some public
business in 1372, Comptroller of the Customs. Chaucer died at the age of
seventy-two.
SnU. — Parted per pale ar. and gu. a bend counter* hanged.
Cftft. — A. tortoise paaa. ppr.
©fmfcespeate-
John Shakespeare, of Stratford-upon-Avon, co. Warwick, who, after pass-
ing through the regular gradations of municipal offices in that town, became
one of its chamberlains in 1561, and bailiff or chief magistrate in 1569;
obtained in the latter year a grant of arms from Robert Cooke, Clarenceux,
which being lost, was confirmed by De thick, Garter King at Arms, and
Camden in 1599. The confirmation recites that "John Shakspere, now of
8tratford-upon-Avon, in the county of Warwick, Gent., whose parent and
grandfather, late antecessor for his faithful and approved service to the late
most prudent prince, King Henry VII. was advanced and rewarded with lands
and tenements given to him in those parts of Warwickshire, where they have
continued for some descents in good reputation, credit," &c. John Shakes-
peare, who appears to have been a Wool-dealer, married Mary, dau. and co-heir
of Robert Arden, of Willingcote, co. Warwick, son of Arden, Groom of the
Chamber to Henry VII. who was nephew of 8ir John Arden, Knt. Squire
of the Body to Henry VII. and grandson of Walter Arden, by Eleanor, his
wife, dau. of John Hampden, of the county of Bucks. To Mary Arden her
PLATE XI.
Sir Walter was a descendant of the renowned Border Family of Scott of
Harden, and quartered the Arms of Halibnrton, as representative of Ruj-
burton, of New Mains.
Bnw.— Quarterly, first and fourth, or, two mullets in chief andaciaa cant sb bane as.
within an orle of the second, for Scott ; second and third, or, on n bead am. three
maaclea of the first, in the sinister chief point an oral buckle erect of the second for
Halibukton.
Ctrft. — A female figure ppr. couped above the kne e s, rested ga. with an. waist and
laced stomacher or, cuffs and ruffs ar. holding in the dexter hand ■ son gold, and in
the sinister a crescent of the fifth.
Sasporttr*.— Dexter, a mermaid, holding in the exterior band a bwji
sinister, a Moor ppr. wreathed and cinctured ar. holding a torch rerersed.
&lOttO.— Over the Crest, Reparabit cornua Phoebe; under ike Armu, Watch
Uj=A|
cc
a
miortr VoltMttt* volution.
Sir William Scott, of Harden, KnU <i.=pAgnes Murray, sister of Patrick, first
in 1655. Lord EUbank.
Sir Gideon Scott, of Harden, Walter Scott, of Raeburn,=pAnne Isabel, dan. of Wfl-
ancestor of the present Esq. d. soon after the Re- Ham Makdongal, of Maker-
i i '
William Scott, of Raeburn, Walter ScoU, Esq. called^ane, dan. of Campbell of
Esq. ancestor of the present Bearded Watt, second son. Silrercraiga.
mUItrr &C0tt, of Rae-
burn, Esq,
r
d^Ja
f
Robert Scott, of Sandyknow, co. Roz-c^pBarbara, dau. of €|s«SJ ftsllHr*
burgh, Esq.
toll, of New Mains, now called
Dryburgh Abbey, represe n tative of
the ancient family of Hahburton of
Morton, which representation, by
the death of all the other children
of Thomas Haliburton «. p. devolved
on the descendants of Barbara
Scott.
Walter Scott, Esq. Writer to theapAnne, dau. of John Rutherford, M.D.
c; . l » i V#._ i*«« by ^une, y, firgt w y 6f fan^ <# g^
John Swinton of that Ilk.
Signet, 6. 11 May, 1729.
Sir raUItfT &f Ott, Bart, of Asbotsiobd.
*T BmJ+r »c
Lccidan,J?d*"vJ Cher* on, : '<.'\
PLATE XII.
GSQattet, of Crucfc *$eole, co. ©atop.
These Anns, without the quartering, have been long the Bearing of the family
of Warter, originally of Warter co. York, and subsequently of Stableford,
Swancok Rudge, and Cruck Meole, co. Salop; also of Staffordshire and
London. They were borne in 1451 by Christopher Warter, Esq. Sheriff of
London, and by Sir Willyam Warter, temp. Henry VIII. and were confirmed
13 Queen Anne, with the addition of the Crest, to John Warter, of the Inner
Temple, Esq. Assistant to the Counsel for the affairs of the Admiralty and
Navy of Great Britain.
flnw.— Quarterly, first and fourth, sa. on a chev. engr. betw. three chessroolcs ar.
as many crosses croaalet fitchee of the first, for Warter. Second and third, or, on a
pale as. three martlets of the field, a chief of the second, for Wood. *
Creft — A lion ramp. aa. collared ar. holding betw. bis fore-paws a chessrook of the
last.
JBptlO. — Vi rictus non coactus.
Qmrt, of aiDertoaslep ant) mitfcgtoortft, co. Dertp*
The families of Hurt, of Alderwasley and Wirksworth, in Derbyshire, bear
a Coat quarterly, first, Hurt; second, Lowe of Alderwasley ; third, Lowe of
Denby, and likewise Lowe of Alderwasley; and fourth, Fawne of Alderwas-
ley. The Hurts derive these Bearings from the intermarriage of Nicholas
Hurt, of Castern, living in 1663, with Elizabeth, daughter of John Lowe,
of Alderwasley, and sister and heir of John Lowe of the same place. The
Lowes had intermarried with the Fawnbs, through their heiress, and thua
the Coat of Fawne.
Arm*. — First, sa. a fesse betw. three cinquefoils or, for Hurt ; second, gu. a wolf
preyant ar. for Lows of Alderwasley ; third, az. a hart trippant ar. for Lowe of Denby,
and likewise for Lows of Alderwasley ; fourth, ar. a bugle horn betw. three crescents
aa. each charged with a bezant, for Fawns of Alderwasley.
Crtft — A hart passant ppr. horned, membered, and hurt in the haunch with an
arrow or, feathered ar.
JBottO. — Mane pned&m reaped spolium.
99'aoam, of TBaUoc&morrie, co. apt*
The Shield and Supporters are borne by the present William M'Adam, of
Balrochmorrie, Esq. as Chief of the ancient Scottish family of M'Adam of
Waterhead, in the Stewartry of Kirkcudbright, derived from Adam M'Gregor,
PLATE XII.
grandson of Gregor M'Gregor, Head of the Clan Gregor. Mr. M' Adam is
grandson of John Loudon M'Adam, Esq. so celebrated for the improvement
of the Public Roads of the kingdom, who was son of James M'Adam, of
Waterhead, Esq. by Susannah, his wife, dau. of John Cochrane, of Waterside,
Esq.
fllHtf. — Vert, three arrows paleways, points downwards, barbed and feathered, ar.
The ancient Bearing, as found in the Old Tower, over the Gate of the Family Burial
Ground, Tombstones, &c. was, Vert, an arrow ar. point upwards.
Creflt — The head of a red deer, erased, ppr.
^Uppottrr*. — Two naked Saracens, wreathed about the middle, ppr.
JRottOt*. — Under the Arm*, Crux mihi grata quies. Over the Crest, Calm.
IPrptfietcf), of abetgole, co< Carmarthen*
Daniel Prytherch, now of Abergole, Esq. a Magistrate for Carmarthenshire,
great-grandson of Rhys Prydderch, Esq. High Sheriff of that County in
1758, bears a quartered Coat, as Representative of the ancient family of Pry-
therch or Prydderch, originally ap Rydderch, descended, through James
Prydderch, Esq. High Sheriff of Carmarthenshire in 1599, from Rhydderch
ap Gwilyn, of the line of Cradoc ap Gwilyn, Lord of Tallyn; and in right of
his wife, Caroline-Georgina, youngest dau. of James Dal ton, Esq. by Augusta
Ritso, his wife, dau. of Henry Frederick, Duke of Cumberland, impales the
arms of Ritso.
Arms. — Quarterly, first and fourth, ax. a stag trippant ar. collared and lined or, betw.
the attires, an imperial crown ppr. Second and third, gu. on a chev. betw. three men's
heads cooped, in profile, ar. fire guttes-de-sang.
Impaling, quarterly, first and fourth, az. semee of crosses crosslet, a lion ramp, guard,
ar. for Dalton ; second and third, for Rmo, ar. on a chev. betw. three boars' heads
couped sa. three mullets of the first.
Cftft. — A stag's head cabossed, betw. the attires an imperial crown, as in the arms.
JBottO. — Duw a digon ; (in English) God and enough.
Stamer, ofBatfc*
The Rev. William Stamer, D. D. Rector and Patron of St. Saviour's,
Bath, younger son of the late Sir William Stamer, Bart, and brother of the
present Sir Lovelace, bears on his paternal shield an Escutcheon of Pretence
for Houlditch, in right of his wife, Eleanor-Louisa, daughter and co-heir of
Richard Houlditch, Esq. of Edenham House, Hampstead.
9rm0. — Quarterly, first and fourth quarterly, gu. and az. a cross erm. charged with
the City Sword in the scabbard, in pale, ppr. in the first and fourth quarters, on a fesse
dancettle ar. a lion passant of the second; in the second and third, three castles ar.
for Stamer ; second and third, gu. a lion ramp, or, on a chief of the last three martlets
ppr. for Lovelace ; on an escutcheon of pretence az. on a chev. or, three birds sa.
Cr«t*. — First, a stag's head erased or, gorged with a mural crown ppr. Second,
an eagle displ. ppr.
JBottO. — Virtute et ralore.
HENRY DE GREY WARTER. ESQ.
CIUCK MEOU i"0 * U.il 1
HTRT OF ALDERWASLEY fc WIRKSWORTH
**s
^5*P>^>
""LLfM? ADAM. ESO
1 4LLOCRMOUUE . CO. AT*
DANIEL PRYTHERCH. ESQ.
AftElCOLE. CO. CAEKMARTHEM
REV WILLIAM. STAMER. D D
BATH.
rrs*i*» **
[lOUiltii, Fdw*r«i ».'humi«, .'<' iluui^
i»vii^«li :\;\i i»v m. - '
I
PLATE XIIL
fl^iWrteton, of Heam, co* Detbg*
Marmadcke Middleton Middleton, of Learn, Esq. High Sheriff of Derby-
shire in 1808, who is son and heir of the late Rev. John Carver of Morthen,
by Sarah, his wife, dau. of Thomas Allen, of Sheffield, Esq. which lady
succeeded to the estates of the Middletons of Learn, assumed, upon attaining
his majority, the surname and arms of Middleton.
flrttft. — Quarterly, first and fourth, erm. on a aaltire engr. sa. an eagle's head erased
or, for Middleton. Second and third, or, upon a cher. betw. three crosses cluchel sa.
a fleur-de-lis betw. two stags' heads cabossed of the first, for Carver.
Crrftf. — First, An eagle's head erased ar. charged on the neck with a saltire as in
the arms, for Middleton. Second, A mount vert, thereon a cross cluchee or, charged
in the centre with a fleur-de-lis sa. for Carver.
JBotto. — Conjunctio firmat.
0pU, of MlprartJtsburp, co, lBucfcff*
The family of Gy 11 or Gill resided in Cambridgeshire, and descended from
Richard Gylle or Gill, who lived in the time of King Edward I. From
him derived John Gyll, who passed into Buckland, co. Hertford, about
1450, and married there. Dying in 1499, he left a son, Richard, father
of John Gyll, Esq. who married Margaret, dan. and heir of George
Canon, of Wyddial Hall, co. Hertford, Esq. The property was sold by the
son of Sir George Gyll, Knt. about the middle of the seventeenth century.
A branch of this family settled in Kent, from which proceeded George
Gyll, of Boxley, grandfather of William Gyll, of Wyrardisbury House,
co. Buckingham. His son, William Gyll, Esq. Captain 2nd Life Guards,
married the Lady Harriet Flemyng, dau. and heir of the last Earl of Wig-
toon, and left four sons and one dau. viz. Brooks Hamilton Gyll, Esq.
present representative of the family, Gordon Willouohby Gyll, Esq.,
Hamilton Gyll, Esq., Sir Robert Gyll, and Louisa, married to Sir
Jasper Atkinson, Knt. of the Royal Mint.
flrvf . — Quarterly, first, Sa. two cher. ar. each charged with three mullets ef the
first, on a canton or, a lion pass, guard, gu. for Gyll. Second, Lozengy or and vert,
a lion ramp, guard, gu. also for Gyll. Third, Ar. on a chev. engr. sa. betw. three
crosses pattee, as many martlets of the first, for Canon.
Crff t. — A falcon's head as. betw. two wings frettee rert
JRott*. — Virtutis gloria merces.
PLATE XIII.
annanU, of auc&ter €iton*
The Annands were seated at Auchter Ellon, co. Aberdeen, in high repute
for several centuries, and on an old Monument, still to be seen in the Church-
yard of Ellon, the Arms, as now faerue, appear, with the date 1326. The
present representative of this long descended line is Alexander Annand, of
Sutton, co. Surrey, Esq. son and heir of the late John Annand, Esq. by
Helen, his wife, second dau. of Adam Smith, Esq.
8rmf. — Ar. a chief and saltire gn. cantoned with two mascles in the collar and base
points as. in the flanks a spot of ermine.
An Escutcheon of Pretence in right of hit wife, Sophia, dau. of William Bennet, of
Faversham, co. Kent, Esq. Per pale gu. and enn. afesse embattled, counter-embattled
betw. two roundles in chief and a demi lion in bate, all cotmterchanged.
Cmt— A griffin segreant.
fttlOTOrttrf .—Two griffina.
jBottO.— Sperabo.
Jennings;, of tfce ©fcrutoerp, Dotiet,
The arm* of the present Grorgb Jennings, of the Shrubbery, Esq. are :-
As. a cber. engr. enn. betw. three golden fleeces.
deft — A dragon passant rut, wings or, the dexter claw resting on a shield as.
charged with a golden fleece.
jBottO. — Conserrabo ad mortem.
Cracroft, of IJwckt&orn, co. Lincoln*
The family of Cracroft has been resident at Hackthorn for many centuries :
the arms are recorded in the " Union of Honour/' published by James York,
Blacksmith, " containing the Nobility of England, and the Gentry of Lin-
colnshire, in the year 1640." The descent can be traced from the time of
Edward III. The present representative is Robsrt Cracroft, of Hackthorn,
Esq. formerly lieutenant-Colonel of the North Lincolnshire Militia, son and
heir of the late John Cracroft, of Hackthorn, Esq. by Penelope Anne, his
wife, dau. of the Bey. Charles Fleetwood Weston, Prebendary of Durham.
flrmf . — Vert, on a bend dancettee ar. three martlets sa.
Cttft — A stork ppr. supporting with his dexter foot a battle-axe, staff or, head ar.
GEORGE. JENNINGS. ESQ.
TNI •■■UBBE1T. DOVE I
ROBERT. CRACROFT. ESQ.
KACKTHORN. CO. LINCOLN-
JhfctXiwfe Jt
IsTTfhvt. f.d**id Chnrrai 1* H.^r.e - ;^.Tt ( I'wfeh ,Vm*r»-, VM!"
PLATE XIV.
iBopt), of agtDDleton jparfr, co* mestmeatf).
Thb Arms of Boyd and Mackay were confirmed to the present George
Augustus Boyd, of Middleton Park, Esq. by Letters Patent bearing date
24th August, 1837, with an augmentation of the arms of the Noble Family of
Rochfort, Earls of Belvedere, in consideration of a portion of the property
of the last Earl devolving upon Mr. Boyd, through his mother, Jane, Countess
of Belvedere, widow of that Nobleman in 1836. Mr. Boyd is great-grandson
of the Rev. James Boyd, Rector of Erris, co. Mayo, living in 1752. His
son, Mr. Boyd's father, Abraham Boyd, Esq. a Barrister and King's Council,
married for his second wife the above-named Jane, Countess of Belvedere,
who was dau. and eventually sole heiress of the Rev. James Mackay.
Arm*. — Quarterly, first and fourth, as. a fesse chequy ar. and gu. betw. three cres-
cents of the second, for Hoyd. Second, gu. on a chev. ar. betw. three bears' heads
couped or, muzzled of the first, a roebuck's head erased ppr. betw. two hands, couped
at the wrist, each grasping a dagger, pointed to the centre, ppr. for Mackay. Third,
Ax. a lion ramp. or. and in chief two redbreasts ppr. for Rochfort.
Crfit*. — First, out of a ducal coronet or, a hand erect, with the third and fourth
fingers folded, ppr. for Boyd. Second, a cubit arm, grasping a dagger in pale ppr. for
Mackay. Third, a redbreast ppr. on a ducal coronet, for Rochfort.
/Button. — Under the Arms, Confido, for Boyd. Over the Crett, Manu forte, for
Mackay.
Delatml 0rap*
Frahcis Delaval Gray, Esq. of the 14th Light Dragoons, son and heir of
the late John Gray, of Hartsheath Park, co. Flint, Esq. and maternally a
descendant of the old family of Delaval, bears the quartered Coat of Gray
and Delaval.
Arm*.— Quarterly, first and fourth, gu. within a bordure engr. a lion ramp. ar. for
Gray. Second and third, quarterly, first and fourth, erm. two bars vert, second and
third, ar. a fesse ax. betw. an eagle displ. with two heads sa. in chief, and a lion ramp,
in base, for Delaval.
Crtft*. — First out of a mural crown a phoenix in flames ppr. for Gray. Second, a
demi lion guard, holding in the dexter paw a dagger, all ppr. for Delaval.
0btt§€%.—Ch*r the Crests, Clarior eTenebris. Under the Arms, Vixi liber et moriar.
jrerranD, of ©t* 3[tie0, co, £orfe-
Mrs. Ferrahd, of St. Ives, bears the quartered Coat of her late husband,
Bosfeild and Atkinson quarterly, and on an Escutcheon of Pretence the arms
of Ferrand quarterly with Walker and Dale.
flrif. — Quarterly, first and fourth, sa. a cher. betw. three fleurs-de-lis or, for Bus-
mLD. Second and third, ar. an eagle displ with two beads sa. ; on a chief, or, a rose
PLATE XIV.
betw. two martlets gu. for Atkinson. An Escutcheon of Pretence, quarterly, first, sx.
on s chief gu. two crosses patonce rsirl, for FaaRAXft ; mmnH, ar»a cher. betw. three
crescents ss. ; on a canton of the second a dore with as olive branch ppr. for Walks* ;
third, gu. on a monnd of grass a swan close ppr. dncalry gorged and chained or, for
Dale.
Cfttoartr Bale, of Tunsul,^JoanShipperdsou,ofMer-
grandson of Edward Dale,
of Dalton le Dale.
George Dale, of Durham.
Edward Dale, of Stockton on
Tees. =p
Snrff WUItrr. M. A.
Vicarof Stockton on Tees.
Richard F errand, descended;
from the Ferrands of Har-
den-Grange, Yorkshire.
Anne Walker,
co-heir.
and
Sarah Dale, dau. and heiress.^Jobn Ferrand, of Barnard Castle, co.
Durham, Esq.
AnneCa*:
therine.
r
Edward
Walker
Jane^=Rer. J. B.
Ferrand,
Ferrand,
Charl-
of St.
of liar-
wood,B.A.
lvos, d.
den -
ofOakhiU.
I. p.m. in
Grange,
1837.
M. P.
d.s.p. in
Charles Charl-
1835.
wo
od, d, unm.
SbaraJ.
lady, after
the death of
the son of
her elder
sister, and of
herownbro-
thersj.p.m.
resumed her
maiden
name and
arms, and is
the present
ratiH, of St.
Ives.
This=y=Cnrrer,
Fother-
gillBus-
feild, of
Cotting-
ley
Bridge,
Esq.
Edwad
Surtees,
of Sea-
tonburn,
CO.
North-
umber-
land,
Esq.
William Edward
Surtees, Esq.
M.A. Barris-
ter-at-Law.
Ctopning, ofTBrpn, co- Pembroke*
Tub family, now represented by William Henry Twyning, of Bryn, co.
Pembroke, Esq. is one of great antiquity, and has borne its Coats of Arms
for a long series of years.
Arms. — Sa. two bars betw. two stars of six points or.
(ftmt.— The twins, Castor and Pollux, in infancy. (The stare in the shield repre-
sent them after death.)
fHotto. — Stellis aspirate gemellis.
jftetoman of C&ornimrp park, co. Gloucester-
Henry Wenman Newm an, of Thorhbury Park, Esq. bears the Arms of the
extinct Baronets Newman of Fifehead-M agdalen, co. Dorset, which his father,
the late Richard Newman Toll, M.D. of Thornbury Park, assumed with the
name on inheriting the property and representation of the family in 1802.
9rnt0.— Quarterly, sa. and ar. ; in the first and fourth quarters three mullets of the
second, in the centre an inescutcheon gu. charged with a portcullis imperially crowned
or,— an augmentation granted by King Charles I. to Colonel Newman for his distin-
guished conduct at the battle of Worcester.
Crest— A swallow rising ppr.
IQottO. — Lux raea Christus.
GEORGE. AUGUSTUS. BOYD. ESQ.
MIDDLE TON PAUL CO- VE3TUEXTH.
FRANCIS. DE LAVAL. GRAY. ESQ.
14™ LIGHT D RACOONS.
MV FERRAND.
ST IVES, CO. YORK.
WILUAM. HENRY. TWYNING. ESQ.
■ tTW. CO. PEMBROKE.
HENRY. WENMAN. NEWMAN. ESQ.
THOHNBURY PABK. CO GLOUCESTER.
■i.-wm ■" , • «. ;. 'i ;
t
PLATE XV.
hamerton, of ^elltficlD peel, co* gorb.
James Hamerton, Esq. now of Hellifield Peel, as representative of the very
ancient family of Hamerton, of Hamerton and Hellifield Peel, bears a Shield
of Fifteen Quarterings.
3rntf. — Quarterly, first, Ar. three hammers sa. for Hamerton. Second, Ar. a hend
cottised sa. for De Knoll. Third, Gu. three arches ar. for Dk Arches. Fourth, Ar. a
bend engr. sa. in the sinister chief an escallop gu. for Radcliffe. Fifth, Ar. an eagle
displayed rert. for Lanofield. Sixth, Ar. a bend sa. betw. an eagle, vert, and a cross
moline sa. for Rish worth. Seventh, Ar. a chev. betw. three cinquefoils sa, for Falk-
ingham. Eighth, Sa. three pickaxes ar. for Pigot. Ninth, quarterly, first and fourth,
Ar. a garland ppr. second and third, ar. three pheons sa. for Clotherham. Tenth, Ar.
a fesse gu. betw. three eagles displayed sa. for Leedes. Eleventh, Ar. a fesse az.
and a label of three points gu. for the Baron de Birkin. Twelfth, Per chev. or and
gu. three human hearts counterchanged, for the Baron de Cadz. Thirteenth, Ar.
three crosses crosslet botonnle fitche>, within a bordure engr. gu. for Chissenhall.
Fourteenth, Ar. three dungforks sa. for Worthinoton. Fifteenth, as first, for Hamer-
ton. \
Crrft. — A greyhound couchant, sa.
/BnttO.— Fixus adversa sperno.
Attain lie ftautertoit, Lord of=r=Katherine, dau. andheiroftiPItaf
Hamerton, temp. Edward III.
He UltoII, of Wigglesworth
and Hellifield Peel.
Richard de Hamerton, Lord of=pElizabeth, dau. and heirofglffiltU
Hamerton, Hellifield Peel,&c.
Frwm which marriage derived
Itam Ire Ka&clifle, and of his
wife Ellen, niece and heiress
of ftenrg He fUngfielfc.
John Hamerton, of Hellifield^ Dorothy, dau. and co-heir of
Peel, Esq. 6. in 1610. IStetfartr jfalfetngfjam. of
I North Hall, Yorkshire, Esq.
Of this marriage the grand*/*, \
Stephen Hamerton, of Hellifield=pAnne, dau. and heir of Sir <&Xi?
Peel, Esq. 6. in 1668; d. in bar* <?Tf)tWTtf)aU, of Chis-
1745. I senhall, co. Lancaster, Knt.
Of thu marriage the great-grandson , 1
James ftamertOlt, Esq. now of Hellifield Peel.
King, of Staunton park, co. Deteforti.
The father of the present James-Kino Kino, of Staunton Park, Esq. the
Rev. James Simpkinson, M. A. Rector of St. Peter-le-Poor, Old Broad
Street, London, assumed by Sign Manual, in 1837, the name and arms of
King only.
AtlRi. — Quarterly, ar. and az. in the second and third quarters a mullet of six points
or, pierced of the field, over all a bend barry of six of the second, charged with a
ciuquefoil of the third, and gu.
PLATE XV.
apoacd of two
'Griffith*.
ir ?<auii>- kme, of fcinp. Kar. film, of L\ne, King.
us ?*arL. Com: oc 1-aam. t&e atr of E*q.
Xal Sob,. 1 Lo*4 '
**t. . Eat).
X. 1^-T— fc«r& dm. of Edward Vox, of
!**■». <n*7 ii*«atTofUndo».Eeq.
~£j&r. June, of sonant Pn*, En*. Th* Rcr. TVobm king. M. A. FiYedaughten.
%pciHmw, of g tmuuag timcco> Cumfterlant)*
Tm fknihr «f Speodbij came GngzoaDj from Ireland, wag afterwards resident
&c son* £»c;si5a&t ia Scotland, and became settled in Cumberland about
tb* rear lf«>5- TLr prcara: represeataxire is James Speddixg, of Summer-
CTW*- Esc. Maxw <s iLc ltaral Westmoreland Militia, and a Magistrate and
IVpxTT-Ii-ntnaiit ice CuLberlaxxL eldest son of the late James Spedding,
£b^. by ELisaheih, Li> wifc. dan. of Thomas Harrington, of Carlisle, Esq. a
dosoeadazLi of ine aacieax faznUr of Harrington of Harrington.
Snra.— v~-t. ok a ?ms» *a*cr. betw. line* weans slipped or, a mural crown betw.
fnti. — Or: :c a scraC crz-wr. or. a £e itertra eKbowed in amaonr, the hand graapine
a ftcurtfctr. ibf ars charpec «-iii xhn* accnu, one and two, and entwined bj a branch
«c\m&. aU por.
fc
JAMES. HAMERTON. ESQ.
BILL! FIELD PEEL. CO. YORK,
JAMES. KING. KING. ESQ.
8TAUKTOK PABK. CO. HEREFORD.
JAMES SPEDD1NG. ESQ.
SUM ME KG HOVE. CO. CUMBERLAND.
binhn.. K.'wu-J 'hir.'.i.
PLATE XVI.
atcMep, of barton, co* ©atop*
David Francis Jones, Serjeant-at-Law, son of David Francis Jones, of
Cymman, co. Flint, Esq. by Jane, bis wife, daughter of Richard Atcherley,
Esq. assumed, by letters patent dated 21 March, 1834, in compliance with
the testamentary injunction of his maternal uncle, the surname and arms of
Atcherley, and is the present Mr. Serjeant Atcherley of Marton, Attorney-
General of the Counties Palatine of Lancaster and Durham.
The family of Atcherley of Marton has been settled in that neighbourhood
at least as far back as the time of Henry VII. The direct ancestor, Sir
Roger Atcherley, Knt. who was born at Stanwardine, within about a mile of
Marton, served as Lord Mayor of London 3 Henry VIII.
fltfttf. — Go. on a feue engr. ar. betw. three griffins' heads erased or, as many
crosses pattee fitchee sa. Serjeant Atcherley bears, in addition, an Escutcheon of Pre-
tence, quarterly Topping and Robinson, in right of his wife, Anne Margaret, second
dan. of the late James Topping, of Whatcroft Hall, co. Chester, Esq.
Crfft — A demi bustard couped gu. wings elevated or, in the beak a lily ar. slipped
rert.
JKottO. — Spe posteri temporis.
Ufrfcrrtr atr}erles, Etq^=Jane,dau.oftheReT.Tho- Wiilliam Kobmion, of
representatire of the an- " "" " «■" - .«...-. ~.
cient family of Atcherley
of Marton, co. Salop,
buried 26 April 1766.
mas Hughes, Vicar of Whatcroft Hall, co.Ches-
Loppington, co. Salop. ter, Esq. High Sheriff
thereof: d. in 1766.
J
Jana Atcherley, born^Darid Francis Jones, Sarah-Marearet, only^JarawCoppiltg.Esq.
dau.andheirofWil- K.Q. Attorney-Ge-
8 July 1762: died
3 May 1792.
of Cymman, Esq.
liam Robinson, Esq.
neral of the Coun-
ties Palatine of Lan-
caster and Durham.
David Francis Atcherley, of Marton^Anne-Margaret, second dau. and co-
Serjeant-at-Law, F. K.S. born 13 I heir of James Topping, Esq. m. 20
June 1783. May 1817.
(ZEDtoatDess of ®i\z*ttm 9©anor.
Thb Rev. John Edwardes, of Gileston Manor, co. Glamorgan, is youngest
brother of the late David John Edwardes, Esq. representative of the ancient
Welsh family of Edwardes of Rhyd-y-Gors, co. Carmarthen.
Arm*. — Quarterly, first, sa. a lion ramp, within an orle of cinquefbils or. Second,
fa. a cher. or, betw. three Bowen's knots. Third, sa. three bucks' heads cabossed ar.
ourth, chequy or and sa. a fesse ar.
Cttft. — A demi lion or, holding betw. the paws a Bowen's knot.
JKsttS. — Aspera ad rirtutem est via.
PLATE XVI.
jQtcola**
Sir Nicholas Harris Nicolas, Chancellor and Knight Grand Cross of the
Order of Saint Michael and Saint George, Knight of the Order of the Guelphs
of Hanover, is fourth son of Captain John Harris Nicolas of the Royal Navy,
by Margaret, daughter and co-heiress of John Blake, and grand-daughter
and co-heiress (by Prudence, sister and heiress of William Busvargus of
Busvargus, co. Cornwall, Esq.) of the Rev. John Keigwin, second son of
John Keigwin of Mousehole, co. Cornwall, by Margaret, daughter of John
Giffard of Brightley, co. Devon, Esq. and Joan, his wife, daughter of Sir
John Wyndham, of Orchard Wy ndham, ancestor of the Earls of Egremont.
Of the Families of Nicolas, Keigwin, and Busvargus, an account will be
found in the fourth volume of Burke's " History of the Commoners"
glnnf. — Ar. afesse engr. in chief three eagles displ. Gu. quartering Harris, Blau,
Keigwin, and Busvargus ; and impaling Davison, viz. Gu. a stag tnppant Or.
dtxttt — A fetterlock or, the fetter passing through a plume of five ostrich feathers,
alternately ar. and gu.
&Ufl]K>rteVt (as G.C.M.G.). — On either side, the Sept-Insular lion, vis. a lion guard,
with wings elevated, holding in the fore-paw a hook and seven arrows, with a glory
round his head, all Or.
IHottO.— Pttria cara oarior fides.
Campbell, of 3uta, co. atgpil
Colin Campbell, of Jura and Craignish, Esq. Heritable Keeper of Craignish
Castle, bears the quartered Coat of Argyll, as representative of a junior
branch of the Lochnell line of the Noble House of Argyll. The Campbells
of Lochnell are the latest Cadets of Argyll, and, in default of male descen-
dants of John fourth Duke of Argyll, heirs to the titles and estates.
ATOM.— Quarterly, first and fourth, gyronny of eight sa. and or. Second, ar. a boar's
head couped ppr. Third, ar. a galley sa. sails furled, and oars in action ppr.
CrWt — A hand holding a spear ppr.
JQotto. — Audaces jovo.
Prior, ofiaatftDotonep*
Andrew Redmond Prior, Esq. formerly Accountant General of the Irish
Post Office, (son of Andrew Murray Prior, of Rathdowney, Esq. High
Sheriff of Wicklow in 1777, by Frances, his wife, sister of Lodge Evans
Morres, Viscount Frankfort de Montmorency, and grandson of John Murray,
Esq. who assumed the surname and arms of Prior on succeeding to the
estates of Thomas Prior, of Rathdowney, Esq. the celebrated Founder of the
Royal Dublin Society,) descends from, and bears the arms of, the ancient
family of Prior, which was established in Essex so far back as the time of
Henry III., and became subsequently located in the counties of Oxford,
Lancaster, and Cambridge.
flrtttf. — Sa. on a bend enn. three chevronels gu. betw. four stars of eight points wavy
or. In right of his wife, Katherine, youngest dau. of Sir John Call, Bart. Mr. Andrew
Redmond Prior impales the arms of Call and Batty.
€Trrf t.—A star, as in the Arms.
/Hotle.— Malo mori quam fccdari.
DAVID FRANCIS ATCHERLEY.
MAlTOX. CO. SALOP. . 3IRJEANT AT LAV.
THE REV. JOHN EDWARDES.
CILESTOS MANOK CO. GLAMORGAN.
SIR HARRIS NICOLAS. C.C.M.C.
COLIN CAMPBELL, ESQ
JL'BA < O. ARGYLL
ANDREW REDMOND PRIOR. ESQ.
gt:ELK8 CO. IRELAND.
V
PLATE XVII.
TBroton, of TBeilbp (©range-
These Arms were confirmed by the Herald's College to the present William
Brown, of Beilby Grange, co. York, and Richmond Hill, co. Lancaster, Esq.
one of the most eminent Merchants of Liverpool, and to his brothers, George
Brown, of Baltimore, John A. Brown, of Philadelphia, and James Brown,
of New York, the four sons of the late Alexander Brown, of Baltimore, in
Maryland, North America, Esq.
flrm*.— Gu. a cher. or, betw. two lions' gambs in chief ar. and four hands conjoined
in base of the second : on a chief engr. gold, an eagle displ. sa.
Crist — A lion's gamb, erect and erased, ar. holding a hand ppr.
J&ottO. — Est Concordia fratrum.
ffiftatroeil, of TBeadb ^ouge,
George Waddell, of Beach House, Walmer, co. Kent, Esq. bears for
flntf . — Erm. a fesse cbequy ar. and az. in chief two martlets of the last.
Crrtt — A lamb couchant ppr. surmounted by a demi eagle displ. or.
Haulier, of jFountain ©all, TBart.
Sir Thomas Dick Lauder, of Fountain Hall, co. Haddington, Bart, as lineal
male representative of the family of Lauder Tower and Bass, and, through a
female, of Dick of Braid and Orange, bears the quartered Coat of Lauder
and Dick ; and carries, on an Escutcheon of Pretence, in right of his wife,
the only child and heir of George Cumin, of Relugas, Esq. the Arms of the
ancient Family of Cumin.
flnil — Quarterly, first and fourth, gu. within a double treasure ar. a griffin segreant
of the last, for Lauder. Second and third, ar. a fesse as. betw. three mullets gu. for
Dick. On an Escutcheon of Pretence the Arms of Cumin.
tfrettf . — First, out of a tower ar. masoned, and portcullis down, sa. the head and
•boulders of a sentinel, in a watching posture ppr. for La u deb. Second, a stag's head
erased ppr. attired or, for Dick.
$UJ>port* ri.— Two lions ramp. ar.
JBottOf*. — Below the Arms, Ut migraturus habita. Over the Lauder Crest, Tunis
prudentia Gustos. Over the Dick Crest f Virtuti.
&lf flttbretD lAUtoer, of Fountain Hall,=j=Isabel, onlv child and heir of $21 1 litem
fifth Bart. I Bicfc, of Grange, Esq.
I '
Sir Andrew Dick Lauder, of Fountain Hall=j= Elizabeth, dau. of Thomas Brown, of John-
and Grange, died in 1820. I stonburn, Esq.
&ir CtSWflS Btit lAUftrr, of Fountain Hall, seventh and present Dart.
PLATE XVII.
!Roget0, of Partington.
Francis Rogers, of Yarlington, co. Somerset, Esq. descended, on strong
presumptive evidence, from the Rogers's of Eastwood, co. Gloucester, quarters,
with his own paternal Coat, the Arms of Robinson, Lloyd, and Pickering.
Ann*. — Quarterly, first, erm. three bucks trippant sa. on a chief wavy as. aa many
acorns slipped or, for Rogers. Second, vert, a chev. betw. three tracks trippant or, for
Robinson. Third, sa. three nags' heads erased ar. for Lloyd. Fourth, arm. a lion
ramp. az. langued and crowned or, for Pickering.
Crest — A buck's head erased sa. attired or, on the neck a bendlet wavy of the last,
charged with three acorns vert, in the mouth a slip of oak fructed ppr.
JUtsttO. — Justum perficito nihil timeto.
Cf)0ma* ItOofttSOIt, Esq- born at Hull 4=pU0T0ttfi WtfUtiXtq, an heiress of the
Feb. 1693, son of William Robinson, of
Kingston-upon-Hull, Esq,
r-
Pickerings of Yorkshire, to. 17 July
1717.
Pickering Robinson, of Rawcliffe, Esq. ft^Mary-Anne, dau. of nomas Uto$0, Esq.
in 1726, m. 21 Aug. 1753, d. 21 June d. 27 Oct. 1761, and was buried at the
1775. Savannah.
r
Anne-Reynolds Robinson, dan. and soIe=
heir: and eventually heiress of her great
uncle, Samuel Lloyd, of Friday Hill, co.
Essex, Esq. m. 10 Nov. 1774.
= JofW ICogm, of Yarlington Lodge, co.
Somerset, Esq. only son of Thomas Ro-
gers, of Besford Court, near Worcester,
Esq. by Mary Englesby, his wife. Mr.
Rogers was High Sheriff of Somerset-
shire in 1804. He died 28 Feb. 1821,
aged 78.
Jf raittt* Kogett, of Yarlington, co. So-epCatherine-Elizabeth, eldest dau. of Benja-
merset, Esq. 6. in 1784, m. in 1815.
Pbesent head or the family.
min Bickley, of Ettingshall Lodge, co.
Stafford, Esq.
Thomas Englesby Rogers, B.A, eldest son Other issue,
and heir.
Du$)e0, of <ZE!p Douse-
Robert Hughes, of Ely House, near Wexford, Esq. a Magistrate for the
County, son of the late Abraham Hughes, Esq. by Jane, his wife, youngest
daughter of Colonel Robert Clifford, of Cromwellsfbrt, represents an ancient
Welsh family, and bears their Arms. The first Settler in Ireland was
Abraham Hughes, a gentleman of Cambrian descent, who accompanied
Cromwell to Ireland, and acquired, by marriage, the estates of Ballytrent
and St. Margaret's.
Arms.— Or, on a chev. sa. betw. three griffins 1 heads erased gu. as many mullets
pierced of the field.
€Trot— A griffin's head erased gu.
fdotfS. — Verus amor patriae.
ciu tvoMAS DICK LAUDEP n » DT
FOUNTAIN HALL.
FKAKCIS ROGERS. ESQ
TAKL1KCTON. CO SOMERSET.
KOBERT HIGHES. ESQ
ELY HOlTaE. WEX^R1».
L-udi.L E+lwirl Climi^. Li. IUR-:
PLATE XVITT.
Datrie^ of <£ton tyoutfe*
}ww Davtbs, of Eton House, co. Kent, Esq. of the Family of Davies of
Jwtsahbt, bears a Shield of Sixteen Quartering^.
Inn- Quarterly :—
1. Go. on a bend ar. a lion pass. sa. for Da vies of Gwysanet.
II. Quarterly, first and fourth, Ar. three boars' head couped sa. langued gu. tusked
or, for Cadwoan ap Elystan ; second and third, Gu. a lion ramp, reguard.
or, for Elystan Glodrydd.
HI. Per bend sinister, erm. and ermines, over all a lion ramp, or, for Tudor
Trevor.
IV. Sa. a chev. betw. three fleurs-de-lis ar. for Collwyn ap Tanono.
V. Quarterly, first and fourth, Gu. on a chev. betw. three goats' heads erased or,
three trefoils slipped vert, for Ithel Velyn ; second and third, Az. a lion
pass, or, for Llewelyn Aurdorchoo.
VI. Or, a lion ramp. as. for Cadwoan, Lord of Nannau.
VII. Quarterly, first and fourth, Gu. a chev. or, a chief erm. for Sir Griffith Lloyd ;
second, Gu. a chev. erm. betw. three Englishmen's dead heads couped in
profile ppr. for Ednyped Vychan ; third, Gu. a Saracen's head erased at the
neck ppr. wreathed about the temple sa. and ar. for Marchudd ap Cynan.
VIII. Vert, a lion ramp, or, for Haynes.
IX. Ar. a cinquefoil as. for Mutton of Llanerch.
X. Per pale sa. and ar. semee of cross crosslets counterchanged of the field, thereon
an eagle displ. with two heads or, the whole within a bordure engrailed of the
last, for Sir Hamo Vaughan.
XI. Ar. a lion ramp. sa. debruised by abendcompony or and as. for Burlet of Male-
burst.
XII. Sa, three towers embattled ar. for De Tour of Shrewsbury.
XIII. As. three preeds (small lamperns) haurient in pale ar. for Pride of Shrews-
bury.
XIV. Go. seven lozenges vairl, three, three, and one, for Sir John de Buroh.
XV. Or, a lion ramp. gu. armed and langued of the first, for Sir John ap William,
Lord of Mswddwy.
XVI. Quarterly, first and fourth, Two bars gu. fretty or; second and third, Gu. a fess
betw. six pears erect or, leaved vert, both for Clopton.
Ctfft — A lion's head erased quarterly ar. and sa. langued gu.
JetsttS. Hili Dduw heb ddym Dduw a digon.
PLATE XVIII.
Gronwy, son of Cuftor
CtfUor, Lord of Whit-
tington.
Cwhelyn ap Iforr^i&fjeingar,
dau. and
JofMI 9rtHf t of
Shrewsbury.
Jfo^n ap CHtUtatt. Lord
of Mawddwy, great*
great grandson of Grif-
fith ap Gwenwynwyn,
Prince of Powys-wen-
wynwyn.
«H»«tan (ffirlote
rfifcH, Prince
of Ferlys.
T
Sir ft an no^augti an,
Lord of the Manor
of West Tilbury,
co. Essex.
312&illiam=T=Jane,
treCour,
ofShrews-
bury.
CaotD^an ay «H8*tan,
Prince of Ferlys.
1
dau.
and
h.
Elizabeth, dau .=j=Sir ftttri If
' Bttrrf, Rut.
«»(Uteltt=f=Isa
Cynric Efell,=f=Gole,
LordofEgl-
wys Egle.
From whom do-
dau.
and
h.
Reginald=pdau.
de Mut- and
ton.M.P. h.
in 1373.
f- * r-
Buries*
of Male-
hurst,
co. Sa-
lop, Esq.
bel,
dau.
and
h.
and co.-h. of
her brother,
Foulk, Lord
of Mawd-
dwy.
derived from
Hubert ds
Burgh, Earl
of Kent.
Sir John de=pJoan, dau. and
Burgh, Lord
of Mawd-
dwy.
Thomas^Agnes, dau.
Mytton, and h.
Esq.
Meilor ap Grono
-Gwenllian, dau. and co-h. of
Ievan ap Meredith, of Hen
Llys in Cefn-y-Farm, 6th in
descent from ColllDJtl at)
CangitO, Founder of the V
Noble Tribe of North Wales
and Powys.
Llewellyn ap==Mali, dau. and heir of Madoc
prom woom w$*
riotd
Thomas
co-h. of Sir
Q&tUtatt
ClDptUB, of
Clopton,Knt
Esq.
Shrewsbury
1472.
Mytton,=pEleanor, dau. and
M.P. for
in
heir.
David, of Gwy-
saney, co. Flint.
From whom do-
ap Bleddyn, of Lees wood,
8th in descent from Jft)el
Velfilt, Lord of Yale; ob.
9th Edward IV.
Robert Davies,^=Ann, only dau . and heir of j|of)tl
of Gwysaney,
Esq.; burUd
29 Jan. 1633.
AasttrK, Esq. Receiver to
Queen Elisabeth of her Re-
venues in Wales, who d. 27
May, 33 Elizabeth; buried
31 Aug. 1636.
William Mytton, of Shrews-
bury, Esq. Lord of Mawd-
dwy.
Fro
Sir
VtUt AtttttMl, Knt. of
Llanerch.
T
Robert Davies, Esq .=?= Anne, dau. and co-h.
Mutton Davies, of Gwysaney and Lle-^Elieabeth, dau. of Sir Thomas Wilbra-
nerch, Esq.
Oct. 1684.
b. 19 Feb. 1634, d. 29
ham,
Bart.:
of Woodhey, co. Chester,
buried 3 April, 1678.
Robert Davies, of Gwysaney
and Llanerch, Esq.
Margaret, dau. of Owen^Thomas Davies, Esq. b. 1660,
Madoc, Gent. m. 1687, d. 1697.
Rev. Owen Davies, 6. 1689, m. 1714,==Jane, dau. of William Lloyd, Esq.
d. 1766.
Owen Davies, Esq. 6. 1715, m.
Sept. 1756, <*. 1805.
9=j=Ji
ane, dau. of James Stockell, of West-
bury, co. Salop, Gent.
Thomas Davies, Esq. seated at Tre-e=Margaret, dau. of John Peploe, of
fynant, co. Denbigh, 6. 8 Nov.
1757, d. 24 Jan. 1840.
Salop, Gent. <L 24 Jan. 1809, aged
49.
Thomas Davies, Esq. Lieut.
Engineers E. I. C/s S. 6. 7
Nov. 1789, hilled in action
at Malegaum, in India, 10
May, 1818, unm.
Frederics Wilhelmina, dau. ofeOwen Davies, Esq. seated at
Samuel Cutler Hooley, Esq.
only son of James Hooley,
of Woodthorpe, co. Notts,
Esq.
Eton Hall, co. Kent, b. 4
Nov. 1796, m. 4 Nov. 1826.
Owen, b. 1 Nov.
1831.
Thomas, 6. 2 Feb.
1833.
Margaret. Mary Hooley.
1
Fred erica.
PLATE XVIII.
®abt>, of a^onmoutiw&ite*
Thb present Representative of the Family, the Rev. James Ashe Gadb,
Rector of Shire Newton, bears his Paternal Arms, quartered with those of
Ashb, being descended maternally from D'Esse, D'Essecourt, or Ashe, a
Family which was established in England at the Conquest, and from which
derived the Ashes of Clyst Fornyson, Heytesbury, Freshfield, Langley, &c.
In right of his wife, Mary Anne, daughter of Frederick Secretan, of Arcadia
House, Esq. Mr. Gabb impales the Arms of Secretan.
ftrttt. — Quarterly, first and fourth, Barry of six or and az. an inescutcheon or, on a
chief of the second a pile of the first, charged with three pales, also of the second, for
Gabb. Second and third, Ar. two chev. sa. for Ashe.
Cftit — Out of a ducal coronet a harpy, wings expanded and ducally gorged.
JatOttO.— Nullius in verba.
Join *«tt. Esq.
d. in 1690.
: Elisabeth, dau. of Henry Baker, of Abergavenny, Esq. repre-
sentative of the ancient family of Baker, which possessed large
estates in Monmouthshire, Herefordshire, and Gloucestershire,
temp. Henry VII. Henry VIII. Edward VI. Mary, Elizabeth,
James I. Charles I. Charles II. and James II. Mr. Baker was
lineally descended from Sir Roger Vaughan, of Bredwardine,
co. Hereford, Knt. and his wife, Gladdys, dau. of Sir David
Gam, knt ; and also from Rhys ap Twdwr Mawr, King of
Sooth Wales.
T
mouth, Esq.
Thomas Gabb, Esq =A lice, dau. of Henry Feneux, co. Kent, Esq
Winchester, and Vicar of Cheriton, co. Hants.
James Gabb, Esq^Cbarlotte, dau. and co-h. of the Rev. Kobfft ftaljf , Prebendary
^ ofW -.--...
Monmouth, Esq.
J of
Jamtf &0|f €raM,=f=Mary Anne, dau. of fttDtrick &ecretAlt, of Arcadia House, co.
Rector of Shire " "* ~
Newton,co.Mon-
mouth, present
representative of
the family.
Issue.
Catipon, of Ctegrefmn,
Edward Carlton, of Tregrehan, co. Cornwall, and Greenaway, co. Devon,
Esq. Lieutenant-Colonel in the Army, bears, as representative of the Car-
lyons, a Shield of Twelve Quarterings, derived from intermarriages with the
Families of Hawkins, Scobbll, Trbdbnham, &c.
ft HW.— Quarterly :—
I. Sa. a plate between three castles ar. each charged with a cross crosslet gu. for
Cabltok.
II. Ar. on a saltire sa. fire fleurs-de-lis of the field, for Hawkins.
III. Per pale ar. and gu. three fleurs-de-lis and a label in chief counterchnnged, for
Scobell.
IV. Ar. seven lozenges in bend gu. for Trbdkniiam.
V. Gu. a fesse, and in chief three lozenges enn. for Tihrel.
PLATE XVIII.
VI. Ar. within a bordure gu. three wiverns in pale vert, for Enys.
VII. Or, a chev. sa. in chief two cinquefoils, and in base a mullet of the second, for
Killowb.
VIII. Ar. three battle-axes ppr. for Gwavab.
IX. Carlyon, as first quarter.
X. Or, a lion ramp. gu. for Pomerot.
XI. Ar. a fesse vaire" between two lions pass, guard, sa. for Hooker.
XII. As first.
CfWt. — A demi lion ramp. gu. ducally crowned or, collared ar. holding between his
paws a bezant.
Jttotto.— -Turris tutissima Virtus.
., only dau. of Sir Edward
Seymour, Bart, and Bister of Sir
Edward Seymour, Speaker of the
House of Commons ; d. in 1730.
Sir Jfotftfty Crttrrnjsm. of Trego-^pElizabeth,
nan, Knt. Governor of St. Mawes
Castle, 6. in 1642, and d. in 1706,
lineally descended through heir-
esses of Cirtfl, &im, and WiiU
ICobe, from John de Tredenan,
•• Dominus de Tredenan, 1 ' at a very
early period.
Mary Tredenham, second dau. and=p^ranc(0 &CottU, of Menagwins,
co-heir. Esq. M. P.
Elizabeth Scobell, elder* dau. and
heir.
00-ef='
Elisabeth Hawkins, dau. and co-heir.
WUp pfcatofUlrt, of Pennans, co.
Cornwall, Esq.
Mtta* CarlgOlM of Tregrehan,
Esq.
The Rev. Thomas Carlyon, of St
Just, in Roseland.
r.«yCt>
dau. and co-heir of QsBtlltABi
tStoafaatf, Esq.
>tr-r-Annei
Thomas Carlyon, of Tregrehan, Esq^Mary, only dau. and heir of QSItl?
Sheriff of Cornwall in 1802 ; <L 16 Itam Catty Otl, of St. Austell, Esq.
Dec. 1830, and is buried at St.
Blazey, where a very handsome
monument has been erected to his
memory.
by Elizabeth, his wife, dau. and co-
heir of the Rev. jtotyll 90tttrO&,
by domoftna feoofctr.
Lieut.-Colonel tiRfoatft Carlson, of=?=Anna Maria, elder dau. of Admiral
Tregrehan and Greenaway. j Spry.
fLATE JTT.
OWEN DAVIES.ESQ.
OF THE HOUSE OF CWYSANtY.
1EV JAMES ASHE GABB
SHIRE NEWTON. CO. MONMOUTH.
LT COL»> CARLYON.
TREGREHAN. CO. CORNWALL.
/.oljVc i.aw*.~\:
O^p-j.'il.'L S M .„c vi 1 - h'-
*
PLATE XIX.
anbetftm, of 3e*monl> Douse.
Thb Andersons of Jesmond House, co. Northumberland, were settled in
Newcastle from the time of Elizabeth until about the year 1620. The late
Johx Anderson, of Jesmond House, Esq. who died in 1829, left, with three
daughters, four sons, Thomas, now of Jesmond House ; Matthew, of Jes-
mond College, J. P.; Jambs-Crosby, who died in 1837; and John, of
Coxlodge, near Newcastle, J. P.
Arm*. — Vert, three bucks lodged or.
Ctfit — A bock lodged, holding in his mouth an scorn leaved, and wounded in the
breast by an arrow.
JstfttS. — Nil desperaodum Auspice Deo.
©utton, of €Uon,
George William Sutton, now of Elton Hall, co. Durham, Esq. (whose
patronymic is Hutchinson) assumed the surname and arms of Sutton in 1822.
He quarters the Ensigns of Sleigh and Bathurst, as representative, through
his great-grandmother, Mary, of the Arkendale branch of the ancient Kentish
family of Bathurst, whose chief is Earl Bathurst.
flnti — Quarterly, first and fourth, gu. a tower or, thereon a stork ar. for Sutton.
Second, gu. a cher. betw. three owls ar. beaked and legged or, for Sleigh. Third, sa.
two bars erm. in chief three crosses formle or, for Bathubst.
Crtft — On a mount vert, a stork ppr. charged on the breast with a cross pattee gu.
the dexter claw supporting a rose of the last, surmounted of another ar.
JetOtti. — Fidelis usque ad mortem.
d«rl*0 V*n)ttTft, of Glints, Scut-apFrances, dau. of Thomas Potter, of
terokelfe, and Arkendale, Esq.
living in 1712, M.P. for Richmond.
Leeds, Esq.
Charles Bathurst, Mary, sister and co- Jane, sister and co- Frances, sister and
Esq. High Sheriff heir, m. QSItlUaitt heir, ro. William co-heir, ro. Francis
of Yorkshire, <L SbUM t of Stock- Turner, ,of Kirk- Foster, of Buston,
i. p. in 1740. ton, Esq. leatham, Esq. co. Northumber-
land, Esq. and had
issue.
-X
Charles Bathurst Sleigh, of Stockton^Mary^dau. and eventually sole heir
and Arkendale, Esq. ro. in 1757. | otWBUXliam &tttton, of Elton Hall,
Co. Durham, Esq.
Elisabeth Caroline Sleigh, dau. andapjohn Hutchinson, Esq.
eventual heir, m. in 1800.
n=r=n
andaj=Jo
George William Sutton, now of Elton Hall, Esq.
TBopD, of jetton l>ail
Edward Botd, of Merton Hall, co. "Wigton, Esq. a Deputy- Lieutenant of
that shire and of Kirkcudbright, as Representative of the Boyds of Merton
Hall, derived, in direct descent, from William Boyd, Abbot of Kilwinning,
PLATE XIX.
younger brother of Sir Thomas Boyd, ancestor of the Boyds, Earls of Kil-
marnock, bears the ancient Coat, Crest, and Supporters of that Noble family.
flriltft. — As. a fesse chequy ar. and gu. .
Cre0t — A dexter hand, couped at the wrist, erect, pointing with the thumb and the
next two fingers, the others turning down,
&unportm— Two squirrels ppr.
JRottO.— Confido.
k, one ofcpJo
of King
Sir Thomas Boyd, of Kilmarnock, one ofc^Joanna, dan. of John Montgomery, of Ar-
the Hostages for the Ransom of King | dr
James I. in 1424.
Sir Thomas Boyd, of Kilmarnock, ancestor William Boyd, Abbot of Kilwinning, who
of the Boyds Earls or Kilmarnock, the received • dispensation from Rome,
last of whom, bearing the title, suffered King James III. gave him a Charter
on Tower Hill in 1745, for his partici- confirming the grants of the Crown to
pation in the rising of that memorable that Abbey, and. erecting the lands into a
year. Regality. His representative is the pre-
sent tfbtoarto 09ffe, of Merton Hall,
Esq.
Ducfeett, of Duckctr* tfrotie*
John Dawson Duckett, of Duckett's Grove, co. Carlow, Esq. bears nume-
rous Quartering^, derived from the intermarriages of his ancestors from very
early times. He is eldest son of 'the late William Duckett, of Dnckett's
Grove, Esq. by Elizabeth, his wife, dau. and co-heir of John Dawson Coates,
of Dawson Court, co. Dublin, Esq., and representative of Thomas Duckett,
Esq. the first settler in Ireland, son, by his third wife, of Jambs Duckett, of
Grayrigg, co. Westmoreland, Esq. twelfth in lineal descent from Richard
Duckett, Lord of the Manor of Fillingham in 1205. A younger branch of
the family, bearing the same Arms, was of Hartham House, co. Wilts, and
is now represented by Sir George Duckett, Bart.
3trtlt0. — Quarterly, first and fourth, sa. a saltire ar. charged with a crescent gn. for
DucRsrr. Second and third, as. a chev. erm. betw. three arrows or, barbed and feathered
ar. ; on a chief of the last as many birds sa. ; a canton gn. charged with a mullet of the
third, for Dawson.
Cmtff. — First, out of a ducal coronet or, a plume of five ostrich feathers ar. for
Duckett. Second, a cat's head full faced and erased near the shoulders ar. spotted sa.
holding in the mouth a rat of the last, for Dawson.
iBsttO. — Spectemur agendo.
&atirin, of iftetoton &ou*e.
These Arms and Crest were granted in 1618 to Robert Harbin, of Newton
House, co. Somerset, Esq. and are now borne by his descendant, George
Harbin, of Newton House, Esq. who is great-grandson, by Abigail, his wife,
daughter and heir of Richard Swayne, of Gunville, co. Dorset, Esq. of
Wyndham Harbin, of Newton, Esq. who was son and heir, by Elizabeth, his
wife, daughter of Sir Francis Wyndham, of Trent, co. Somerset, Bart, of
William Harbin, Esq. fourth in descent from Robert Harbin, of Weeke, co.
Dorset, and of Newton, co. Somerset, Esq. born in 1526.
Arm*. — Ax. a saltire voided betw. four spears' heads erect or.
gTrtft. — A hand and arm, vested, ppr. holding a spur or.
JOHN DAWSON DUCKETT. ESQ
Dl'lKETTS CMOVE. CO TAMLOV.
GEORGE HARBIN. ESQ.
NEVTOK HOI SE. l.O .SOMERSET.
lar.J.- £ihri-.: l-at^ H-.i.*- >.,.-. ..*•..,. .iv<h '*;.»:•: . tf-VA
PLATE XX.
tfalton.
Thesb Arms are borne by Samubl Tbbtius Galton, of Daddeston House,
co. Warwick, Hubert John Barclay Galton, of Warley Hall, co. Salop,
and John Howard Galton, of Hadzor House, Esqrs. sons of the late Samuel
Galton of Duddeston, Esq. by Lucy, his wife, eldest daughter of Robert
Barclay, of (Jry, co. Kincardine, Esq. M. P.
flrnt*. — Erm. on a fesse engr. gu. betw. six fleurs-de-lis of the second, an eagle's
bead erased ar. betw. two bezants.
Cmt — On a mount vert an eagle erm. looking op at the sun or, its claws resting
on a fleur-de-lis gu.
^ftflttfl, — Gaudet luce videri.
atiamtf, of aginmeton $all
Edward Hamlin Adams* of Middleton Hall, co. Carmarthen, Esq. High
Sheriff of that county in 1 832, and Knight of the Shire in Parliament in
1833-4, is son of the late William Adams, Esq. by Elizabeth Anne, his wife,
daughter of Thomas Coxeter, Esq. grandson of Thomas Adams, Esq. by
Margaret his wife, daughter of Thomas Maxwell, great-great-grandson of
Carlaveroche, Earl of Nithsdale, and great-grandson of William Adams, Esq.
by Frances, his wife, daughter of Thomas Walrond, Esq. and Lady Frances
Hackett, his wife, daughter of Sir Jonathan Atkins, Knt. Governor of Bar-
bados from 1674 to 1680.
Arm*. — Ar. on a cross gu. five mullets or.
€Tre*t — Out of a ducal coronet or, a demi lion aflfrontle gu.
iHuttO. — Aspire, persevere, and indulge not.
iBptftegea, of tfce $tll, jFteaftfotti,
Samubl William Bythbsba, of The Hill, Fresh ford, co. Somerset, Esq.
bears a Shield of Eight Quarte rings, and impales, in right of his wife, Mary-
Agnes- By thesea, younger daughter of the late Charles Brome, of Mailing
House, West Mailing, co. Kent, Esq. the Arms of Brome, Hodges, and
Saxdford.
flnW.- Quarterly :—
1. Ar. on a chev. engr. betw. three crabs, the claw* towards the dexter gu. the
Roman fasces erect, surmounting two swords in saltire, and encircled by a
chaplet or, for 13 y these a.
II. Ar. a chev. engr. gu. for Chi vers.
III. Quarterly, Per fesse dancettee gu. and or, for Bromley.
IV. Ar. on a chev. gu. five bezants, all within a bordure engr. of the second, for
ChITTLETON.
V. Ar. on a fesse sa. betw. six fleurs-de-lis gu. three cross crosslets or, for
Clifton.
VI. Gu. on a chev. ar. three roses gu. for Brock.
VII. Ar. a bend or; on a chief ar. a saltire engr. gu.betw. two Cornish choughs ppr.
Y11I. Sa. a lion ramp. betw. six cross crosslets ar. all betw. two Haunches erm. for
Long.
PLATE XX.
Cmt. — An eagle displ. ar. on the breast the Roman fasces erect surmounting two
swords in saltire, and encircled by a chaplet ppr. each wing charged with a cross
crosslet fitcbee gu.
JattfttO. — Mutare vel timere sperno.
CtOttfttf Ifromleg, of Cheshire, son=r=Maiy, dan. and eventual heir of Sir
of Sir Thomas Bromley, Lord Chan-
cellor of England, who was great-
grandson of Roger Bromley by his
wife, the dan. and heir of Sat) ft
iSr*C, and serenth in descent from
William de Bromley, by Anne, his
wife, dan. and heir of /HAtttjeto tot
C|ft titan and Johan, his wife, dau.
and heir of H&tUtam He CllftOtt.
gjtfttfi fAimntr, Knt. son of Henry
Vinonr, by Mary, his wife, dan. ana
heirofUoiertlUng.
flnntdtnottr, daughter and co-heir.=pThe Rer. &libtt dfrtr*, Preben-
| dary ofBarom.
j J
Mary Chrrers, dan. and co-heir, d. in=r=Th omasBythesea, of Compton Bishop,
1672.
I
Esq.
John Bythesea, of Week House, co^pHester Halliday, of Bradford.
WUts, Esq. J. P. 6. 1672, d. 1747. |
John Bythesea, of Week House an<
Chapmanalade, Esq. d. 1769.
Thomas
idWJane,
dan. of the Rev. Thomas Leir,
d. in 1782.
Bythesea,
of Week House,
Esq. J. P. d. in
1783: his son
and successor is
the present Rev.
Bptfjewa, of
Week House.
Henry, J. P. for=
* Wilts, m. three
times ; by his first
wife he had no
issue.
William, of Samuel,
Chapmans- cLunm,
lade, m. Ca- 26 May,
therine,dau. 1830.
of the Rer.
Thomas
Cobb,andd. The Rer'. Henry Frederic Bythesea,
in 1795. Rector of Nettleton.
Fanny ,dau.=pA.nne,
of Thomas
Whittaker,
Esq. 2nd
wife.
dau. of
John
Budd,
of
Green-
ham,
Esq.
3rd
wife.
Jane,
m. to
Simon
Ham-
day,
Esq.
The Rer. George Bythesea,
Rector and Patron of Fresh-
ford, co. Somerset.
Samuel William Bythesea, of the Hill,
Freshford, co. Somerset, Esq. J. P.
for Wilts and Somerset.
a&icfcell, of jrotcett $all
John Michbll, of Glassell, co. Kincardine, and Forcett Hall, co. York, Esq.
bears for
Arm*. — Per cher. gu. and sa. a cher. betw. three swans ar.
Ctef t — On a mount ppr. a swan ar.
/BottO. — Ferar onus et idem.
\
Colt, of & attsberrie.
The Family of Colt was established in Scotland by Blais-Coult, who fled
from France daring the persecution of the Huguenots, and became Professor
in the College of St. Andrews. His great-great-grandson, Sir Robert Colt,
an eminent Lawyer, was Solicitor to James VII. The representation of the
Family now vests in John Hamilton Colt, of Garthsherrie, co. Lanark, Esq.
flnttff. — Ar. a stag's head erased gu. betw. the attires a pheon az.
CtfUt. — A dexter naked arm embowed, holding in the hand an arrow in bend
sinister ppr.
Atftt*.— Transfigam.
J OHM HOWARD CALTON, ESQ
IU4D1 ROUEC, *TO VOlCtlfU,
EDWARD HAMLIN ADAMS. ESQ.
UiDDLbTON HALL. CO. CARMARTHEN.
L WILLIAM &VTHE*E
ILL HftaHFOtn. CO.
JOHN MICHELL. ESQ
FORCETT HALL, CO. YORK.
JOHN HAMILTON COLT. ESQ
CARTHSHER1E. CO. LANARK.
PLATE XXL
HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS
au>ett*<£moatti, Prince of males, »♦<£>♦
BORN AT BUCKINGHAM PALACE 9 NOVEMBER, 1841.
The Prince of Wales, as heir-apparent to the Crown, bears the Royal Arms,
differenced by a Label of three points, and an Escutcheon of Pretence for
Saxony, viz. Barry often sa. and ar. a bend trefle vert. His Royal Highness
has likewise the Royal Supporters and Crest, differenced by a similar Label
of three points. The Prince of Wales's Badge or Cognizance, is a Plume of
three white ostrich feathers issuing through the rim of the Royal Coronet,
with the motto, Ich dien, on a scroll entwined at the bottom of the feathers.
" The Prince of Wales having been victorious at the battle of Crescy,
was presented with the Helmet of John of Luxemberg, King of Bohemia*
who was slain in that celebrated field. This Helmet being ornamented with
three ostrich feathers, and bearing the German motto, Ich dien (I serve)
allusive to the said King, who served in person as an auxiliary, the Black
Prince henceforward bore the feathers and motto, and they became the
ensigns of the Princes of Wales." — Burke's General Armory.
-'LJ.IJE J.'.l
PLATE XXII.
TBpam, of antiffua*
The Rev. Richard Burgh Byam, Vicar of Kew and Petersham, co. Surrey,
and Edward Samuel Byam, Esq. bear a coat quarterly of six, which has
been allowed and is recorded in the College of Arms. They are sons, by
Mary, his wife, only daughter of the Rev. Richard Burgh, of Mount Bruis,
co. Tipperary, of William Byam, Esq. Captain 68th Regiment, third son of
William Byam, of Byams in Antigua, ana of Westbourne House, Padding-
ton, co. Middlesex, Esq. Colonel in the Army, and member of the Privy
Council of Antigua, who was second son of Edward Byam, Esq. Governor
of the Leeward Islands, and President of the Council of Antigua, by his
second wife, which Edward was second son of William Byam, Esq. Governor
of Surinam.
flrtt*. — Quarterly, first and sixth, ar. three dragons' heads erased vert, each holding
in its mouth a dexter hand erased ppr. dropping blood, for Byam. Second, sa. a chev.
betw. three spears' heads erect ar. pointed go. for Caradoc Vraicti-Vras. Third, gn.
a lion ramp, reguard. or, for Elystan Glodrydd. Fourth, gu. a tower tripple-turreted
ar. for Powel, Prince of Casrlson. Fifth, vert, a chev. betw. three wolves' heads
erased or, for Elvabch, Lord of Penrose and Brythlyn, co. Glamorgan.
Crtftfi. — First, a squirrel pass, or, collared and chained vert. Second, a dragon's
head erased vert, langued gu. holding in its paws a hand ppr. dropping blood.
l&OttO. — Claris dextera factis. " Y Gwin yn-erbyn y Byd," is the Motto borne by
Edward Samuel Byam, Esq.
Caradoc Vraicji-Vras, Earl of Hereford.
From whom derived I
Rhys Goch, Lord of Istrad.=j=Joan dau. of Elystan Glodrydd, Prince of Fer-
lys, and Founder of the IV Royal Tribe of
I Wales.
r J
Janet, dau. and heir of Howell, Prince of Caerlon.
Kynwillin
From vtkom derived
Grimth=pJanet, dau. and heir of Gronow, ap Treherne,
Jap Blaidde, ap Elvarch, Lord of Penrose in
Monmouthshire temp. William Rufus.
William Byam, Esq. 6. 9 March 1623, Governor of Surinam, whence, on its being ceded
to the Dutch, be removed to Antigua, and was ancestor of the Byams of Antigua, now
represented by militant ISgam, of Cedar Hill, Antigua, and Westwood House, co.
Hants, Esq. and of the other branch of the family now represented by the Rev. !£icjar&
Smrgt ©jam.
abettor*
Charles Mbllor, of Grove Terrace, Chiswick, co. Middlesex, Esq. eldest
son of the late Charles Mellor, of Frith Hall, co. Leicester, Esq. bears for
Arm*.— Ar. three blackbirds ppr. : on an Escutcheon of Pretence the Arms of Wil-
II N SON.
Crrtt. — A stag's head erased ppr.
/BottO.— Fidelite est de Dieu.
Cl>arlf* #UUor, Esq. eldest son of the=p;jf ratues, dau. and co-heir of £tepfteit
late Charles Mellor, of Frith Hall, co.
Leicester, Esq.
Charles
Stephen, of
Llanwrst,
m. Eliza,
dan. of the
Rev. Mr.
Ryle, and
has issue.
3H3HllkmSOn\ Esq. third son of John
Wilkinson, of Hilcote Hall, co. Derby,
Esq.
2. James, Ma-
jor 20th
Native In-
fantry, m.
Anna Ma-
ria, dau. of
Dr.Hugbes
of Dublin,
and has is-
3. Stephen
Wilkinson,
in Holy or-
ders.
4. Abel, E.I.
C. Civil
Service.
5. Abijah, in
Holy or-
ders.
1. Sabina, m.
to John
Cross Star-
key, Esq .of
Wrenbury
Hall, co.
Chester,
and d. i. p.
. Frances,
m. to Capt.
Winter, E.
I.C.S. and
has issue.
3. Maria.
4. Harriet.
PLATE XXII.
iButratn, of malfjampton, co- $ant0, TBatt*
The present Rev. Sir George Burrard, of Walhampton, Bart, succeeded
as third Baronet upon the decease of his brother, the late Admiral Sir Harry
Burrard Nealb, G.C.B., G.C.M.G.; and in 1839 had granted, by Royal
Warrant, the Supporters of his said brother, to descend to his heirs for ever
with the title. '
flrmfi.— Ar. a lion ramp, and in chief two dexter hands gu. over all a Jesse or,
charged with two lions ramp, counter-ramp, supporting between them a hand couped,
all of the second.
CrCSto. — First, a dexter arm embowed, in armour, holding in the hand a sword, all
ppr. Second, a naval crown or, therefrom iasuant a cubit arm erect, encircled by a
branch of oak ppr. the hand grasping a trident in bernl sinister, the points downwards
gold.
J&UJjporterfl.— On either side a lion reguard. ar. standing upon an anchor ppr. sup-
porting a trident erect or, gorged with a naval crown, therefrom a chain reflexed over
the back az.
ittotto. — Persevere.
Ponsonbp, of it>ale $all, co* Cumberland
Miles Ponsonby, of Hale Hall; Esq. is son and heir of the late John Pon-
sonby, Esq. who changed his paternal name and arms of Fisher for those of
Ponsonby^ iir right of his wife, Dorothy, daughter and heir of Miles Ponsonby,
of Hale Hall, Esq. Representative of the senior line of the great and ancient
family of Ponsonby, a junior branch of which was ennobled m Ireland under
the title of Bessborougn.
SltnU. — Gu. a chev. betw. three combs ar.
Cttftf. — On a ducal coronet three arrows, one in pale, and two in saltire, the points
downwards, entwined by a serpent ppr.
iHottO.— Pro Rege, Lege, Grege.
iBtmti, of OTcfe g)ou*e, co< Worcester.
Thomas Henry Bund, of Wick House, co. Worcester, Esq. bears quarterly
with his Paternal Coat of Bund, the Ensigns of Parsons and Johnson, and
on an Escutcheon of Pretence those of Wilmot, in right of his wife, Anne,
daughter and only surviving child and heir of the Rev. Pynson Wilmot,
Vicar of Halesowen, co. Salop.
9rm0. — Quarterly, first and fourth, gu. three eagles 1 legs erased, a la quise, or, for
Bund. Second, az. a chev. erm. betw. three trefoils ar. for Parsons. Third, ar. a fosse
lozengy, betw. three lions' heads erased gu. for Joimsoir.
0* tuttfjeon Of llretatce. — Ar. on a fesse gu. betw. three eagles' heads sa. as many
escallops of the field*
CrC0t. — An eagle's head erased or.
HSlttliam Btttlft, Esq. eldest son and heir=r=Mary, dau. and heiress of Jo(ll |)arf01lf,
of Thomas Bund, Esq. of Overbury, co. Worcester, Esq.
I ' '
Thomas Bund, Esq.=r=Susannah, youngest dau. of Benjamin JofjtWOtt, of Worcester,
I Esq.
CJomafl ftetir» ttttlft, of Wick House, Esq. who m. 16
Nor. 1802, A nne, dan, and only surviving child of the
Rev. Vpnion SHBilmot, Vicar of Halesowen, co. Salop.
«Jfc
TME KIT. RICHARD B0R6H BYAM.
VI CAM OF KEV ft PS TEE 81 AM CO 8UEEET.
CHARLES MELLOR. ESQ.
MILES KWSONBT. ESQ.
RALE BALL. CO. CUMKELAND.
THOMAS HENRY BUND. ESQ.
WICK ROUSE. Ca WOSCESTES .
.rii.lrr. t'.tw-r-l :'t:rt ■>•: '■<*.. H.-
■ ».« •.".!• .V V
PLATE XXIIL
$usb*& of ^toertlas, count? of Q&erioneti),
&ub0equentlp of ftot^Clatolto,
Wiixiam Hughes, Esq. Representative in the Male Line of the Hughes's of
Gwerclas, Barons of Kymmer-yn-Edeirnion, bears a Shield of Sixteen Quar-
tering^
arm*.— Quarterly :—
L Ax. a Ikm ramp, sa. armed and langued gu. (the Royal Anns of Powys), for
Huohx8 of Gwerclas.
II. Ax. a wolf passant ppr. for Cilin ap y Blaidd Rhudd, Lord of Gest.
III. Or, a lion ramp. gu. for Madoc ap Gwenwynwyn, Lord of Mawddwy.
IV. Ar. three boars' heada couped sa. langued gu. tusked or, for Cadwoan, son
of Elystan Glodrydd, Prince of Fferlys.
V. Go. a lion ramp, reguardant or, for Elystan Glodrydd.
VI. Per bend sinister ermine and ermines, over all a lion ramp, or, for Tudor Trevor,
Lord of Hereford.
VII. Ar. a lion ramp. sa. armed and langued gu. for the " Lady or Crooen."
VIII. Or, a lion ramp. az. for Howel ap Meurio, Lord of Nannau.
IX. Ermine, a aaltire gu. with a crescent for difference, for Rooers of Bryntanoor.
X. Paly of eight ar. and gu. over all a lion ramp. sa. armed and langued gu. for
Tudor, Lord or Gwyddelwern, brother of Owen Glendower.
XI. Gu. a lion ramp, within a bordure indented or, for Thomas ap Llewellyn,
Lord or South Wales, Representative of the Sovereigns of South Wales.
XII. Ax. an eagle displayed or, for Philip ap Ivor, Lord or Iscoed.
Xin. Quarterly, or and gu. four lions pass, guard, counterchanged, for Llewellyn ap
Griitith, Prince or North Wales.
XIV. Vert, three eagles displayed in fesse or. for Owen Gwynedd, Prince of North
Wales.
XV. Gu. three lioncels pass, in pale ar. armed as. for Griffith ap Cynan, Kino of
North Wales.
XVI. Ar. betw. four Cornish choughs ppr. armed gu. a cross flory engr. sa. for Wynn
or Pen-y-Clawdd.
Crtf 1 — A demi lion ramp. sa. armed and langued gu. issuing out of a ducal coronet or.
$«990Tter* .— Dexter, a lion sa. as in the Arms ; sinister, a dragon, gu.
Jllstto.— Ityratt^iuCftfirafoii.
PLATE XXIII.
latoQC, last Prince of Powys, son of Meredith,
Prince of Powys, son (by Haer, his wife, dau.
and heir of Ctlm ap v luaftft ttturift, Lord of
Gest-yn-Efionydd, of Bleddyn ap Cynfyn,) King
of Powys, Founder of the 111 Royal Tribe of
Wales, Representative of Mervyn,King of Powys,
third son of Rhodri Mawr, King of Wales, d. 1 160.
Brain Brogyntyn, Lord of Edeirnion, Dinmael, and
Abertanat, in Powys, younger son of Madoc,
last Prince of Powys, living 1 165.
bill* I
Lord <
<5Ipitail <&looT$Mr, Prince of Fferlys, Founder of
the IV Royal Tribe of Wales, son of Cyhetia ap
Ivor, Lord of Builth, by Rhiengar, his wife, dam.
and heir of GumtDg ap CtOlOt Crete?, Lord of
Hereford. =?=
CaJltogan, Lord of Hereford, son of Elystan Glod-
rydd. ==>
rtOtR whom aCftVtd I
| '
Gwerfyl, dau. and heir of=p45rriffit|. Lord of MawsV
Gwrgenas ap Howel,
Lord of Caer-a Chy-
dewen.
dwy-Cyfeilioc, i
son of Meredith,Prines
ofPowys,<2. in USD.
Fnm wA*m derived
I a» j|bor,=T=The Princess Eleanor, dau.jmd
Lord oil scoed
in Caerdigan.
heirof lit tocljn ap tilriffitfj,
Prince of North Wales, de-
rived from <S)tom <$tn&nelft,
Prince of North Wales, son of
ftriffify ap €onan, King of
North Wales.
Iorwerth, Lord of Half==Efa, dau.
Edeirnion, eldest son
of Owain Brogyntyn,
Lord of Edeirnion, in
Powys.
From whom derived
and heir of
UfcOroc, Lord of
Mawddwy, younger
son of Gwenwynwya,
PrinceofPowys-Wam.
wyuwyn.
Joinai ap ttletofljn, Lord of=^The Princess
South Wales, Representative of
the Sovereign Princes of South
Wales, ton and heir of Llewelyn
ap Owen, Lord of South Wales,
by Eleanor, dau. of Henri, Comte
de Barre, by Eleanor, his wife,
dau. of Edward I. of England.
Eleanor Goch,
dau. and co-
heir.
Ievan ap Llew-=pMargaret,
elyn Ddu,
III Baron of
Kymmer-yn-
Edeirnion.
Lady of Crogen/* liv-
ing under age 44 Edw. I II. ass.
and heir of iletoelff* ft?*!***
Baron of Crogen and Brants,
in Edeirnion, grandson of Grifc
fith, Lord of Half Edeirnion, tir-
ing a. d. 1200, 2nd son of Owaa
Brogyntyn, Lord of Edeirnion.
•irath Vychan, Lord of Glvn-=f=The Lady Ele- Rhys ap Ievan ,=T=Angharad, dau. and heir of
Iwrdwy, in Merioneth, Repre-
enutive of ftrfffflt i&arlor,
-ord of Bromfield, eldest son of
fflafcoc ap JRmbitt, last
'rinoe of Powys, whose ances*
or was ttleMtyn ap Cfitiffin,
ting of Powys.
anor, dau
and heir.
IV Baron of
Kymmer-yn-
Edeirnion, and
of Crogen and
Branas.
t&Of ap ©ttffitf} V»rtan,=Maud, dau. and
Lord of Gwyddelwern, in
Merioneth, 2nd son, Brother
Df Owen Glendower; up-
wards of 24 years old 3 Sept.
10 Rich. II. when he ap-
peared as a witness in the
Borope and Grosvenor con-
troversy.
h. of Ieuaf ap
Howel,derived
from Tudor
Trevor, Lord
of Hereford
and Whitting-
ton.
David ap Rhys,=
V Baron of
Kymmer-yn-
Edeirnion.
iffith ap Einion, of Cors-y-ge-==Lowrie, dau.
dol. derived, through OsWlt and heir,
if itfgeraUl, Lord of Ynys-y-
Maengwyn in Merioneth, from
Walter Fits Otho, progenitor of
the Ducal House of Leinster.
From vkem derived
Griffith Vaughi
ap David, VI
Baron of Kym-
mer-yn-Edeir-
feotoel ap &Uurit Vvt}***
Lord of Nannan, in Merio-
neth, derived from Cadwgsa,
Lord of Nannau, younger soa
of Bleddyn ap Cynfyn, King
of Powys.
Mali, dan. of Ievan, Unmg 6
Henry VI. son of Einum as
Griffith, of Coraygedol, d»-
rived from Osbora Fitsgeraldl
Lord of Ynys-m-Maengwya.
:Margaret, dan. of William as
Meredith, of Mochnsnt-ya-
Rhaiadr, derived from Eines
EfeU, Lord of Eglwys Egis.
William ap Grif-=pMargaret, dau. of Meredith ap
fith Vaughan,
VII Baron of
Kymmer-yn-
Edeirnion.
hn Rogers, =Catherine, dau. of John Wynn, of
£sq. of Bryn-
angor,
Denbigh.
Brynglas Lloyd and' Plas
Enion, co. Denbigh, Esq. de-
rived from Osborn Fitzgerald,
Lord of Ynys-y-Maengwyn.
Hugh ap WU-
liam, VIII Ba-
ron of Kym-
mer-yn-Edeir-
nion, living 27
Feb. 1546.
David, of Melai, co. Den-
bigh, derived from Marchndd,
Lord of Brynffenigl.
:Alis, dau. of Richard ap Tho-
mas, of Caervalwch-yn-Iistt-
ynys, derived from Llowareh
Holbwrch.
Richard Hughes,=p Frances, dan. of Iovanni Volpe,
of Gwerclas-
yn-Edeirnion,
Esq. X. Baron
of Kymmer-
yn-Edeirnion,
d. 21 March,
1641, xtat. 80.
an eminent Italian, establish*!
in England temp. Elizas**,
m. 2 Nov. 1601, d. 29 Jaw.
1636.
PLATE XXIII.
Rogers, <
Magdalen
31 Aug. 1602, died 20 Oct/1655.
ofBryntangor, dau. and heir, born= Humphrey Hughes, of Gwerclas in Edeirnion, co.
Merioneth, Esq. XI Baron of Kymmer-yn-Edeir-
nion, born 14 Aug. 1605, mar. (set. 10) Aug. 13,
1615, bur. 4 May 1682.
Hughes, of Gwerclas and H endreforfydd,= Margaret, dau. of Thomas Griffith, of Plas Enion, co.
Esq. Capt. in the service of Charles I. ; b. 1 Sept.
1628, o. d. p. 2 April 1670.
John Hughes, Esq. 2nd;
son jested at Kymmer-
yn-Edeirnion, 6. 28
An«;. 1662, m. 3 Nov.
1693, drowned 1 July,
1604.
Denbigh, Esq.
Duel Hughes, Esq..
R e p resen tative in the
■ale Hue of the
Hughes's of Gwer-
dat, Barons of Kym-
sasr-yn-Edeirnion, 6.
2 July. 1694, m. 14
Feb. 1740, d. 14 Aug.
1754.
Hughes, of Pen-y-
Csnrdd, Esq. b. 25
J«*e,1742,».22July,
1764,4.29 April,1784.
WilKssn Hoghes, of Pen-=
y-Ckwdd, Esq. b. 8
Feb. 1779, m. 27 Mar.
1800, a?. 18 Jan. 1836.
Witts**:
Dorothy, dau. of Ro-
bert Lloyd, of Plym-
og, co. Denbigh, Esq.
d. in child-birth 2 July,
1694.'
Catherine, dau. and heir
of the Rev. Joljn
SHBjmtt, of Pen-y-
Clawdd, co. Denbigh,
d. 2 April, 1760.
:Mary,dan. of John Jones,
of Plas-Hen, co.
Montgomery, Esq. 6.
16 February, 1739-40,
d. 10 February, 1823.
^Elizabeth, dau. of Tho-
mas Davies, of Trefv-
nant, co. Denbigh,
Eaq.
Hugh Hughes, of Gwer-
clas and Bryntangor,
Esq. XII Baron of
Kymmer-yn-Edeirni-
on, 6. 31 July, 1659,
bur. 2 April, 1725.
Dorothy Hughes, of=
Gwerclas, dau. and
heir, ro. Dec. 1724, d.
27 Aug. 1732.
^Dorothy, dau. of Thomas
Yale.ofPlas-yn-Yale,
co. Denbigh, Esq. b,
20 January, 1650, liv-
ing 25 Oct. 1725.
=Edward Lloyd, of Ply-
mog, co. Denbigh,
Esq. derived from Ed-
nyfed Vychan, Lord
of Brynffenigl, dm 16
May, 1742.
^Margaret, dan. and heir
of Richard Walmesley,
of Coldcoates Hall, co.
Lancaster, and of
Bashall, co. York,
Esq. Representative of
the Talbots de Bashall,
d. 26 May, 1800.
Richard- Hughes Lloyd, ==Caroline, dan. of Henry
Hugh- Hughes Lloyd, of-
Plymog and G wer-
clas, Esq. 6. 22 Oct.
1725, ro. 18 April,
1766, d. 31 March,
1788.
of Plymog, Gwerclas,
and Bashall, Esq. h. 4
Nov. 1768, m. 9 Oct.
1798, d. 24 Jan. 1822.
Thompson, Esq. d. 23
Nov. 1816.
uftpril,
1801, iau
11 J^f.
1835.
EKsa-Anne, dan. of
William-Henry
Worthtngton, of
Sandiway Bank,
co. Chester, Esq.
Thomas
Hughes,
M. D. 6.
22 Ang.
1603.
John Hughes, Esq. =f= Dorothea, eldest dau.
"" of Richard-Hughes
Lloyd, of Plymog,
co.Denbigh, Gwer-
clas, co. Merio-
neth, and Bashall,
co. York, Esq.
of the Inner Tem-
ple, Barrister -at -
law,6.6Oct.l805,
m. 5 July, 1832.
Wflfissn O'Famll,
b. 18 Feb. 1838.
Frances Elizabeth
Margaretta.
Richard-
Walmesley
Lloyd, Esq.
o. 3 Ang.
1801, and
other issue.
Talbot de Bashall Hughes,
b. 15 Dec. 1836.
PLATE XXIII.
Part, of llptfrtooou, co< €>alop*
Thomas Parr, of Lythwood Hall, co. Salop, Esq. bears the ancient Coat of
the Parrs of Kendal, and, on an Escutcheon of Pretence, the Arms of
Walter, in right of his wife, Katherine, daughter and co-heir of the late
Robert Walter, Esq. Captain R. N. The Parrs of Lythwood descend from
a younger branch of the family of Parr of Kendal, whose Representative
temp. Henry VIII. was William Parr, the celebrated Marquess of North-
ampton, brother of Queen Katherine Parr.
flhffltg. — Ar. two hars as. a bordure engr. sa. a crescent for difference, an escutcheon
. of pretence, ar. guttle de sang, two swords in saltire gu. oyer all a lion ramp. sa. for
Walter.
• Cre0t.— A female's head couped below the shoulders, full faced ppr. yetted as. on her
head a wreath of roses, alternately ar. and gu.
f&Sttfi. — Amour avec Loyaultl.
©emstoortk of ©fttopftam !0aU 9 co. iSorfirtfu
Henry D'Estebrb Hbmsworth, of Shropham Hall, co. Norfolk, Esq. a
Magistrate for the Counties of Norfolk and Suffolk, and a Deputy Lieutenant
of the former, is second son of the late Thomas Hemsworth, of Abbeyville, 00.
Tipperary, Esq. by Mary, his wife, daughter of Henry D'Esterre, of Ros-
maugher, co. Clare, Esq. In right of his wife, Jane Maria, daughter and
co-heir of General James Hethersett, he bears on an Escutcheon of Pretence
the Arms of Hethersett. The Hemsworths, settled in Ireland since the
middle of the seventeenth century, were originally of Hemsworth, co. York*
flrttttf . — Per saltire ar. and or, a leopard's face sa. On an escutcheon of pretence
the Arms of Hethersett.
CrC0t — A dexter arm emhowed in armour, the gauntlet grasping a sword ppr. hilt
and pomel or, transfixing a leopard's face sa.
JQOttO. — Manus haec inimica tyrannia.
WILLIAM HUGHES. ESQ.
MALI REPRESENTATIVE OP THE HUGHES'S OF CWKRCLAS. BAIONS OF KTMMLK - TK - EDEIRNIOK
HENRY D'ESTERRE HEMSWORTH. ESQ.
SHIOPHAM HALL. CO. NORFOLK.
THOMAS PARR. ESQ
LTTHVOOD HALL, CO. SALOP.
PLATE XXIV.
JFi0te$atti0on, of CopforD 5>aii, co< <£mx.
Fiskb GooDKVK Fi8kk-Harri80n, of Copford Hall, Esq. assumed his
additional Surname and Arms of Fiskb on succeeding to the family estate
of his mother, Sarah-Thomas, only child of the Rev. John Fiske, of Thorpe
Morieux, co. Suffolk, by his wife, the dau. and heir of the late Samuel
Thomas, of Lavenham, Esq.
flrotf . — Quarterly, first and fourth, Ax. tiro bars era. betw. six eatoiles, three, two*
and one, ar. Second and third, Ar. three crescents barry undee az. and gu.
Crest. — A stork, wines expanded, ar. beaked and membered or.
JtSottO. — Ferendo et feriendo.
tfttginm, of burton and TButton, co. Durham.
Johit Greg son, of Murton and Burdon, co. Durham, Esq. M. A. Barrister-
at-law, bears the Quartered Coat of Greoson and Allgood, as son and heir
of the late John G reason, of Murton, Burdon, and Durham, Esq. by Eliza-
beth, his wife, only dau. and heir of Lancelot Allgood, Esq. The Family of
Gregson derives from John Gregson, living in 1537, who came from Barton,
co. Lincoln, and purchased die estate of Murton from Lord Lumley.
Arm*. — Quarterly, first and fourth, Ar. a saltire gu. a canton chequy or and az. for
Gbeoson. Second and third, Ar. a cross engr. go. betw. four mullets az. on a chief or
three damask roses of the second, seeded gold, barbed vert, for Allgood.
Crff 1 — An arm couped at the elbow, vested, bendy wavy of six, and environed
round the wrist with a ribbon, ar. and gu. holding in the hand ppr. a battleaxe- or,
handle sa.
Croft, of Cotoltng J£>all, co. gorfc,
ant) 2DoHt)ington, ca- %ent, Bart.
Sir John Croft, Bart. Knight Commander of the Tower and Sword, D.C.L.
F. R. S. is son and heir of the late John Croft, Esq. by Henrietta-Maria, his
wife, dau. and co-heir of the Rev. James Tunstall, D. D. and grandson (by
Lucy, his wife, dau. and heir of Henry Thompson, Esq.) of Thomas Croft, of
London, Esq. who was second son of Stephen Croft, of Stillin^ton, Esq. the
Representative of an ancient Yorkshire Family, of which was Sir Christopher
Croft, Knt. who, when Lord Mayor of York, in 1641, entertained King
Charles I. in his own house.
The present Sir John Croft was appointed Commissioner, in conjunction
with the Portuguese Judge, Senhor Joao Gaudencio Torres, to distribute the
Parliamentary Grant to the Portuguese Sufferers in the year 1811 (vide
Report of Parliamentary Grant, 6 July, 1814), and in 1815, was constituted
Charge des Affaires at Lisbon. The Supporters, borne by Sir John, were
granted by Royal License in April, 1834, in consideration of his eminent
Services while attached to the British Mission at Lisbon in 1811 and 1812,
(vide Parliamentary Report, Southey's Peninsular War, vol. iii. p. 189, and
Gurwood's Despatches of the Duke of Wellington, new edition, vol. iii. p. 652,)
and as Charge des Affaires there in 1815.
flrntf . — Quarterly, first and fourth quarterly, per fesse indented or and gu. in the first
quarter a lion pass, guard, of the second, for Croft. Second and third, sa. three combs
ar. for Tunstall. Impaling (in right of his wife, Anne-Knox, dau. of the Rev. John
Radcliffe, Rector of Limehouse, descended from the ancient and noble family of Rad-
cliffe ), Ar. two bends engr. sa. a canton gu.
Crtftf . — First, a lion pass, guard, or, supporting a shield charged with the arms of
St. George (granted by King Charles I. to Sir Christopher Croft, Lord Mayor of York).
Second, a lion pass, guard, per pale, indented gu. and erminois, the dexter fore-paw
resting on an escutcheon ar. charged with a representation of the star of the Order of
the Tower and Sword ppr.
&tt9f0rtrrf . — On the dexter side, a lion guard, or, gorged with a wreath of laurel
rert, therefrom pendent an escutcheon gu. charged with a tower gold ; and on the
PLATE XXIV.
sinister, a bull sa. horned, crined, hoofed, and gorged with a ducal crown or, therefrom
pendent an escutcheon ar. charged with the Star of the Order of the Tower and Sword
ppr.
iCtottoeg. — Under the Arms and over the first Crest, Esse qnam videri. Over the second
Crest, Valor E Lealdale.
&luppett)0on, of PiDDrnfffjaii #artf) v co- Butfmrn-
Edward Shipperdson, of Piddinghall Garth and Murton, Esq. High Sheriff
of the County of Durham, Representative of a Family which is traceable
among the Records of Halmot Court, Bishop Wearmoutb, to the time of
Edward III. bears a Shield of Six Quartering!?.
ftnit0. — Quarterly, first and sixth, sa. on a bend ar. three lozenges ax. each charged
with a planetary sun in its glory, for Shipperdson. Second, per bend nebulae or and
sa. a Hon ramp, counterchanged, for Sympson. Third, as. six annulets or, three, two,
and one, for Musorave. Fourth, gu. a sword in pale ar. hiked or, in base a serpent
nowed ppr. and on a chief of the third two doves close, beaked and legged of the first,
for Kirsuaw. Fifth, ar. a chev. sa. betw. three fountains ppr. for Sykes.
Crest. — A hand issuing out of a cloud and grasping a sword ppr.
/&0tto. — Nubem eripiam.
tifttoarto $fjipperto0Oft, of Murton, co. Dur-=f=Margaret, sister and sole heir of UMlliaiB
ham, Esq. d. in July, 1707. $itt|>0O1t, of Piddinghall Garth, Esq. d. in
1699.
Ralph Shipperdson, of Piddinghall Garth, Esq.=p Margaret, only child and heir of the Rev. €Tfto=
d. 16 June, 1719. | 11180 f&Uftgrabe, sixth son of Sir William
Musgrave, of Edenhall, Bart.
1-j*
Edward Shipperdson, of Piddinghall Garth ,=j=Margaret, only dan. of George Baker, of Ele-
Esq. I more, Esq.
Ralph Shipperdson, of Piddinghall Garth, Esq .=j= Frances, sister and co-heir of the Rev. Vtrfjarft
d. 8 Nov. 1793. tMrjjjato, Rector of Masham.
Edward Shipperdson, of Piddinghall Garth and Other issue.
Murton, Esq. High Sheriff of co. Durham
1843.
Par&bouse, of <£a»tfietti &ot)ge, co. Dants.
George Park house, of Eastfield Lodge, co. Hants, Esq. Representative of
a junior branch of the Devonshire Family of the same name, impales, with his
own Arms, the Quartered Coat of Armstrong of Gallen, in right of his wife,
Fanny, sister of Sir Andrew Armstrong, of Gallen, King's County, Bart. M.P.
Arm*. — Per chev. embattled vert and ar. in chief two bucks trippant ppr. each gorged
with a collar or, in base a cross flory of the first ; impaling, quarterly, first and Fourth,
ar. issuing from the sinister side a dexter arm habited gu. the hand grasping the trunk
of an oak tree, eradicated and broken at the top, ppr. Second and third, or. three
pallets ax.
<JTre0t. — A buck ppr. charged on the body with three mullets as. the dexter foreleg
resting on a cross flory, as in the Arms.
HftOttO. — The Cross our Stay.
ltat|amilt lJartrt>OU0e.=r=Honoria, dau. of Captain Greenslade, and first cousin of the Poet Gay.
Philip Parkhouse, Esq.=^Hannah, dau. of William Richards, Esq. of Welsh extraction, by Ruth,
his wife, dau. of James Bickham, Esq. whose wife's name was
Escott.
John Parkhouse, Esq. =pMary, dau. of Other issue, Hannah, whom. Captain Cowlev,
' '* " Peter Cor- d. *. p. E. I. C.'s S. This lady was tie
ney, Esq. celebrated dramatic writer, author-
Secretary to the Ar-
cot Commission, d.
14 Sept. 1814.
ess of the " Belle's Stratagem,"
1 Who's the Dupe," &c.
George Parkhouse, now of Eastfield Lodge, co^pAdan. of Edmund Armstrong, of Gallen, Esq.
Hants, Esq. m. 31 March, 1830. and niece of Lord Ashtown.
FISHE GOODEVI FISXE HARRISON. ESQ
COPFOtO HALL. CO ESSEX.
JOHN CRECSON. ESQ
ML'RTON A BUR DOM. CO. DURHAM.
EDWARD SHIPPERDSON. ESQ.
PIOOINCHALL GARTH. CO. DURHAM
r
GEORGE PARKHOrsE. ESg
EA*lT\fc\.b LO\»Ct. \\V&"\*
•>' • ?m,v> '/;:,.■..■ L .... if...
PLATE XXV.
31ones; of llanartf) Court, co« a9onmout&*
John Jones, of Llanarth Court, co. Monmouth, Esq. Representative of the
senior branch of the great House of Herbert, derived immediately from
Howbl, third son of William ap Jenkin, alias Herbert, Lord of G war in dee,
living temp. Edward III. bears a Shield of Twenty Quarterings.
flmw.— Quarterly :—
I. Per pale ax. and gu. three lions ramp. ar. for Jones.
II. Or, two ravens in pale ppr. in chief a label of two points az. for Corbet.
III. Gu. two bends or and ar. for Milo Frrz- Walter, Earl of Hereford.
IV. Gu. fire fusils conjoined in fesse or, for Bernard Newmarch, Lord of Breck-
nock.
V. Ar. on a chief gu. a label of five points or, for William de Vivonia.
VI. As. three escallops or, for William Mallet, Lord of Cory Mallet.
VII. Per pale or and vert, a lion ramp. gu. a canton vaire* or and of the third, being
the Arms of Ferrers, for Marshall, Earl of Pembroke.
VIII. Gu. a bend lozengy or, for Marshall, ancient.
IX. Ar. on a chief az. three crosses pat6e, fi tehee at the foot, of the field, for
Richard Stronobow, Earl of Pembroke.
X. Or, three chev. gu. a label of five points az. for Gilbert de Clare, Earl of
Pembroke.
XI. Gu. three lions pass. ar. for Giffard, Earl of Buckingham.
XII. Sa. three wheatsheaves ar. for Macmorough, King of Leinster.
XIII. Ar. on a cross gu. five mullets or, for Blethin Broadspbare, Lord of
Llanllowell.
XIV. Per pale az. and sa. three fleurs de lis ar. for Gwarinddy, Lord of Llandilo.
XV. Sa. on a chev. betw. three bucks' heads cabossed ar. as many bugles stringed
sa. for Huntley, Lord of Treowen.
XVI. Or, a maunch gu. for Hastings.
XVII. Chequy or and sa. on a fesse gu. three leopards' faces jessant de lis gold, for
Wallis, Lord of Llanarth.
XVIII. Ar. a griffin segreant sa. for Morgan of Penllwyn.
XIX. Sa. a fesse or, betw. three swans ar. membered gu. for Wy borne, of
Hawkswell.
XX. As. on a fesse cottised or, three leopards' faces gu. for Lee, of L an foist.
CtfSt. — A Moorish woman's head, with long hair tied at the end by a button, a
wreath about the head or and gu.
iHottO. — Asgre Ian diogel ei pherchen.
PLATE XXV.
tckrkt-Fi
Herbert Fns-P<
■finer ei Herbert,
Gilbert, s«r-
EariofBnon,
Her etfe
tat, Eari of
BockiDghsm,
mm to Eng-
land with WO-
nun the Con*
queror.
Agnes, dm
of Genei
Wffliftm,
Bishop ef
Ei
Herbert Fits-Hei bci t,
HerbertofW
beriain and Treasurer to King
Henry L and King Stephen.
Jgiis
matter. Eari
of Hereford,
Constable of
England, Lord
of the Castles
of Abergaren-
ny and Bre-
con and the Fo-
rest of Dene.
^ft|*=f=Sibin,
Sibill, dan. and
heir of 8er*
tirs ***«
varrt, Lord
ofBrecknock.
71
Herbert Fits-Herbert, Lord of=pLucy, third dan,
the Forest of Dene, and lired
in the Castle of St. Michael's
in the Forest, d. 1205.
and co-heiress.
2nd wife,
Isabel, dau. and=
coheir of Wil-
liam deBraose,
and widow of
David Llew-
ellen, Prince
of Wales.
I 1st wife,
Peter Fitz-Her-=pAlice, dau. of
bert, Baron of
Berstople,Lord
of Blenlleren-
ny Castle in
Breconshire,
one of the Ba-
rons in Magna
Charta, d.
1235.
JT
Robert Fits-
Roger, a
great Baron
in Northum-
berland, Lord
ofWarkworth
and Clayer-
ing.
Richard Fits-Gilbert, came to=j=Robais,
England with William, and was
at the battle of Hastings— called
Earl Richard.
fStberttr
Earl Gilbert went
into W ales with has
brother Walter.
CUre.=pAdelixa. Walter ds
dan. of
the
Eari of
Clere-
Chw,
He-
ther" Gwemt, hi
Wales, and
founded Tisterm
Abbey, d. a, a.
Richard Fits-
Gilbert, Earl
of Clare, an-
cestor c£ the
Earlaof Gkm-
Hertford.
Gilbert declare^
2nd son, Earl
of Pembroke,
Lord of Chep-
stow and Rag-
land Castles m
Monmouth-
shire, d. A. D.
1149.
Elizabeth*
Beaomoat,
dau.ofRe-
bert, foat
Ear! of Lei-
Richard de Clare,
Strongbow, Earl of Pem-
broke and Striguil, Marshall
of England, Lord of Chep-
stow and Ragmnd.
surnamed^pThe Princess Era,
dan, and h. ef
WttWttt
|IUrrra||,thi
last King ef
Isabel de CUre.^fflUllum fUnWl Eari ef
only
heir.
dan. and
Pembroke, d. a. d. 1219,
buried in the Temple Church.
SibvuTone of t h e . I s B illUW tt JftXTttt, Eari
daughters and Ferrers and Earl of Derby,
co-heirs. <L a. d. 1254.
fe«fi He IftlmfsV
Seneschal of Poi-
tou, Aquitain, and
Guienne.
Maudde Ferrers, co-heir^ William de Vuronia,
of her mother.
Reginald Fitz-Peter, Lord of Blenllerenn;
Castle, Breconshire.
iy=j=J<
MabeH, eldest das,
and co-h. of &BM*
liwm JaUnet, Lord
of Corry
co. Somerset.
named de Fortibus, Lord
of Chewton, co. Somtr-
oan ae Vironia, eldest dan. end co-heir.
John Fits-Reginald,
summoned to Par-
liament as a Baron
1294.
Reginald Fitz-Regi-
nald.
Peter Fitz-Reginald,=j=Alice, dan. and heir of We*
Lord of Chewton. tjui sfrea***ere. Lord of
Llanllowell, in Monmouth*
shire.
Herbert Fitz-Peter^Margaret, dau. of Sir John Walsh, Knt.
Adam Fits-Herbert, Lord of=pChristian, dau. and h. of tttDfrTilt Bee.
Lllanllowen and Betesley.
r
PLATE XXV.
aamaoAdssn,
Joba Iierbert,=pGwenIlMm f dau.
alias Jenkin, j of Sir Aaron ap
Lord of
Werodee, near
Abergavenny.
Sir fflUItrt =pDau. and co-h.
Bledri, Knt.
l af> Jenkin, a/ia#=pGwenlHsn, daughter of
Herbert, Lord Wern- Howell Ichan, Esq.
dee, lived at Perthir,
near Monmouth. |
?\UUtltV, of
reowen, near
Monmouth,
Knt.
offeastings.
Sir Thomas=r=A dau. of Gwn-
Huntley, of
Treowen,
Knt.
David.
daw of
Forest.
the
Sir Robert
naaaiiis,Knt.
Lord of Llan-
arth.
Sir Thomas
Wallis, of
Llanarth, Knt.
WfflianTwallis,
of Llanarth, Esq.
HowelL^Maud. dan. of
Howell ap
Rhys.
Thomas Hunt-=pAhce,
ley, of Tre- l dau. and
owen, Esq. I heir.
. HowelL=j=C
onstance, dan. of Roger
Vychan ap Walter
Sail.
Thomas ap=^=Maud, dau. and
Gwillim. heir of Sir John
Morley, Knt.
Sir William ap Tho- John Tomelin,=j= Margaret, dan.
s, Knt. or Huntley. of John Tho-
mas ap Adam
Herbert.
Darid ap Jenkin, slain at Banbury, fightinff=f=Margaret, dau. and co-heir.
under the standard of his cousin, the Earl
of Pes&broke.
Sir Pmhp Jones, of Treowen, Knt. wss in=?=Elisabeth, dau. of Sir Edward Morgan, of
Ragfand Castle when destroyed by Sir
Thomas Fairfax ; d. 1660.
Llantarnam Abbey, co. Monmouth, Esq.
owen, Esq. d. 1755. I gait, of Penllwyn, co. Monmouth, Esq.
Phihp Jc«es, of Llanarth Court, Treowen ,=pCatherine,yonnge8t sister and co-heir of
mud Penllwyn, Esq. d. May, 1782. | Jof)n QSIgbonte, of Hawkwell Place,
co. Kent, Esq.
Lq= C
John Jones, of Lanarth Court, &c. Esq.=?=Mary, eldest dau. and co-heir of Kfcfjarft
I Witt, of Llanfoist House, co. Monmouth,
I Esq.
Join Jones, of Llanarth Court, &c. Esq^=Lady Harriett Plunkett, only dau. of Arthur
IjLaay Harriett nunicett, only aau. oi Art
James, eighth Earl of Fingall, K. P.
John J
Esq.
Arthur Jones, 23rd R. W. Fusileers.
Edmund Philip.
Gerald Herbert.
Frances Mary.
Mary Louisa.
Heatfee*, of ^etttngfleet ©all, co. Suffolk.
The present John Francis Leathes, of Herringfleet Hall, Esq. is grandson
of Cartaret Mnssenden, Esq. M.P. who took the name and Arms of Leathes,
as heir to his maternal uncle, William Leathes, Esq. many years Minister at
the Courts of Brussels and the Hague. The family of Mussenden came over
with William the Conqueror, and became possessed of the Lordship of Mus-
senden, or, as it is now written, Missenden, in the county of Buckingham,
about that period. Sir William de Mussenden was Grand Admiral of
England temp. Henry I. and founder of the Abbey of Missenden.
flltm. — Quarterly, first and fourth, as. on a bend, betw. three fleurs-de-lis or, as
many muDets pierced gu. for Lbathis. Second and third, or, a cross engr. g u. ; in the
dexter canton a Cornish chough ppr. beaked and legged as the second, for Mussenden.
CrrStS. — First, a detni griffin segreant or, armed and langued gu. for Leathes.
Second, a dove, with an olive branch in its beak, all ppr. for Mussenden.
JRsttSfl.— In ardua virtus, for Leahies; and over the Mussenden Crest, Tending to
peace.
PLATE XXV.
Joftlt JatUMfttlirit, son of John Mussen-=
den, Vicar-General of the piocese of
Down and Connor, <L in 1700.
Saru, dan. of fltam aUaltfg, of Agbat,
resk, co. Antrim : d. in 1736.
Cartaret Mussenden, Esq. who took the=j=Loyeday, dan. of J. Garrod, of the county
name and arms of Lkathes. He was | of Lincoln, Esq.
M.P. for Harwich and Sudbury, and d.
in 1787.
W=f=J
9
George Leathes, of Herringfieet Hall, cos
Suffolk: d. in 1817.
.=j=Mary, <
1 e»<i-
dan. of W. Moore, «f WorcMter,
1. George-
2. John Fran-
3. Henry-
Augustus,
cis, now of
Mussenden,
Lieut-Col.
Herring-
of Guild
96th Regi-
fleet Hall.
House,
ment: d,
tuts*. 1808.
Thorpe, co.
Norfolk.
4. Frederick,
5. Edward,of
1. Louisa
in Holy or-
Norman-
Mary.
ders. Rec-
stone, CO.
2. Harriet
tor of Wick-
Suffolk.
Elisa-
' hampton
beth.
and Rings-
field.
Clarke, of melton place, co. iSortimmpton*
The various branches of the stock of Clarke, Clerk, or Clerke, in Northampton-
shire and the adjoining counties, refer their common origin to the ancient family
of that name situated m Warwickshire as far back as the time of Edward I.
Richard Trevor Clarke, of Wehon Place, Esq. bean a Coat of Six Qoar-
terings, viz. Clarke, Adams, Plomer, Plombr-Clarkb, Child, and Ttmms.
Arm*.— Quarterly, first, ar. on a bend gu. betw. three torteaux as many swam* ax. for
Clarke. Second, enn. three cata*a-mountain pass, in pale as. for Adams. Third, per
cbev. flory counterflory ar. and gu. three martlets counterehanged, for Plomzb. Fourth,
Plomeb and Clarek quarterly, for Plomeb-Clabxz. Fifth, gu. a cher. erm. betw.
three martlets, for Child. Sixth, per cher. engr. or and as. three fleurs-de-lis counter-
changed, for Tymms.
Cref tr-A swan rising ar. ducally gorged and chained or.
illotto. — Erectus non elatus.
ClOftWf Clarke, of Welton, living in=j=
1590.
i
John Clarke, of Welton and Drayton, li
in 1651.
ving=|=
John Clarke, of London and Drayton, Esq.=j=Anne Clarke, his first cousin, 6. in 1632.
Sheriff of London and Middlesex in 1694.
John Clarke, of Drayton and Dayentry,
Esq. m. about "
T
Mary.
Mary Clarke, of Welton Place, sixth child, ■ MM IUaai Storm*, of Walton, Esq.
m. in 1712. I
Frances Adams, second dau. m. in 1742.
Jo|ll 9lomtr, of Stone, oo. Backs, Esq.
brother of Sir William Plomer, Lord
Mayor of London 1781. Sheriff 1774.
John' Plomer, Esq. took the name and anns=v=4ltsr£, dau. and hair of S8Ht%$\a§ C|iHr
J
of CUrfcf by Act of Parliament, 15
George III. 1775, pursuant to the will
of his maternal great-uncle, s?tr|arfe
Clark*, Esq
of London, Esq.
Richard Clarke, Esq. 3rd, or Prince ofcgphihppa, dan, and sole heiress of the Rer.
Wales's Dragoon Guards, m. 1806, d. | tteotff CgBTtt*. Rector of Harpole,
ad Vicar of DaUin " "
Dec. 16, 1829.
i
and
ton.
Icar of DaUington, co. Northamp-
1. Richard Treror
Clarke, Esq. Lord
of the Manors of
Wehon , Daventry ,
and Drayton.
2. John Alexander
Clarke, M. A. in
Holy orders.
3. George-Henry
Clarke, Lieut
R.N.
4. Caroline Char-
5. Mary Su
fLATE .XXV.
JOHN JONES. ESQ
LLANARTH COURT CO. MONMOUTH
JOHN FRANCIS L1ATHES. ESQ
■ UMUMCFLEKT HALL. CO. SUFFOLK.
RICHARD TREVOR CLARKE. ESQ.
VELTON PLACE. CO NORTHAMPTON.
l-.ru-hvi. Kdwud i.."hurt' n:, .: li, IJ. i
iv.«_Ait\i :o.«. V.^V
PLATE XXVI.
*he Rev. Lovelace Bigg-Wither, of Maoydown and Tangier Park, as Repre-
sntative of the ancient Families of Bigg and Wither, bears a shield of twenty-
iree quarterings. He is grandson of Lovelace Bigg, of Chilton Follyatt, co.
Vilts, Esq. who assumed, upon inheriting the Wither estates, the surname and
rms of that family.
Arm:—
I. Quarterly, first and fourth, ar. a cbev. ra. betw. three crescents sa. for Wither.
Second and third, per pale erm. and as. a lion pass. gu. ducally crowned or,
within a bordure engr. of the third, charged with eight fleurs-de-lis of the
fourth, for Bioo.
II. Per pale erm. and as. a lion pass. gu. ducally crowned or, within a bordure
engr. of the third, charged with eight fleurs-de-lis of the fourth, for Bioo.
III. As. a saltire betw. four escallops or, for Wade.
IV. Per bend indented or and az. a pelican in her piety, betw. two fleurs-de-lis
bend wise in each compartment, all count ere hanged.
V. Ar. a cbev. gu. betw. three crescents sa. for Wither.
VI. Or, a lion ramp, double headed az. vulned in the shoulder, for Mason.
VII. Ar. a fosse az. betw. three crescents gu. for Risley.
VIII. Erm. a chief sa. thereon a greyhound pass. ar. for Murden.
IX. Cbequy ar. and gu. on abend sa. three mullets of the first, for Bekering.
X. Ar. a Eon ramp, queue fourchee gu. for Havering.
XI. Az. two bendlets and a chief ar. for Newbald.
XII. Ar. three pellets, two and one, for Delaborne.
XIII. Or, on a bend sa. cotised gu. three mullets ar. for Hawton.
XIV. As. a cross engr. or, an ermine spot in the first and fourth quarters, for Os-
borne.
XV. Gu. sexnee of crosses cross! et fitcbie ar. three crescents or, for Derehurst.
XVI. Gu. three eagles displ. ar. a label az. for Newnham.
XVII. Ar. three torteaux, two and one, for Halberke.
X VIII. Sa. ten billets, four, three, two, and one, or, on a canton of the same a martlet
sa. for Blundell.
XIX. Ar. on a fesse sa. betw. three mullets gu. as many escallops or, for Odingsells.
XX. Ar. two bars sa. in chief three lions' heads erased of the some, langued gu. for
GZALX.
XXI. Sa. a boar's head, couped, over two perpendicular spear-heads ar. for Loker.
XXII. Az. a cbev. erm. betw. three hedgehogs or, for Harris.
XX III. Lozengy ar. and vert, on a bend az. three griffins' heads erased of the first, for
Youno.
Crtft of Wither. — A demi hare erect az. in the month three ears of ripe corn or.
fBottOfS.— 1 grow and wither both together. Pro Rege, lege, grege. Nee habeo :
nee careo : nee euro.
lofcf Uci IMftg, of Chilton=pgj)orot|to' dia - ^» ^ ker _ "sue^ heir of QSHilltam
Follyatt, Wilts, Esq. b.
8 Oct. 1661, son of Rich-
ard Bigg, of Haines Hill,
Berks, Esq.
Q&itQer, of Manydown, Hants, Esq. representative of
Robert Wither, otM any down, Esq. living temp. Edward
III. This lady was entitled by descent to quarter Ma-
son, Risley, Murden, Bekering, Haverino, New-
bald, Delaborne, Hawton, Osborne, Derehurst,
Newnham, Halberu, Blundell, Odinosells, Geale,
and Loker.
The Rev. Walter Bigg, Rector of Wort-=pJailf, eldest dan. and eventual heiress of
ing, Hants, and Fellow of Winchester the Rev. $0$tt jfearttf, by Jane, his
College, b. in 1701, d. 18 June, 1772. first wife, sister of Dr. Young, the Poet.
Lovelace Bigg, of Chilton Follyatt, 6. 4=f=Margaret, second dau. of Bridges Blach-
Aug. 1741; assumed the name and I ford, of Osborne, Isle of Wight, Esq.
annsofS&ttifT. I
Harris Bigg Wither, of Manydown, Esq .=^= Anne Howe, only dau. of the late Bed in g-
b. 18 May, 1781 ; d. 23 March, 1833. fold Bramley Frith, Esq.
The rlev. WLeMott Vtgg4Slit||er, of Manydown and Tangier Park, Hants.
PLATE XXVI.
a0&e, of a0&fietu, co, fl^eatk
Lieutenant-Colonel William Wellbsley Ashe, of Ashfield, is Representa-
tive of the ancient Devonshire family of Ashe or Esse, which was established in
England temp. William the Conqueror; and, as such, bean a shield of six
quarterings.
AmtS. — Quarterly, first, ar. two chevronels sa. for Ashe. Second, vert, a lion ramp,
ar. for Fornyson. Third, go. a cross erm. Fourth, Ar. a bend and three mullets in
chief sa. Fifth, gu. a fesse rair ar. and as. betw. in chief a bezant, charged with an
anchor sa. betw. two stars or, and in base three mullets, two and one, of the last, for
Bailey.
Crest. — A cockatrice or, crested, armed, &c. gu.
IStOttSff . — Abo9$ the Crest, Fight. Below, Non nobis sed omnibus.
ffiQ&ite, of Cfcatlton ^argfmli, co* Dorset.
The present Samuel White White, of Charlton Marshall, Esq. son of William
Driver, Esq. by Anne, his wife, sister of the Samuel White of Charlton Max*
shall, assumed, upon succeeding to his uncle's estates, the surname and arms of
White by Royal License in 1835. The family of White derives from Thomas
White, of Poole, M.P. for Borough, living in 1533.
fltm0. — Ax. on a fesse betw. three greyhounds courant or, collared gu. as many roses
of the last, slipped ppr.
Ctff t — A dexter arm, embowed, couped above the elbow, vested or, cuff ar. the
hand holding by the legs an eagle volant ppr. beaked gold, betw. two roses slipped, ss
in the arms.
iltOttO. — Virtus omnia vincit.
Samuel Q®fj(U, of Charlton Marshall,=~Ann Thomson, niece of Sir Peter Thorn
co. Dorset, Esq. mat-great-grandson
of Capt. Samuel White, and Edith, his
wife, heiress of John Watson, of Charl-
ton, Esq.: d. in 1791.
son, of Poole, co. Dorset, F.R.S. and
F.A.S. High Sheriff of Surrey in 1745,
and M.P. for St. Alban's.
Samuel White, of Charlton Marshall, Esq. m. Ana Ann White^WiDsim Driver,
Linthorne, and d. i. p. in 1822, aged 62. j Jbq.
$amuel 9t2£f)ite Q&f)itt, of Charlton Marshall, co. Dorset, Esq.
I'LATL XJVl.
THE REV LOVELACE BIGG-WITHEK. M. A.
OK MAXYDOWX * TAKCltR PAKK, HANTS.
LIEU. COL. WILL- WELLESLEV ASHE
A8HFIELD. CO. MEATH.
SAMUEL WHITE WHITE. Eb(J.
CHASLTOK MARSHALL, CO. DORSET.
PLATE XXVII.
Cooite.
William Tooke, of Russell Square, Esq. F.R.S. Vice-President of the Society
of Arts, <fec. descends from the ancient family of Toke or Tooke, of Bere, co.
Kent,
Mr. William Tooke, and his elder brother, Thomas Tooke, of Spring Gar-
dens, Esq. F.R.S. are the only sons of the late Rev. William Tooke, F.R.S.
author of " The Life of Catherine II., M and of other valuable works relating to
Russia; by Elizabeth, his wife, daughter of Thomas Eyton, of Llangynhafal, co.
Denbigh, Esq. a descendant of the ancient Flintshire family of Eyton of Lees-
wood.
8nBf . — Per chev. sa. and ar. three griffins' beads erased, counterchanged, impaling
in right of his wife, Amelia, dau. of Samuel Shaen, of Crix, parish of Hatfield Peverell,
co. Essex, Esq. the Arms of Shaen, viz. Or, three piles issuant from the chief gu.
within a bordure engr. erm.
Cttft — A griffin's head erased, per chev. sa. and ar. holding in the mouth a tuck
sword ppr. pomelled or.
fitUttO.— Militia Met Multiplex.
Mffin*, of Crafalgar part, Co. a^apo*
Charles Fitzgerald Higgins, of Trafalgar Park, Esq. quarters in right of his
mother the arms of Ouseley. Paternally he derives from the very ancient Irish
family of Higgins or O'Higgins, descended from Hyginus, 3rd son of Milesius
Prince of Biscay.
9nH. — Quarterly, first and fourth, ar. guttee sa. on a fesse of the second three towers,
double turretted or, for Hiooins. Second and third, or, a chev. sa. betw. three holly
leaves vert, a chief of the second, for Ouseley.
Cmt— Out of a tower, double turretted, sa. t demi griffin ar. holding in the dexter
paw a dagger of the last, hilt and pomel or.
JstOttO.— Pro Patria.
fitwt<s fciggtaf, of Westport, co.*«=jttarff, only child of 51® (Hi am <B>u*eIes,
Mayo, Esq. a magistrate for that county
ana for the county of Galway, 6. 6 Jan.
1789, m. 22 Feb. 1811.
of Rushbrook, co. Mayo, Esq. (of the
family of the Right Hon. Sir Gore Ouse-
ley, Bart.) by Marianne, his wife, sister
or the late M . G. Prendergast, of Bally-
fair, Esq. M.P. for Galway.
CtKUf^ittgttal&Jatfggtllf, George -Gore -Ouseley Hig- Mar- Mary. Ellen-
of Trafalgar Park, co. Mayo, gins, Esq. late civil service garet. King.
Esq. J. P.m. Amelia Vertue, Jamaica, a magistrate for
only dau. of Sir Richard Paul the county of Mayo.
Jodrell, of Sail Park, co. Nor-
folk, Bart.
PLATE XXVII.
Cftapman, of OTntfcp ®tranti, co* potfc.
Thomas Chapman, of Whitby, and of Montagu Place, Bryanston Square,
London, Esq. Justice of the Peace for the county of Middlesex, eldest son of
the late Edward Chapman, of Whitby, Justice of the Peace, and Deputy Lien-
tenant of the North-Riding of Yorkshire, Esq., by Martha, his wife, daughter
and co-heir of Thomas Holt, Esq., quarters Temple, Sheppey, Everton, Heritage,
Gaskin, Holt, and Stockton ; and impales the arms of Hanson, in right of his
wife, Maria-Louisa, youngest daughter of the late John Hanson, of The Rookery,
Woodford, and of Great Bromley Hal), co. Essex, Esq.
Anns. — Quarterly, first, per cher. ar. and gu. a crescent counterchanged, for Chap-
man. Second, ar. two bars sa. each charged with three martlets or, for Temple. Third,
as. a cross or, fretty gu. for Sheppey. Fourth, ar. on a fesse sa. three mullets of
the field, for Everton. Fifth, ar. on a pale sa. a demi lucy erect, cooped or, for Gas-
kin, having on a canton ar. three blackbirds ppr. for Mellar. Sixth, vert, three trunks
of trees raguly and erased ar. for Stockton. Impaling or, a chev. chequy ar. and as.
betw. three martlets sa. for Hanson.
CrtUt — An arm, embowed, habited in mail ppr. cuffed ar. holding in the hand ppr.
a broken tilting spear or, enfiled with a chaplet vert.
fBtattO. — Crescit sub pondere virtus.
SBRiIIurm CJapraanv
of Whitby, co. York,
Esq. 6. 19 April 1646,
d. in 1720.
iHarj, dau. and heir of BSilltam MUmplt, Esq. formerly
of Sheriff Hutton and Temple Sewerby, son of the Rev.
Thomas Temple, D.D. Vicar of Battersea in 1634, who
was second son of Sir William Temple, Knt. Provost of
Trinity College, Dublin, and uncle to Sir William Temple,
Bart, the great statesman. Through this alliance with an
heiress of Temple, the Chapmans are entitled to quarter
CempU, ^ftrppec, (Pbertim, and Rentage.
Abel Chapman, of Whitby, Esq . b. 22 Oct.=pElizabeth, dau. of John Walker, of Whitby,
1694, d. 13 Oct. 1777. Esq. ; second wife.
r — . 1
John Chapman, of Whitby, Esq. 6. 27=,=Jane, dau. of John Mellar, Esq. by Jfcmt,
May 1732, <L 5 Jan. 1822. I dau. and co-heir of iffiltUtam Gs&kin,
Esq.
I '
Edward Chapman, of Whitby, Esq. J. P~=j$tart(a> eldest dau. and co-heir of do*
... ., . _.•. *.. ma»ftoIt, of Whitby, Esq. by ertlrr,
his wife, dau. and co-heir of JfMOt
&tOCfctolt, of Hawsker HsH, co. York,
Esq.
and D. L. of the North Riding of York-
shire; b. 1 Sept. 1769, d. 22 Jan. 1836.
ITfjoma* Chapman, of Whitby, co. York,=l£tar(a ftOUfea, youngest dau. of J s|it
and of Montagu Place, Bryanston J$at!80f!, of The Rookery, Woodford,
Square, London, Esq. F.ILS. ana F.S.A. and of Great Bromley Hall, co. Essex,
J. P. co. Middlesex. Esq. J. P. and D. L. co. Middlesex, and
High Sheriff in 1795.
arfctorifffct, of OTUewlep, co* Derbp*
Sir Richard Arkwright, (to whom we owe the compilation and completion
into a connected whole of the different parts of the invention called the Spinning
Frame,) born at Preston, co. Lancaster, in 1732, obtained a grant of armorial
bearings from the Heralds* College. Sir Richard, who was Sheriff of Derby-
PLATE XXVII.
ihire in 1787, died in 1792, and was succeeded by his son, the late Richard
Arkwright, of Willersley, Esq. who died in 1843, leaving several sons and
laughters.
8tm.— Ar. on a mount vert, a cotton tree fructed ppr. and on a chief az. betw.
two bezants, an inescutcheon of the field, charged with a bee volant ppr.
Cttft — An eagle rising or, in the beak, pendant by a riband gu. an Escutcheon
as. thereon a hank of cotton ar.
£fatto. — Multa tuli fecique.
®urnep, of ftestoicfc, co* jRorfirtlu
Hudson Gurnet, of Keswick, Esq. F.R.S., Vice-President of the Society of
Antiquaries, bears a shield of four quartering^, viz. Gurney, Gournay, War-
re*, and Barclay. The family of Gurney, or Gournay, derived its name from
the town of Gournay in Normandy, and was established in England by Hugh
de Gournay, Lord of Gournay, one of the Barons of William the Conqueror,
irho had large possessions in Norfolk. The Gurneys of Keswick descend from
a younger branch of the Harpley and West Barsham line, which deduced its
lineage from Mathsw de Gournay, temp. Henry 11. who obtained from Hame-
line Plantagenet, Earl Warren, that nobleman's kinswoman, Rose, daughter of
Reginald Fit* Philip, of the House of Warren, in marriage, and with her the
Manor of Harpley. Sir John de Gurney, who was in arms against Henry HI.
at the Battles of Lewes and Evesham, attended Prince Edward to the Holy
Land, and bore for Anns " Arg. a cross engr. gu." a coat borne ever since by
the Norfolk Gurneys.
sltm. — Quarterly, first, ar. a cross engr. gu. Gurney. Second, paly of six or and az.
GovmjfAT. Third, chequy or and az. a crescent ar. charged with a cinquefoil sa. War-
man. Fourth, as. a chev. and in chief three crosses patee ar. Barclay.
Cftftf. — First, on a chapeau gu. turned up era. a fish paleways, ar. with its head
downward. Second, a wrestling collar or.
Jtoftp} ©TirttfS, of Ke8wick,=pHannah Middleton.
second son of John Gurney, of j
Norwich, d. 1750.
John Gurney, of Keswick, d.=pEUzabeth Kett.
1770.
I 1st wife. 2nd wife.
Richard Gurney, of Keswick , ^flgotfta, dau. and heir ofBabtto ttar*=y= Rachel, dau. of Osgood
difdinl811
flag, of Youngsbury, co. Herts.
Esq. by Martha, his wife, dau. and
heir ot John Hudson, Esq.
H anbury, Esq.
PtEfeSM ' <£srnej>, of=Msrgaret, dau. of the late Robert Barclay, Richard H anbury Gur-
Keswick, Esq. F.R.S. of Ury, N. B. Esq. by his wife, Sarah ney, Esq.
V.P.8.A. .Ann A Hard ice, of Allardice, heiress of
line of the Earls of Airth and Monteith.
ruTT. xmi
WILLIAM TOOKE. ESQ.
F R S VM*. 5*K\AitTS
CHARLES FITZGERALD HIGCINS. ESQ.
IUUALCAM fAlU, CO. U A TO
1 ill 1 P| .. U TfQBK
ARK WRIGHT OK WILLERSLEY.
CO. OLKBT.
HUDSON GLKNEX F>Q. F.K.S. V.P. S. ANT.
hLSWJCK. CO. NOHJOLK.
'.-v«^n V-.n..\. :. . ,^.\\
PLATE XXVIII.
DenUp, of Dorfciitff, co* ©urtep,
Samuel Dendy, and his brother, Arthur Dendy, both of Dorking, co. Surrey,
Esqrs. bear a quartered Coat, viz. :
flriBS. — Quarterly : first and fourth, quarterly, vert and erm. a griffin segreant, betw.
four escallops, three in chief and one in base, or. Second and third, quarterly, az. and
or, in the first quarter a mullet of the second.
CttSt- — On a mount vert a swan ar. beaked gu. resting its dexter claw on a pheon
ppr.
iHotto. — Per ardua stabilis esto.
Cfearnocfc, of Cfoarnocfc, co. Lancaster.
The family of Charnock was seated at Charnock as early as the reign of King
John (Visitation of Lancashire). In the Harleian MSS. No. 1437, Charnock
is shewn to quarter "Az. a cross moline, crowned, or," for Molyneux of Crosby,
Adam Charnock having married, temp. Edward II. Joane, daughter and co-heir
of Sir Richard Molyneux, of Crosby, Knt. and to bear on an Escutcheon of Pre-
tence, first and fourth, az. a cross moline or, for Molyneux of Sefton ; second and
third, ar. three boars' heads, erased and erect, sa. for Booth, of Barton, Thomas
Charnock having married Bridget, daughter and heir of John Molyneux (brother
of Sir Richard Molyneux of Sefton), by Dorothy, his wife, daughter and co-heir
of John Booth, of Barton, co. Chester, Esq. The representation of the family
of Charnock of Charnock now vests in Susanna, daughter and sole surviving
heiress of Peter Brooke, of Astley, co. Lancaster, Esq. who was great-grandson
of Richard Brooke, Esq. (second son of Sir Richard Brooke of Mere, Knt.) by
Margaret, his wife, daughter and heir of Robert Charnock of Charnock. This
lady (Susanna) married, first, Thomas Townley Parker, of Cuerden, Esq. ; and
secondly, Sir Henry Philip Hoghton, of Hoghton Tower, Bart.
ftim.— Quarterly, first, ar. on a bend sa. three crosses crosslet of the first, for Char-
wool. Second, as. a cross moline, crowned, or, for Molyneux of Crosby. Third, az. a
cross moline or, for Molyneux of Sefton. Fourth, ar. three boars' heads, erect and
erased, sa. for Booth of Barton.
CtYft — A lapwing or plover ppr.
JRottO.— Soies content.
lBatclap*aUatt)ice, of (Hrie ant) aUarWce*
Robert Barclay-Allardice, of Urie and Allardice,. Esq. is male representa-
tive of the Barclays of Urie, descended from Roger de Berkeley, Lord of
Berkeley Castle, co. Gloucester, before the Conquest. As heir general of Prince
David Earl of Strath era, son of Robert II. King of Scotland ; of Malise
Graham Earl of Monteith ; and of William Earl of Airth, Mr. Barclay Allardice
claims the Earldoms of Strathern, Monteith, and Airth ; and his Case is
still depending before the House of Lords.
PLATE XXVIII.
arm*.— Quarterly :—
I. Ar. a chev. and in chief three crosses patee ar. for Babclat of Urie.
II. Ar. a fesse wavy gu. betw. three boars' heads erased sa. for AixAKDicsof Allardice.
III. Quarterly, first and fourth, or, on a chief sa. three escallops of the first, for Gsaham.
Second and third, or, a fess chequy ar. and am. in chief a cbsr. gu. for Stuabt,
Earls of Airth and Monteith.
IV. Or, a lion ramp, within a double treasure, iory and oounter-4ory go* s Utl of
three points ar. for Prince David of Scotland.
£>ttMMorUr8. — Two wild men with clubs, ppr.
CteSt — A mitre, or.
Jttotto. — In cruce spero.
JUmff, of Jptesbato, co, ©ants.
" Sable, semee of crosses crosslet, a lion ramp, ar." has been for a long series
of generations the Armorial Bearing of the family of Long of Wiltshire, settled
at a very remote period at Wraxall, and afterwards at Draycot, by marriage with
the heiress of Cerne. The Coat bears a strong resemblance to that of the Preux
family, " Sa. semee of crosses crosslet or, three lioncels ramp, ar.* 9 and supports
in some degree the tradition mentioned by Camden of the origin of the Longs,
from a younger son of the house of Preux, which was seated at Gidley Castle,
co. Devon, soon- after the Conquest. The Longs of Preshaw derive from a
cadet of the Wraxall family. Their present Representative is Walter Lokg,
of Preshaw, Esq. High Sheriff of Hants in 1824, who impales the Arms of
Carnegie in right of his wife, Lady Mary Long, eldest daughter of William, 7th
Earl of Northesk, G.C.B. Admiral of the Red.
Stum. — Sa. semee of crosses crosslet, a lion ramp. ar. impaling, for Gaknsois, or,
an eagle dispU sa. armed and membered gu. charged on the breast with a naval crown
gold : over the eagle the word Trafalgar.
tittftft* — Ont of a ducal coronet or, a demi lion ramp. ar.
iHottO. — Pieux quoique preux.
This family derives from John Fowle, of All Cannings, co. Wilts, Esq. brother
of William Fowle, M.A. of Oriel College, Oxford, and Rector of All Cannings.
William, son of Thomas Fowle, of Market Lavington, co. Wilts, Esq. (by
Bridget, his wife, one of the daughters and co-heirs of Richard Legge of Market
Lavington aforesaid), bears the Arms here depicted, being grandsoa of Michael,
youngest son of the above John Fowle, Esq. and grand nephew of William
Fowle, Esq. formerly of Wiltshire Estate, Jamaica.
grutt. — Quarterly, first and fourth, gu. a lion pats, guard, betw. three rosea or.
barbed and seeded ppr. for Fowls. Second and third, as. a stag's head cabosiad ar. an
annulet for difference, for Legos.
©tWtS.— First, out of a ducal coronet or, a dexter ami, in armour, embowed ppr.
garnished, and holding a battle-axe in bend or, the hand ppr. for Fowls. Second, out
of a ducal coronet or, a plume of five ostrich feathers, three ar. two as. for Lsoos.
i&OttO. — Boutes en avant.
£&6,.
SAMUEL DENDY. ESQ
DOIK IN C-. t ■ K L t
CHARNOCK OF CHARKOCK.
CO LANCASTER.
ROBERT BARCLAY- ALLARDICE. ESQ.
UHT AND ALLARlUCt.
,^£u
v^V
WALTER LONG. ESQ.
PRE* HAW, HANTS.
WILLIAM FOWL* ESQ.
/.-.". i-L. -■/-.*:■■ S. .. t.i:
PLATE XXIX.
3£afteto, of iLlanoaff, %t. tteto, ano
tfie Heetoarti JiaflarUiiaf*
For the genealogy of this ancient family, no longer (since the death of Francis
Mathew, Earl and Viscount of Llandaff) to be found in the peerage, see
Burke's Landed Gentry.
The Engraving exhibits the Arms and Quarterings of Captain George
Mathew, of the Coldstream Guards, representative in Parliament for Athlone,
and subsequently for Shaftesbury ; who married Anne, only daughter and heir
of Henry Hoare, of Stourhead, co. Wilts, Esq. (by Charlotte, daughter of Sir
Edward Dering, Bart) only son and heir of Sir Richard Colt Hoare, Bart, and
of Hester, his wife, daughter of William, Lord Lyttelton and Westcote, and
eventually sole heir to her mother, Mary, daughter and coheir of James Macart-
ney, of Longford, Ireland, Esq.
The quarterings borne are very numerous, but those habitually used, are :
Struts.—
I. and VI. Quarterly, first and fourth, sa. a stork ppr. ar. within a bordure of the
second, for Starkey, assumed on the marriage of Jenkyn Mathew, of Llandaff,
with Lucia, sole heir of William Starkey, Esq. brother to Sir Humphrey Starkey,
Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer 10 Henry VII. Second and third, az. two
mullets or, for the Barony of Van Leemput, borne from the marriage in Sept. 1682,
of General Sir William Mathew, K.B. Captain General of the Leeward Islands,
with the Baroness Catherine Van Leemput, heir of the historical Dutch family of
that name, descended from John Van Leemput, Burgomaster of Utrecht, Plenipo-
tentiary on behalf of the United Provinces to the Prince of Orange, by his wife
Catherine de Berghes, Lady of Essendelles (niece of George de Berghes, Prince
Bishop of Liege) the celebrated Heroine of Utrecht.
II. Ar. three roses purpure, seeded or, barbed vert, a chief of the second, a crescent
for difference, for Sparrow.
III. and IV. Quarterly, first and fourth, or,'a lion ramp. sa. armed, &c. gn. for Mathew,
of Llandaff. Second and third, or, three chevrons gu. for Clark, borne from the
marriage of Sir Ievan ap Meiric, Knight of the St. Sepulchre, (great grandfather
of Sir David Mathew, of Llandaff, Grand Standard Bearer of England at the
battle of Towton) with Cecily daughter and heir of Sir Robert de Clare, second
son of Richard, Earl of Clare and Hertford, descended from the sister of King
William the Conqueror.
V. Quarterly, first and fourth, gu. on a chev. or, betw. three bezants as many crosses
formee fitchee sa. ; second and third, gu. three men's heads affrontee ppr. for
Smith, of the Leeward Islands, quartering Williams.
VI. As first.
Captain Mathew bears an Escutcheon of Pretence in right of his wife, viz.
I. and VI. Sa. an eagle displayed with two heads ar. an ermine spot on the breast,
within a bordure ar. for Hoars, of Stourhead, Bart. II. Ar. on a chev. gu. three
escallops or, in chief a lion passant vert, for Tully, of Wetherall Abbey. HI. Or
a fesse betw. three colts at speed sa. for Colt. IV. Ar. three trefoils sa. betw.
two bendlets gu. for Benson. V. Macartney with Lyttelton, quartering England
and France on a canton. Or, a buck trippant gu. attired ar. within a bordure gu.
for Macartney. Ar. a chev. betw. three escallops sa. for Lyttelton. VI. as first,
Hoare, of Barn Elms.
Cm tf . — First, A stork ppr. on a wreath with grass. Motto round, i£quam servare
mentem, for Syarkxy. Second, On a mount vert a heathcock ppr. sa. Motto round,
*Tow£n."
Jftfttt.— Ytfynno Dwy y Fjdd. What God willetb shall be.
PLATE XXIX.
8@eatiotn0, of OOitnesftam ©all, co* ©uffolfu
Daniel Charles Meadows, of Witnesham Hall, and Great Bealings, co. Suf-
folk, Esq. son and heir of the late Rev. Philip Meadows, Rector of Great Beal-
ings, senior male representative of the ancient house of Meadows, or Medows,
from a junior brauch of which the Earls of Man vers descend, bears his paternal
Coat, quartered with Brewster, and impales the Arms of Wood in right of his
wife, Agnes, youngest daughter of John Wood, of Melton Hall, co. Suffolk, Esq.
Peter de Medewe was seised of lands at Witnesham 34 Henry I. which are
still possessed by the family.
fltm*.— Quarterly, first and fourth, gu. a chev. erm. betw. three pelicans ruining
themselves ppr. in a canton a lion sejant, and in chief a label of three points, for Mea-
dows. Second and third, sa. a chev. erm. betw. three estoiles ar. for Brewster, im-
paling az. three naked savages ambulant in fesse ppr. in their dexter bands a shield ar.
charged with a cross gu. in the sinister a club, resting on their shoulders, also ppr.
Crot— A pelican valued ppr.
JSlotta. — Men dos virtus.
IPbillipps; of detention IParfc, ant) ®raceDieu Qdandr*
Charles March Phillipps, of Garendon Park, Esq. High Sheriff in 18*25,
and formerly M.P. for Leicestershire, son and heir of the late Thomas March,
of More Cntchell, co. Dorset, Esq. who took the surname and arms of Phil-
lipps, and subsequently assumed the Arms and Crest of Lisle, in right of his
mother, Susan Lisle, daughter and coheiress of Charles Lisle, Esq. whose
family Mr. March Phillipps represents.
9rnt0. — Quarterly, first and fourth grand quarters, — first and fourth, as. a cher. ar.
betw. three eagles close ppr. for Phillipps. Second and third quarterly, gu. and as. a
cross erm. betw. four lions' heads erased or, for March. Second and third grand
quarters — Or, on a chief az. three lions ramp, of the field, for Lisle. •
CTtrattf. — First, a demi griffin ppr. gorged or, holding a shield az. charged with a lion
ramp, gold, for Phillipps. Second, a demi lion ramp. ar. holding a Maltese cross or,
for March. Third, a stag trippant ppr. for Lisle.
i&otto. — Quod justum non quod utile.
/&!?£, only dau. of Sir 8hnur0fle=j= tftotoarfc %itiit> of Lincoln's Inn, Barrister at Law— of
W)llUp«0, Knt.ofGarendon,co.
Leicester.
Crux Easton and Movies Court, Hants, Esq. only son of
Sir William Lisle, Knt. of Holt, co. Wilts, and Bosco-
ville and Wootton, Isle of Wight.
Jane Lisle, second surviving dau. mar. 24 Aug.=j=£f)nina0 iHatft|,of the City of London, Turkey
1734, d. 1 764. I Merchant, d. 1764.
I •
Thomas March, of Garendon, and of More Cntchell, co.^$U0On,2nddau.ofCt€rIfS24Slf,
Dorset, Esq. only surviving son and heir, b. 24 March,
1747, assumed by Royal Licence the additional surname
and arms of $f)lUtpp0 in pursuance of the will of his
maternal cousin, Samuel Phillipps, of Garendon, Esq.
of Moyles Court, Esq. and sister
and coheir of Charles Lisle, Esq.
whod. in 1819 j Mr. Aug. 1777.
darletf /Utarrft WllUipp*, Esq. now of Ga-
rendon Park, and Grace Dieu Manor, b. 28
May, 1779.
ftmbrofte £i»U iHarrft
Mrtlipp*. of Grace
Dieu Manor, Esq.
elder son and heir.
Harriet, youngest dau. of John Ducarel, of
Walford, co. Somerset, Esq. d. in 1813.
1 1
Laura Mary, eldest dau. of the Charles Lisle, Augusta Jane Lisle,
Hon. Thomas Clifford, 4th 6. 7 March, m. in 1832, to
son of Hugh, 4th Lord Clif- 1812. John FitageraM,
ford, of Chudleigh. Esq.
tLATF. XTIX
CAPTAIN GKORGE MA1HEW.
COLDSTREAM GUARDS-
DANIEL CHA* MEADOWS. ESQ.
MEAT KEAUNC9, CO- 8UFFOLK.
AMllkOSh 1.1 SI. E I'll I LUFFS.
CRACt DILI' MANOK CO LtlCESTEI.
PLATE XXX.
Darftp, of Coieftroofcuale, co< ®atop*
Francis Darby, of Colebrookdale, Esq. elder son of the late Abraham Darby,
of Colebrookdale, Esq. and grandson of Abraham Darby, Esq. by Abiah, his
second wife, youngest child of Samuel Maude, of Sunderland, Esq. bears, in
addition to his family Arms, an Escutcheon of Pretence in right of his wife,
Havkah, only child of John Grant, of Leighton Buzzard, Bedfordshire, Esq.
The Darby family have been for many generations resident and possessed of
landed property at Colebrookdale and its vicinity.
Slrm*. — Per cher. embattled erminois and az. three eagles displayed, each charged
on the breast with an escallop, all counterchanged ; an Escutcheon of Pretence for
Gkant.
Crrft — In front of two crosses crosslet fitchee in saltire sa. a demi eagle displayed,
cooped, era. wings az. charged on the breast with an escallop of the last.
JBottO. — Ut cunque placuerit Deo.
$oifotn, of memn iBirt, co, Gloucester*
Robert Statner Holford, of Weston Birt, Esq. High Sheriff of Gloucester-
shire, is representative of the Weston Birt branch of the ancient Cheshire family
of Holford, of Holford. He bears a shield of four quarterings, Holford,
Statner, Nutt, and Lade.
flriM. — Quarterly, first, ar. a greyhound pass. sa. for Holford ; second, az. a lion
pass, or, on a chief engrailed of the last three mullets sa. for Stayner ; third, per fesse
az. and erm. a pale counterchanged, three pheons or, for Nutt j fourth, or, a fesse wavy
betw. three escallops sa. for Lade.
Crrft — A greyhound's head, couped, sa.
JFarqufmrson, of ^nticrcauID, co. aberoeen.
James Farquharson, of Invercauld, Esq. is only son and heir of Captain
James Ross, R.N. (second son of Sir John Lockhart Ross, of Balnagowan) by
Catherine, his wife, daughter and heir of James Farquharson, of Invercauld,
Esq. undoubted Chief of the Clan Farquharson. The late Captain James
Rots assumed the surname of Farquharson in consequence of his marriage, and
died in 1810. The Farquh arsons descend from Donald Farquharson, eldest
ton of Farquhar, Chamberlain of Mar, temp. Robert II. who was son of Shaw
Macduff, a Scion of the Thanes of Fife.
9rmt. — Quarterly, first and fourth, or, a lion ramp. gu. as the paternal Coat of Far-
QunARSON ; second and third, ar. a fir tree growing out of a mount in base, seeded,
ppr. on a chief gu. the Banner of Scotland in bend displayed ; a canton of the first
charged with a dexter hand couped at the wrist, in fesse, holding a dagger point down-
wards ppr. The Jir tree is borne]. from an ancient custom of carrying twigs of fir as a
badge in the time of battle. The banner is commemorative of the death of Findla More,
a distinguished ancestor of the family, who fell at Pinkie, bearing the Royal Standard.
The hand and dagger, in the canton, records that another progenitor slew the rebel
Cuming, of Stratheogie.
Crtf t — A lion issuant gu. holding a sword in his dexter paw ppr. pomelled or.
SttyyorttT*.— Two wild cats ppr.
HlottO.— Fide et fortitudine.
PLATE XXX.
®tl!t>anfc0, of ©HWtefiem $ou*e, co* CumbetlanD.
Joseph Gillbakks, of Wbitefield House, Esq. a Magistrate and Deputy lieu-
tenant of the County, son of the late Joseph Gillbanks, Esq. owner of Scawth-
waite Close, an estate possessed by his family for upwards of two centuries,
went out to Jamaica in 1800, and returning in 1814, purchased considerable
property in Cumberland.
Sent*. — As. fire hearts in saltire or, on a chief of the second a rote gu. betw. two
trefoils slipped vert
Crest— A stag's head or, collared.
mtlln, of Cast aiiington, co. Detton,
The family of Wells, derived from the marriage of the Rev. Nathaniel Wells,
Rector of East Allington, co. Devon, with Catharine, elder daughter and even-
tually sole heiress of Thomas Bury, Esq. (son of Sir Thomas Bury, of Exeter,
Knt>) by Dorothy, his wife, daughter and coheir of Edmund Fortescue, of
Fallapit, co. Devon, Esq. are entitled to the quartered Coat of Wells, Burt,
and Fortescue.
AriltS. — Quarterly, first, or, a lion ramp, doable queued sa. on a chief gu. two anna-
lets interlaced of the field, lor Wells. Second, erm. on a bend as. a bezant betw. two
fleurs-de lis or, for Bury. Third, as. a bend engr. ar. cotised or, for Fobtescux.
Gttft — Out of an embattlement ppr. a demi bon, doable queued sa. holding betw.
his paws two annulets interlaced or.
iHottO.— Virtute et honore. ^
©fomuntr ^ortesme, of Fallapit, co. Devon,=p
Esq. b. in 1666, Representative of the senior
line of the great House of Fortescue.
. Mary Fortescue,
m. the Rt. Hon.
Win. Fortescue,
of Buckland Fil-
leigh, Master of
the Rolls, and <2.
in 1710.
2. Elizabeth For-
tescue, of Fal-
lapit, d. tinm.
in 1768, aged
73.
on,=j=Mar
ior ti
aiy, dan. of Sampson Wjae, of Dit-
tisham, d. in 1722.
Sarah Fortescue.
, Grace Fortescue,
both d. unm. the
former in 1703,
the latter in
1743-4.
4. ©otot|ihj=CJomM Bars,
;fortesru*,
d. in 1733,
aged 34.
Mary Fortescue,^=John
only child and , Spooner,
heir,6.inl710, Esq.
d. i. p.
Esq. son of Sir
Thomas Bury,
of Exeter, Kat.
Catharine Bury,;
elder dau. and
eventually sole
heir, d. in 1770.
1. Edmund Wells,
ft. in 1752, inhe-
rited Fallapit,
etc. and assumed
the surname of
Fortescue.
I
.Rev. Wm.
Wells, Rec-
tor of East
Allington,
6. in 1756,
<L in 1836.
T
j-
:The Rev. J&«tt*HUl
SJ&flU, Rector of
East Allington, (of the
ancient Lincolnshire
family of Welles, son
of Samuel Welles,) of
the city of Oxford.
Dorothy Borjr,
<L ma. in
1792.
3. Rev. Na-
thaniel
Wells, b.
in 1757,
d. inl806.
T
4. Rev. $8ittU*I
CBelU. Rec-
tor of Portle-
mouth, and a
Magistrate for
Devon, 6. in
1759; d. in
1839.
Six
dsuga-
5. Thomas
Wells, ai
officer of tars,
the 46th
Reg. e. in
1761, <L
vnm. in
1784.
JOSEPH GILLBANKS. ESQ.
VI1TEF1ELD HOCK. CO. CUMBEtLAKU
THE REV; SAMUEL WELLS.
EElTOE 0» l'OHlLEJ40l'TM,(ai»EVOK.
PLATE XXXI.
IBotfieiD, of Norton mil co, JSort&ton,
Beeiah Botfield, of Norton Hall, co. Northampton, Esq. M.P. for Ludlow,
derives from, and bears the Arms of, the ancient Shropshire Family of Botfield
or Botevyle, originally seated at Botevyle, near Church Stretton, of which the
Marquess of Bath is the head.
Ann*. — Barry of twelve or and sa.
Ctfft — A reindeer atatant or.
JBttfaWay bonne cause.
Strict Bcttftlft, fr. 28 Feb. 1702-3, aon^Margaret, dan. of John Adams, b. 7 Oct.
of Thomas Botfield and Abigail his wife. 1703.
Thomas Botfield, of Dawley,
1736, <L 5 April 1801.
6. 14 Feb.=j=Margaret, only dau. of William Baker,
of Bromley, co. Salop, Esq. b. 6 Dec.
1730, d. 5 Nov. 1803.
Bot-ssLucy,
field, of Hop- dan. of
ton Court, co.
8elop, Eeq.fr.
14 Feb. 1762,
au 14 Feb.
1800, d. 17
Jan. 1843.
i. p.
William
Skel-
horne, of
Liver-
pool.
William Bot-=
field.ofDeck-
er Hill, co.
Salop, Esq.
High Sheriff
in 1806, 6. 7
May 1766.
iLucy, dau.
of John
Bishton,of
Kilsall,
Esq.m. 14
Jan. 1794.
Beriah Botfield ^Charlotte, dau.
Esq.fr. 27 July
1768, d. 27
April 1813.
of William
Withering,
M. D. of the
Larches, co.
Warwick.
Vfriot BotfifRl. of Norton Hall, co. Northampton. Esq.
F.R.S. M. P. for Ludlow
Staunton, of Longfcrt&ge, co* ffllartoicfc.
William Staunton, now of Longbridge, Esq. a Magistrate and Deputy
Lieutenant of Warwickshire, and formerly Captain of the First Regiment of Life
Guards, eldest son of the late John Staunton, of Longbridge, Esq. High Sheriff
of the county in 1801, by Maria, his wife, daughter and coheir of Edmund,
Crynes, of Nottingham, M. D. represents a branch of the Family of Staunton
of Staunton, co. Notts, seated at Longbridge before 1450 ; and as such bears the
Ensigns of that ancient Norman Family.
Alms.— At. two cher. sa. within a bordore engr. of the same.
Ctfft — A fox atatant ppr.
iBotttff. — Under tft# Arms, En Dieu ma foy. Above the Crest, Modentta durant.
PLATE XXXI.
atkiiwon, of iReWiw, co* a&apo.
The Atkinsons of Rehins were established in Ireland temp. Queen Elizabeth,
by Captain Charles Atkinson, a near relative of Sir Thomas Atkinson, of
Yorkshire, Knt. the Representative of a very ancient House in that county.
The present head of the Family is William Atkinson, of Rehins, Esq. a
Magistrate and Deputy Lieutenant for Mayo, eldest son and heir of the late
Charles Atkinson, of Rehins, Esq. by Mary, his wife, daughter and heir of
George Atkinson, of Ballina, Esq.
ftrmfi.— Erm. on a fesse vert three fleurs-de-lis ar.
CtMt. — An eagle with two heads displayed ar.
HftottO. — Est pii Deum et Patriam delegere.
jFeitoen, of 32Iitton, co. Hanca0ter.
Joseph Feilden, of Witton House, Esq. son of the late Henry Feilden, of
Witton, Esq. and grandson of Joseph Feilden, also of Witton, Esq. by Margaret,
his wife, daughter and co-heir of William Ley land, of Blackburn, Esq. descends
from Randle Felden or Feilden, appointed, in the Queen's Charter dated 1567,
one of the original Governors of the Blackburn Grammar School. Mr. Feilden '«
uncles, the younger sons of his grandfather, are John Feilden, of Mollington,
Hall, co. Chester, Esq. and William Feilden, of Feniscowles, co. Lancaster,
Esq. M. P.
flrutti. — Ar. on a fesse cortised az. betw. two martlets in chief sa. and in base a rose
gu. barbed and seeded ppr. three lozenges or.
Crwt.— A nuthatch, perched upon a branch of hazel fructed, in the beak a rose gu.
slipped Tert.
HftottO. — Virtutis premium honor.
®tantimm, of Eetton flange, co. iRurtanD,
• Charles Grantham, of Ketton Lodge, Esq. Captain in the Royal Nary, son
of Thomas Bennett Grantham, Esq. Captain 15th Foot, by Margaret, his wife,
daughter of Captain Arthur Webber, R.N. represents the Family of Grantham
of Goltho*, co. Lincoln, and bears the Arms of that ancient House.
flnitS. — Erm. a griffin segreant gu.
Cre»t— A demi griffin gu.
l&OttO. — Honore et amore. *
■LAI* ZJCl'l
$ g n e
WILLIAM STAUK10K. £ &Q
LOSC BUD CE. CO WAIWjtJt
DEHlAH BOTFIELD. ESQ. MP.
S'OIIIOSi HALL. CO. NOtTHAMPTOK.
flLLIAM ATKINSON. ESQ.
BEHIN8. CO.MATO.
JOSEPH FEILDEN. ESQ.
V1LT«»K. CO. LANCASTER.
CHARLES CRANTHAM.ESQ CAP RN.
KLTTOK LOIICL, CO.RUTLAXO.
* i"«"-i# *
PLATE XXXII.
tftopnne &oifotD, of TBucfciana, co* TBtecon, anu
Hilfftopn, co. Carmarthen-
Lieutenant-Colonel Gwynne Holford, of Kilgwyn, High Sheriff of Brecon-
shire in 1840, eldest son and heir of the late John Josiah Holford, of Kilgwyn,
co. Carmarthen, Esq. by Jane, his wife, daughter of Charles Jackson, Esq. and
grandson of Josiah Holford, of Hampstead, Esq. by Magdalen, his wife, daugh-
ter of William Price, of Kilgwyn, Esq. assumed in 1831, by Royal Sign Manual,
the additional surname and arms of Gwynne, in consequence of his marriage
with Anna Maria Eleanor Gwynne, grand-daughter and heir of Tiiynne
Howe Gwynne, of Buckland, Esq. second son of Roderick Gwynne, of Glan-
brane, Esq. by Anne, his wife, daughter and eventually co-heir of John Howe,
Lord Chedwortji. Colonel Gwynne Holford bears, consequently, a quartered
shield, first and fourth, Holford; second and third, Gwynne : and an Escut-
cheon of Pretence quarterly of twenty-one Coats, comprising, with many others,
the arms of Meredith, Prince of Powys, Gronwy ap Tudor, Ednowain,
Lord of Tegaingle, Howe, Lord Ched worth, Gwynne, of Garth, Jones, Bar-
rett, Mathew, &c. &c.
The G wtnnes of Glanbrane and Buckland descend from the marriage in
1405 of Rhydderch ap Rhys, of Llwyn Howel, (derived from Trahaern ap
Einon, Lord of Cwmwd, co. Brecon,) with Gwenllian, daughter and heir of
Howell ap Griffith, of Trecastle, younger brother of the renowned Sir David
Gam, so distinguished at Azincourt
Arms. — Quarterly, first and fourth, ar. on a mount vert, a greyhound pass. sa. col-
lared or, for Holfoiid. Second and third, sa. a fesse cotised or, betw. two swords ar.
bilts and pomeU gold, the one in chief pointing upwards, the one in base downwards,
for G wynne. An Escutcheon of Pretence quarterly of twenty-one, also for Gwynne.
Crtf t0. — First, from the sun in splendour or, rising from behind a hill vert, a grey-
hound's head issuant sa. for Holford. Second, a dexter arm ppr. issuant from a
crescent ar. holding a sword erect, also ppr. pomel and hilt gold ; enfiled by a boar's
head or, erased and vulned ppr. for Gwynne.
KtOttO. — Over the Crest, Vim vi repellere licet. Under the Arms, Toujour* Fidele.
mttotfrertt ap l^lfii, ofeptitorltUtait, dau. and heir of feotoel ay (fcriffitf), Lord of
Uwyn Howel. Trecastle, m. in 1405.
j '
Darid Gwynne ap Rhydderch, of Glan-=j= Elizabeth, dau. of Morrice ap Owen,
brane.
n-==r.
Rhydderch Gwynne, of Glanbrane.=pJaHf, dau. and co-heir of Allan <3>toeit Barrett,
ofGelliswik.
) '
Darid Gwynne, of Glanbrane.=?=Joan dau. of John Games, of Aberbran.
( '
Rowland Gwynne, of Glanbrane.=pGwellian, dau. of Howell John Powell.
I '
PLATE XXXII.
Rnddr: Gwynne, of GlanDrene.xpMary, dan. of Sir Thomas Jones, Knt. of AbtrmriM.
( '
Howell Gwynne, of Glanbrane^The sole dan. and heir of fterltrt Jofttf .
Rowland Gwynne^Anne, daa. of Ham- Roderick Gwynne,=?=Anne, dan. and heir of yds
of Glanbrane. phrey Wyndham. of Llanorer. I t)atfc of Bryn-y-oye.
Saekrille Gwynne, of Glan- Howell Gwynne, ofepMary, dau. and sole heir of §&B*
brane, d. unm. 1734. Bryn-y-oye. | ttafcufct CKtogirtt*, of Garth.
1 '
Roderick Gwynne. of Glanbrane, Esq.=j=The Hon. gmtf ftotot, aeooud dan. of John,
heir to Saekrille Gwynne, Eaq. fcort* ©fcefctoortft, m. 14 Sept. 1748.
Saekrille Gwynne, of Glan- Thynne Howe Gwynne, ofepMias jBat|*b. of Landed
brane, Eaq. Buckland, Eaq. Castle, co. Glamorgan.
Roaerick Gwynne, Esq. d. v. p^Elixabeth Anna Maria, dan. and co-heir of Hughes
I ofTregunter.
r
anna ftUtia tPleanor, only*pJamcs 9rtce fcolfortr. of Kilgwyn, Esq. Lt.-CoL
dan. and heir, m. in 1830. in the Army, who has taken the additional surname
ofC
i
and arms of (fctogttlte.
fcv
jFaunce, of ^atsten, co. Kent
Tns Faunce8 have been settled in Kent since the time of Edward VI. tod
Monuments still exist in the Churches of Rochester, Cliffe, High Hakes,
Aylsford, &c to different members of the family. The present Representiriie
is Edmund Barrell Faunce, of Shareted, co. Kent, and Newington, co.
Surrey, Esq. eldest son of Lieutenant-Colonel Edmund Faunce, of St. Mary'i
Hall, co. Kent, grandson of the Rev. Edmund Faunce, of St. Mary's Hall, and
great-grandson of Thomas Faunce, of St. Margaret's, Rochester, Esq. who*
father, Thomas Faunce, of High Halston, Esq. was elder brother of Sir Robot
Faunce, of Maidstone and Ildon, Knighted in 1660.
fllHtf . — Ar. three lions ramp. aa. armed and langned gn. ducally gorged or.
Cceft — A demi lion ramp. sa. langaed and gorged as in the Arms, between two
wings ar.
#|*ttO.— Ne tentes ant perfice.
£>ig0in0, of Castnor, co. &ere&m*
The Rev. Joseph Higgins, Rector of Eastnor, co. Hereford, the Representative
of an ancient Family derived immediately from the marriage, in 1561, of
Edward Higgins, Esq. with Mary, daughter of Thomas Clynton, of Castleditch,
Esq. by Margaret, his wife, daughter of Richard Tracy, of Toddington, co.
Gloucester, Esq. bears a Shield of Four Quartering.
IrH — First, Paly of six or and as. on a chev. cottiaed erm. three crosses pattee gn.
lor Hiooihs. Second, Paly of six or and as. a chev. erm. for Clynton. Third, Per
pale dancettte a*, mod or, for
1 or, for Yonoi.
PLATE XXXII.
. Fourth, Ar. on a bend ml three griffins' heads
Cffft— A garb ppr. charged with two crosses pattee gu.
I f aiiutittt to ths Crest)*— Patriam bine sustinet.
C|tW» ClpntOII, of Castleditch, co.=f= Margery, dan. of Richard Tracy, of Tod-
Hereford, Esq. High Sheriff 1568 : de-
scended from Sir John de Clinton, Knt.
tiring 9 Edw. I.
dingtbn, co. Gloucester.
JatfltS Clgnton, daughter and coheir. =T=€R>toat& RMJ0<M, living in 1563.
Higgins, of the Birchen and
East-=p
Anne, dau of James Parry, of Ledbury,
Gent. a. d. 1601.
Robert Higgins, of Eastnor, son and heir o£^= Joan Machan, of English Bicknor.
Thomas. I
Thomas Higgins, of Eastnor, son and 1
of Robert.
Thomas Higgins, of Eastnor, son and heir.=j=Wynifred, dau. of T. Barnes, of Longdon.
Thomas Higgins, of Eastnor, son and heir ^Elisabeth, dau. of Joseph Allen.
6.1701.
r
j
Thomas Higgins, of Eastnor, 6. 1730.=pSarah, dau. of Wood, of Preston.
The Rer. Joftpft ftfftfittf* Rector of=pMary, dau. of T. Hussey, Gent.
Eastnor and Pizley, J. P. for the counties
of Hereford, Worcester, and Gloucester,
6. 1770.
fhe Rer. Tho- Joseph Allen Samuel Hig- Rer. Edward
Higgins,
of StouHon,
co. Worcse-
Higgins, of
West Bank,
near Led-
bury.
gins of Bor-
row Court,
co.Worces-
Higgins, of
Bosbury
House, near
Ledbury.
James
Higgins,
d.unm.
Robert Three
Higgins.
William
Higgins.
Francis
Higgins.
daus.
k
I'LATK .TUTU
LIEU . COL . G WYNNE HOLFORD,
Bl'CKLASD, CO.BHtCOK.
EDMUND UAHKELL FALNCE. ESQ,
9HAISTLD. KfcK T
THE REV. JOSEPH HIGGINS.
MEt'TOl OF LASTKOH (U. HEttFOBD.
PLATE XXXIII.
Dale, of ^lantJilies ©Bootton, co* Dorset*
James Charles Dale, of Glanvilles Wootton, co. Dorset, Esq. M.A. High
Sheriff of the county for 1 843, bears a Shield of Four Quarterings. He is only
son and heir, by Mary Kelloway his wife, daughter of Stephen Barton, Esq. son
of Stephen Barton, of Andover, Gent, by Mary, his wife, only child of the
Rev. Obadiah Bean, Rector of Shapwick, co. Dorset, of James Dale, of Glan-
villes Wootton, Esq. eldest son, by Elizabeth his wife, daughter of John
Ganett, of Blandford and Woolland, Esq. of Captain James Dale, High Sheriff
of Dorsetshire in 1770, who purchased Glanvilles Wootton in 1767, and who
was son of Thomas Dale, of Pareweli, Christchurch, co. Southampton, Esq. a
younger son of William Dale, of Chewton House, Hants, Esq.
Arm*.— Quarterly :—
I. Ax. three buglehorns stringed.
II. Ar. on a bend cottised three fleurs-de-lis.
III. Barry of six ar. and as. over all a bend gu.
IV. Ar. three boars' heads couped gu.
Crt #t.— A garb ppr.
Lunufflen, of pitcaple, co. aberuecn.
Hugh Lumsden, of Pitcaple Castle, co. Aberdeen, Esq. a Magistrate and
Deputy Lieutenant for that county, one of the Commissioners of the Northern
Lighthouses, and Sheriff of the County of Sutherland, bears the Arms of the
Lumsdens of Cushnie, one of the oldest families in Aberdeenshire, having
possessed that and other estates there as far back as the earliest records of the
County extend. Some of their Charters, still extant, bear date 24th March,
1471 ; others have ceased to be legible. The present Mr. Lumsden, of Pit-
caple, is son of the late Harry Lumsden, of Belhelvie and Pitcaple, Esq. by his
wife and cousin, Catherine, daughter of Hugh M'Veagh, Esq. and great-
grandson of Alexander Lumsden, Esq. whose father William Lumsden, Esq.
was fifth son of Robert Lumsden, of Cushnie, Esq. by Agnes, his wife, daughter
of John Leith, of Bucharn, Esq.
flrmf. — A*, a buckle or, betw. two wolves' heads in chief and an escallop in base
ar.
Crfit. — A naked arm grasping a sword ppr.
HlottO. — Dei dono sum quod sum.
PLATE XXXIII.
jrortes^leitf), of TO)it*$au£&, co, a&erteen.
The Family of Forbes-Leith, of Whitehaugh, represents, in the male line, the
Forbes's of Tolquhon, a distinguished branch of the Noble House of Forbes,
derived from the marriage of Sir John Forbes (third son of Sir John Forbes, of
that Ilk, Justiciar of Aberdeenshire 5 Robert III.) with Marjorie Preston,
daughter and co-heir of Hekr y Preston, Thane of Formartin. The late Chief,
J ames- John Forbes-Leith, of Whitehaugh, Esq. Lieutenant-Colonel East
India Company's Service, married in 1827 Williamina- Helen, only child of the
late gallant and distinguished Lieutenant-Colonel James Stewart, younger son
of Charles Stewart, of Shambelly, Esq. and a descendant of one of the branches
of the Royal House of Stewart, and left at his decease, with junior issue, a son
and successor, the present James Forbes-Leith, of Whitehaugh, Esq. male
heir of Forbes of Tolquhon.
Brm*.— Quarterly.—
I. As. three bears' heads couped ar. muzzled, for Forbes.
II. Or, a lion ramp, within a double treasure flory, counterfloiy, gu. for Stewart.
III. Ar. fire lozenges conjoined in fesse sa. for Leith.
IV. Ar. three unicorns' heads erased sa. for Preston.
Crests.— A stag's head attired with ten tynes ppr. for Forbes. A dove with an
olive branch in its mouth ppr. for Leith.
JhlppOrtertf. — Two greyhounds ppr. collared gu.
lllOttOt*. — Under the Arms, Salus per Christum. Atwve the Leith Crest, Fidus ad
extremum.
lButgopne, of ©tratftru Place, Honuon, jFeitfcam,
co. fl^imilejsejt;, anO $otton, co* BeDfortu
Thomas John Burgoyne, of Stratford Place, St Mary-le-bone, descended
from John, second son of Sir John Burgoyne, first Baronet, of Sutton Park, co.
Bedford, and Wroxhall Abbey, co. Warwick, M.P. for Warwickshire; holds
lands in Potton and Feltham ; bears the Arms (Enrolled in the Herald's Col-
lege, temp. Henry VII.) of the ancient Family of Burgoyne, to whom Sutton
and Potton were given by a rhyming grant from John of Gaunt, Duke of
Lancaster.
This gentleman has two sons, Thomas, and John Charles, and several
daughters ; he is the Trustee (with the late Right Rev. William Otter, Lord
Bishop of Chichester,) of the Charities for Sutton, bequeathed by his kinsman,
Montagu Burgoyne, Esq. younger son of Sir Roger Burgoyne, sixth Bart, by
his wife, Lady Frances Montagu, eldest daughter of George, Earl of Halifax.
fltttl. — Gu. a chev. or, betw. three talbots ar. on a chief embattled of the last, as
many martlets az.
Crtftt. — A talbot sejant or, ears sa. and plain collared gu.
PLATE XXXIII.
iBiat&toapt, of Dpt&am Pari, co* Gloucester-
The Blathwayts are of a very ancient origin, the first of the name having
come over to England with William the Conqueror, and settled in the counties
of Cumberland and Westmoreland, where they had grants of land for services
rendered. The name was then spelt " Brauthwait," and it will be found
in the early history of the above counties, a Richard and Robert Brauthwait
having acted as Commissioners in collecting the tax levied for the support of
the Parliamentary Army in the time of the Commonwealth, as will be seen on
reference to the Statutes passed for that purpose in the " Black Letter Book**
but which are now expunged from the Statutes at Large.
The present representative, George William Blathwayt, Esq. of Dyrham
Park, co. Gloucester, and of Langridge and Porlock, co. Somerset, a Captain
(H. P.) of the First Dragoon Guards, Captain in the Bath Troop of Yeomanry,
and a Magistrate for the city of Bath and counties of Somerset and Londonderry,
bears a Shield of Six Quartering, viz. Blathwayt, Brayn, Wynter,
Gerard, Bruen, and Blathwayt, and impales in right of wife, Mary Anne,
daughter of the Rev. Thomas Agmondisham Vesey, (a branch of the De Vesci
Family) the Arms of Vesey.
flOM.— Quarterly:—
1. and VI. Or two bends engr. sa.
II. Sa. on a feaa betw. three buglehorns stringed ar. a hemp hackle gu.
III. Sa. a fess erm. in chief a crescent ar.
I V. As. a lion ramp. ar. crowned or.
V. Ar. a saltire engr. gu.
Impaling the Arms of Vrsky, viz. Or on across sa. a patriarchal cross of the field.
Cmt— On a rock ppr. an eagle rising ar. wings az.
JBottO. — Virtute et veritate.
George Wynter, Esq. youngest brother of=f=Anne, sister and co-heir of Uobcrt Eragn,
Sir William Wynter, of Lyndney in the
Forest of Dean, purchased the Dyrham
estates from Sir Walter Dennis, Knt.
13 Klix. 1571, d. 1581.
Esq. Merchant of Bristol.
John Wynter, of Dyrham, Esq. Captain=j=IVIary, dau. of Sir \\ illinm Bruen, of Dor-
R.N. d. 1619. I setshire.
Sir George Wynter, of Dyrham, Knt. eldest^ Mary, dau. of Edward Rogers, of Can-
ton, High Sheriff of Gloucestershire 7 nington, co. Somerset, Esq.
Charles I. 1631, d. 1638. |
John Wynter, of Dyrham and Hinton, co;
Gloucester, Esq. eldest son, d. 1668.
jFvantn, dau. of dTfjoma* <$crart>, of
Trent, co. Somerset, Esq. descended from
the ancient Lancashire family of that
name.
PLATE XXXIII.
I
JSUrS CBgMter, only surviving dan. and=?=fBailltam BlayQtoagi of St. Martin's,
heir, at. 23 Dec. 1686. city of London, Esq. M. P. for the city
of Bath from 1690 to 1710, Secretary at
War and Secretary of State to King •
William in Holland and Handera, ana
Clerk of the Privy Council in -the rtignft f
of King Charles, James, William, as£
Queen Anne, d. in Aug. 1717.
. ■ ■ i
William Blathwayte, £aq. son and heir,^=Thomasina Tomhnson, d. 1774.
m. 1719, d. 1742.
j ■ ■ J
Elisabeth, dau. of . . . .=t=W illiam Blathwayt, eld-=pPenelope J«nkxnson=Mary Cradock,
Clarke, and relict of
. • . . Le Pepre, of St.
George's, Hanover
Square, Eaq. d. Aug.
1764, 2nd wife.
est son and heir, 6.
1720, d. in May 1787,
(a branch of the
Liverpool family),
m. 1750, d..July
1755, 1st wife.
3rd wife, a, p.
George William Blath-c^Isabella, dau. William Blatb-= Frances, dau.
wayt. Fellow of Mer-
ton Coll.Oxon, Rector
of Langridge, co. So-
merset, of Dyrham,
co. Gloucester, m.
1795.
of Charles
Pye, of
Mfadley,
co. Berks,
Esq.
wayte, eld-
est' son and
heir, 6.1 751,
d, in May
1806, f. p.
of William
Scott, of
GreatBarr,
co.Stafford,
Esq. m.
1790, sub-
sequently
m. to Adm.
Douglas.
James,
Capt.
in the
Army,
d. nam.
1788.
Penelope,
at. Mr.
Crane.
George Willi-:
am Blath-
wayte, now
of Dyrham
Park. &c. J.
P.6.25Feb.
1797, ». 21
Jan. 1822.
;Mary Anne,
dau. of the
Rev. Tho-
mas Ag-
mondisham
Vesey.
William, 6.
Charles, 0.6
Anne So-
10 April
Jan. 1800,
phia, m.
1798,Capt.
in holy or-
ders, Rec-
to Tho-
3rd Light
mas Cur-
Dragoons,
tor of Lang-
tis, of
m.Miss
ridge, m.
London,
Filmer.and
Miss Rose,
Esq.
has issue
and has
one son
issue two
and two
sons.
daus.
.
Fran-
ces.
W'illiamCrane,
who took tbe
name of
Blathwayt io
1818, d. «.».
in 1839.
George William, &. 1 1
May 1824, an officer
I st Dragoon Gds.
Wynter Thomas. Richard Vesey. Charles Pye. William.
il.Al e .i'xmi.
JAMES CHARLES DALE. ESQ Ail.
CLANVILLKS WOOTTOK, CO.DOI8ET,
HUGH LUMSDEN.ESQ.
PITCAPI.r CASTLE. CO. AHLHDEEN
THOMAS JOHN BUHGOYNE. ESQ.
LONDON.
GEOKGE WILLIAM BLATHWAYT. ESQ.
DTRHAM PAEK. CO. CLOUCESTE1.
k
T ft CALK HH40DYtt, ESQ
CH^KLES JOHN riHtl£5IA ll<tOMS,I*Q.
MALUXC KOVSH.. ALHT
ICHAliOD WKIGHT. ESQ
MAPPtlLLY. KOT T 8.
THE KEV . JAMES FOLLIOT.
CHESTER .
4
". Llvrrl "hurvi, TV- Hi:'. .'t->»- ,'ir.i ; v.-U J "**
T It GALE muriltVl.L. ESQ
CHARLES JOHN DY THESE* UWOUC
\ / Of THAT UK, CO IKVEIHf**
ICHAUOD WKIGHT. ESQ.
M AI'PLRLtY. NOTTS.
THE KEV . JAMES FOLLIOT.
CNE8TKI .
,' ft-ir/T .
J ':i I. fvrjr :
11. Uc
.1. :.v.^ --Vr-
PLATE XXXV.
Kotoan, of Amount Datns, co, antrim*
Toe Rev. Robert Wilson Rowan, of Mount Davis, co. Antrim, only son of
John Rowan of Merville in the same county, Esq. and Eliza Honoria, his wife,
eldest daughter of Alexander Macmanus, of Mount Davis, Esq. Lieutenant-
Colonel of the Antrim Militia, &c. succeeded, on the death $. p. 4 January,
1838, of his late uncle, Alexander Bryan Macmanus, Esq. only son of the afore-
said Lieutenant-Colonel Macmanus, to a portion of the Macmanus estate, and is
now the representative of that family, whose arms he quarters. (See Burke's
Landed Gentry,) He married, 30 September, 1824, Anna, second daughter
of Joshua Minnitt, of Annabeg, co. Tipperary, Esq. by whom he has issue two
sons and a daughter: John- Joshua, born 12 December, 1838; Alexander,
born 24 April, 1841, and Eliza Hester.
The Rev. Mr. Rowan quarters on the paternal side the arms of Stewart and
Redmond, with those of Rowan, and on the maternal side the arms of O'Neill,
Ker, and Tobin, with those of Macmanus.
3lo9ten 9 of geatwieg, co. Chester-
Yeardslby, in the county of Chester, together with other lands in the adjoining
townships of Desley and Rettleshulme, in the same county, were possessed, in
the early part of the reign of Edward III. (as appears by several documents
now existing) by William Jauderell, who served as Archer in the French wars
under Edward the Black Prince (Earl of Chester), and whose great-grand-
father owned lands in Derbyshire in the Manor of High Peak, a. d. 1286.
The Arms and Crest still used were borne, together with other quartering,
by his son Roger, for many years one of the four Esquires of the King's body
in the reign of Richard II. and are appended in a seal to a grant of land by
the said Roger dated 1401, 3 Henry IV.
The Arms of Jodrell were exemplified by Sign Manual in 1755 to John
Bower, of Manchester, Esq. on his marriage with Frances, heiress of Yeardsley,
as eldest daughter of Francis Jodrell, Esq. born in 1723, and sixteenth in lineal
descent from the first of the name on record.
The grandson of this marriage, John William Jodrell, of Yeardsley,
Esq. is the present Representative of the family.
3rms. — Sa. three round buckles ar.
CrfSt.— A cock's head and neck, couped or, wings elerated and endorsed ar. comb
and wattles gu.
PLATE XXXV.
jruiftro, of ® teat jFulfctB, co, Detion.
Baldwin Fulford, of Great Fulford, Esq. Lieut. -Col. of the Devon Militia,
is the Representative of one of the most ancient and distinguished families in the
County of Devon, of which was the celebrated Sir Baldwin Fulford, Knight
of the Sepulchre, Under Admiral to Holland, Duke of Exeter, High Admiral of
England, temp. Hen. VI. (See Burke's Landed Gentry.) Colonel Fulford
bears a Shield of nine quarterings for the heiresses who intermarried with his
ancestors.
Jlltllfl. — Quarterly, first, gu. a chev. ar. for Fulford , second, ar. on a bend, three
bears' heads erased sa. for Fitzurse; third, ar. a chev. between three moorcocks, am.
for Moreton ; fourth, or, on a bend gu. three crosses formee for Belstow ; fifth, go*
three birdbolts ar. for Bozom ; sixth, ar. a lion ramp. gu. a chief as.; seventh, a*, abend
erm. between three leopards' faces jessant de lys, for Cantelups ; eighth, erm. on a cross
gu. five bezants; ninth, gu. two bars and an orle of martlets ar. for Chalbows,
Cttft. — A bear's head erased sa. muzzled or.
SbupporteW. — Two Saracens ppr.
aMs&am, of SfcniU Court, co* &ereforo<
Sir John James Walsh am, of Knill Court, Bart, bears a Shield of nine Quar-
terings, as a Representative of the Families of Walsham of Knill, Knill of
Knill, Morgan of Kinnersley, Price of Pilleth, Hughes of Bodwryn, Pugh of
Penrhyn, and Coytmore of Coytmore.
ftrm*.— Quarterly, first, sa. a cross roided or, for Walsham. Second, gu. cnuiuy
fitchee a lion ramp, or, for Knill. Third, ar. three bulls' heads caboaaed am. for
Morgan. Fourth, or, a dragon ramp, rert, for Price, being the Coat of Cadwgan ap
Elystan Glodrydd. Fifth, ar. an eagle with two heads displ. sa. for Hughes. Sixth,
gu. a chev. erm. betw. three Englishmen's heads ppr. for Pooh, being the Coat of
Ednyfed Vychan. Seventh, vert, three eagles in fesseor, for Owen Gwyvedd, Prince
of North Wales. Eighth, gu. three stags' heads erased ar. for Coytmore. Ninth, am.
a lion ramp. ar. within a bordure engr. or, for David Gocb, Lord of Penmachno.
Crest — Out of a ducal coronet or, a demi eagle with two heads displ. sa, having
pendant from the neck an escutcheon ar. charged with a Saracen's head cooped at the
neck ppr. and wreathed round the temples as.
UftottO. — Sub libertate quietem.
Join Q2ftaU$am, o
Presteigne, co. Rad-
nor, Esq. Represen-
tative of the very
ancient family of
Walsham,d.inl639.
From whom, 4tk in descent,
fH=Barhara, dau. and h.
of Francis Knill, of
Knill Court, co. He-
reford, Esq.
John Walsham, of=j=ft Wtet, elder dau . and
ttohett CTogrmore, of=pLad:
Coytmore, derived
from Yarddur ap
Cyndellw, Lord of
Uchaf, Chief Coun-
sellor to Llewellyn
Mawr, Prince of
Wales.
idy Bridget Bertie,
only sister of WQ-
lougby, third Earl of
Abingdon.
Knill Court, co. He-
reford, Esq. d. in
1734,
From whom, 3d in descent,
L
co-h. of Sbir Joftii
iHorgatl, of Kin-
nersley Castle, Bart
by ftefiter, his wife,
dau. and co-heir of
James Price, of Pil-
leth, co. Radnor, Esq.
Mary Coyt-=
more, of
Coytmore,
only sur-
viving
child.
eutoartr $f)iUp Vuq%. of
Penrhyn, Esq. Sheriff of Rad-
norshire in 1743, one of the
Chiefs of that branch of the
VIII Noble Tribe of Wales,
from which sprang the Royal
House of Tudor.
Anna Pugh, of Coytmore, 2nd=Ha?iifi ffelftitf,
dau. and in her issue sole I of Bodwryn,
heir. I Esq.
John Garbett Walsham, of Knill Court ,=
Esq. Col. of the Royal Radnor Militia.
Sir Jofm James
r&nlta JgUriO, dau. and eventually sole
Lheir of feUQf) feugfief , of Bodwryn, in
Anglesey, Esq.
aU|am, Bart.
PLATE XXXV.
tfurtnooo.
Johw Gurwood, Esq. Deputy Governor of the Tower, Colonel in the Army,
and Esquire to Field Marshal the Duke of Wellington, under whom he served
during the whole of the Peninsular War and at Waterloo, bears the Ancient
Arms of his ancestors, the Gorrewods, Comtes de Pont de Vaux en Bresse, with
in honourable augmentation granted to him by the Earl Marshal for having led
the successful Forlorn Hope at the assault of Ciudad Rodrigo in Spain, on the
19th of June, 1812.
Colonel Gurwood was born at Hoddesdon, co. Herts, 7th April, 1788, his
progenitors having, for seven generations, resided at Barnby Moor and Langton,
co. York. Jean de Gorrevod, who served with his cousin, Laurent de
Gorrevod, afterwards Comte de Pont de Vaux, under the Duke of Savoy, in
fighting against the French at the great battle of St. Quentin in 1557, was
wounded and conveyed to Calais, then in the possession of the English. He
escaped from that town previously to the surrender of it in 1558, and arrived at
Kingestowne-upon Hull, in Yorkshire, where he married and settled at Barnby
Moor. His son, John Gorwood, having succeeded to property at Langton, near
Milton, belonging to his mother and eldest brother Henry, resided there.
Colonel Gurwood is eighth in descent from the aforesaid Jean de Gorrevod.
The pedigree is deduced from Guy de Gorrewood, Chevalier, Seigneur de
Gorrewod in 1130 ; and name derived from the Chateau de Gorrevod, a quarter
of a mile from Pont de Vaux, near the river Saone, in the country formerly
called La Bresse, which, being one of the conquests of Louis XIV. was ceded
to France in 1668 by the treaty of Aix la Chapelle.
flrm. — As. a chev. or, and for honourable augmentation, the Shield of the Town of
Ciudad Rodrigo with the Sword of the Governor, whom Colonel Gurwood took
priaoner, being placed " in pretence."
fTrtfl — A unicorn's head az. maned and horned or, being placed for augmentation
on a breached tower, with the words over " Follow me."
JRotta. — Pour a jamais.
THE REV. ROBERT WILSON ROWAN.
MOUNT DAVIS. CO -ATiTlIR
JOHN WILLIAM JODRELL, ESQ.
OP TEARD3LET. CO. CHESTER.
SIR JOHN WALSHAM. BART
KKILL COURT. CO. HEREFORD.
COL CUR WOOD. CB.
DEPUTY GOVERNOR. OF THE TOWER.
fTjetj : -:
;..J c; F.>a. r .i <Jt.m i. ." Jit .'.u w -
PLATE XXXVI.
ftotoan, of <Carrp, co< antrim
John Rowan, of Garry and Ahoghill, co. Antrim, Esq. resident at Merville,
near Belfast, High Sheriff in 1814, descended from the Scottish family of
Rowan, (See Burke's Landed Gentry ,) bears a Shield quarterly ; first and
fourth, Rowan ; second, Stewart ; and third, Redmond.
flrnttf.— First and fourth, vert, a fesse chequy or and gu. between a trefoil slipped
in chief, and in base three cross-crosslets fitchee issnant from as many crescents of the
second for Rowan ; second, or, a fesse chequy ar. and az. between two sinister hands
gu. all within a double treasure flory counternory of the last, for Stow art; third, gu.
three cushions ermine, for Redmond.
CTrtft — A naked arm couped at the elbow grasping a dagger ppr.
Jllttto. — Cresco per crucem.
The Rer. ttobtrt KotDMt, of Mullans, oo
Antrim, (seventh son of the Rer. John
Rowan, of Ballynagappog, co. Down,
fourth in descent from John Rowan, of
Greenhead, co. Lanark, born in 1548,)
will, dated 1742, was proved 1769.
af&etitiO, dau. and sole heir of Joftlt &t*to«
art, of Garry, co. Antrim, Esq. by his
wife, the dau. and coheir of KetontOltlr
of Blaris, co. Down.
John Rowan, of Mullans, Esq. High=pRose, dau. of Capt. Stewart, of Clunie in
Sheriff co. Antrim 1754. I Scotland, by Rose, his wife, dau. of
| Roger Hall, of Narrow Water, Esq.
Robert Rowan, of Mullans, Ksq. High=f=Eliza, dau. of Hill Wilson, of Purdysburn,
Sheriff co. Antrim 1772. | co. Down, Esq.
"un? — ~^
Wilson
JttwlfetaNi*,:
now of Garry,
Esq. m. 2dly.
Dorothea
ShawOgihrie,
relict of J as.
Blair, of Mer-
ville, Esq.
1st Eliza Ho-
nora, eldest
dau. of Alex.
McManus,
of Mount
Davis, co.
Antrim, Esq.
Robert.
James.
Charles,
Comm. of
Metropo-
litan
Police.
IredZ
rick, d.
Edward.
William.
l.^liza,
d. unm.
Ele- =John
nor. Joseph
Hey-
wood,
Esq.
Rev. Robert Wilson Rowan, of Mount Davis, only child.
miBb, of 3sb $all, co. ©taffbrD.
The following Ensigns were granted in May, 1840, to the present Job Meigh,
of Ash Hall, Esq. a magistrate for the county of Stafford, son of the late Job
Meigh, Esq. (See Burke s Landed Gentry.)
flnH0. — Gu. on a cross engrailed between four boars' heads erased ar. three black-
birds in fesse ppr. and two crosses patee fitched at the foot az.
CTmt — A lion rampant or, holding in his dexter paw a cross patee, as in the arms,
the sinister paw resting on an anchor ppr. pendant therefrom by a chain or, an esco-
cheon gu. charged with a boar's head erased ar.
Jgfotto. — Benigno numine.
£@caie0tet, of Loup ano ftennor*
Charles Somerville McAlester, of Loup and Kennox, Esq. Lieut-Col.
Commandant of the First Regiment of Ayrshire Local Militia, and a Deputy
Lieutenant of the County, Chief of the Clan Allaster of Kintyre, (known formerly
as the Clan Eandubh,) claims to represent the ancient Lords of the Isles, as
lineal descendant and heir male of Alexander, or Alester, eldest son of Angus
Mor, Lord of the Isles and Kintyre, a. d. 1284. Alexander acquired a consi-
PLATE XXXVI.
derable addition to his territories by marriage with one of the daughters and
coheiresses of Ewen de Ergadia, but having espoused the cause of Baliol in op-
position to the claims of Bruce, he was finally subdued by that Prince, im-
prisoned in Dundonald Castle, (where he died) and his possessions bestowed on
his younger brother, Angus Oo, who had from the beginning supported the
cause of Bruce.
The present M c Alester bears a quartered Coat, first and fourth, M'Alesto
ancient; second, M c Alester, modern; third, Somerville.
SbupporUr*. — Two bears ramp, each pierced by an arrow.
Cmt*. — First, A dexter arm in armour, couped, holding a dagger, omr it tht Motto,
Fortiter, for M c Alebter ; second, A dexter hand in pale ppr. holding a crescent
ar. for Somerville ; over it the Motto, Donee rortus imple
UftottO. — Per mare per terras.
IBatlep, of <Ciarai0ft ipatft, co* TBtecon*
Joseph Bailey, of Glanusk Park, Esq. M.P. for the City of Worcester, and
High Sheriff of Monmouthshire in 1823, bears the Arms of Bailey, impaled
with those of his wife, Mary-Anne, daughter of the late John Thomas Hendry
Hopper, Esq. of Witton Castle, co. Durham.
flrOI*. — Ar. a fesse between three martlets gu. charged with as many bezants.
impaling — Gyronny of eipht sa. and erm. a tower or, for Hopper.
CfWt.— A griffin sejant erm. wings and forelegs or.
iHottO.— Libertas,
1st wife,
Maria, fourth dau.=
of Joseph La-
tham, Esq. m. 1
Oct. 1810, d. 27
May, 1827.
2nd wife,
: JoeepJ 15a(UB, of Glanusk Park, co. Bre-=pMary Anne, dau. of
con, Esq. M.P. for the City of Worcester
High Sheriff of Monmouthshire in 1823 :
a Deputy Lieutenant for that County,
and a Magistrate for the Counties of
Brecon, Glamorgan, Hereford, and Mon-
mouth.
the late John
Thomas Hendry
Hopper, of Wit-
ton Castle, co.
Durham, Esq.
Joseph, of Easton=7=Elizabeth Richard, o. 19 Sept. Maria Susan, m. 25
Court, co. Here- " « — ~ -
ford, M.P. for that
Shire, 6. 9 Feb.
1812, m. 22 June,
1839.
Mary,
only
child of
W.C.
Russell,
Esq.
1816.
John Crawshay, b.
22 May, 1818.
William Latham, b,
14 Oct. 1820.
Henry, b. 31 Oct.
1822.
Jan. 1838, to the
Rev. J. T. Ormerod,
eldest son of George
Ormerod, of Sedbnry
Park, co. Gloucester,
Esq.
Margaret, m. 22 Jane,
1839,to James Green-
field, of Ryddgaer,
co. Anglesea, Esq.
Jane.
Maiy-
Anne-
Betha.
Joseph Russell, 6. 7 April, 1840. William Latham, b.
27 Feb. 1843.
Elisabeth Anne, d.
in 1843.
©tarftep, of MlaftefiettJ, of Cfcotnton iLaoge,
feprinstoooto an* Beaton Hotoffe, near UuWergffeto, to. gork.
The following Arms were confirmed in 1843 to the family of Starkey of the
above places, derived from John Starkey, of Huntroyd, afterwards of Padiham,
third son of Edmund Starkey, of Huntroyd, co. Lancaster, Esq. by Ann, bis
wife, daughter of Nicholas Hancock, of Lower Higham. (See Burke's Landed
Gentry.)
flints. — Ar. a bend engr. vaire between six storks sa.
CtWt. — A stork ar. semle of etoiles az.
i&OttO. — Homo proponit Deua disponit.
#5K^
lit t*tl ltfc WKji. ESQ
CtY* C%*T* CO AifQ4,ti*T,
OMK FAKgUKARSON. ESQ
AVCKlON, CO. AAA It 01 Ail.
RODENT GfL£ME. ESQ
CtHVOCK, CO. ftlTH.
U1LLIAM MOKSELL. ESQ
TIIVOE. CO. L1MEIICK.
THOMAS FCOLOGAN. ESQ.
T K N E 1 1 F F E .
PLATE XXXVII.
iBeatier, of ®lpn ®arti), co. anglcscp.
Hugh Beaver, of Glyn Garth, co. Anglesey, and of The Temple, co. Lancaster,
Esq. a Magistrate for the former county, and High Sheriff in 1837, third and
eldest surviving son of the late Robert Beaver, of Maesllwyn, co. Anglesey, Esq.
impales the Quartered Coat of Campbell of Barcaldine, in right of his wife,
Isabella Janet, third daughter of Sir Duncan Campbell, of Barcaldine, co.
Argyll, Bart.
flnttf. — Or, a fesse as. between three lions ramp, in chief gu. and a beaver passant
in base ppr. impaling, quarterly, first and fourth, gyronny of eight or and sa. for
Camfbxll ; second, ar. a galley sa. sails unfurled, oars in action, for Lorn ; third, or
a fesse chequy ar. and as.
CTttSt — A mount vert, thereon, in front of three arrows, one in pale and two in
saltire, the pheons downwards, a beaver passant ppr.
JRattS.— IndustriA et Virtute.
Kigt UtabfT, of Glyn Garth, co. Angle-^sabfUa-JlaiUt, third dau. of Sir Bun WW
sey, and The Temple, co. Lancaster,
Esq. High Sheriff co. Anglesey in 1837,
m. 10 Oct. 1839.
Campbell, of Barcaldine, co. Argyll,
Bart.
Elixabeth-Dreghorn. Ada-Isabella
jFarqufmtjBion, of i&augftton, co. afcer&eem
The following Arms of Farquharson of Haughton were confirmed by the Lord
Lyon in 1752 to " Francis Farquharson, of Haughton, co. Aberdeen, Esq.
lineally descended from William dimming, alias Farquharson, Esq. who was
Proprietor of the lands of Kellis, in the co. of Elgin, in 1562." The said
Francis Farquharson was succeeded at his decease by the son of his sister Mary,
hit nephew, Alexander Ogilvie, Esq. who assumed the Surname and Arms of
Farquharson. His son, the present Representative of this ancient Family, is
Johw Farquharson, of Haughton, Esq. a Magistrate and Deputy Lieutenant
of Aberdeenshire.
Arm*. — Quarterly, first, or, a lion ramp. gu. armed and langned as. for Farquharson.
Second and third, as. a bezant betwixt three garbs or, for Cummino. Fourth, ar. a fir
tree growing out of a mount ppr. also for Farquharson.
Crtft. — The sun in his glory, breaking out of a cloud ppr. In an pscroll above
— Ulumino.
JRttta. — Memor esto majorum.
PLATE XXXVII.
tfratme, of tfattiocit, co. tyettb.
Robert Gbjeme, of Garvock, Esq. represents the Family of Graeme of Garvock,
one of the most ancient and distinguished Branches of the House of Graham,
being directly descended from Sir William Graham, Lord of Kincardine, who
is also Ancestor of the Ducal House of Montrose by a prior marriage. He
bears the Arms of Graham, within a double tressure flory and counter-dory, as
being lineally descended from King Robert III. of Scotland, through Mary
Stewart, second daughter of that monarch, who married Sir William Graham,
of Kincardine. The third son of that marriage, William, obtained a grant of
the Barony of Garvock from King James I. his uncle, and from him the present
Proprietor is directly descended. Sir William Graham, of Kincardine, was also
ancestor of the Grahams of Fmtry, Grahams of Claverhouse, Viscount of
Dundee, and other distinguished Families of the name.
flOR*. — Or, three piles gu. issuing from a chiefs*, charged with as many escallops
of the first, within a double tressure flory and counter-nory, gu.
CrtSt — A lion ramp. gu.
fstftto. — Noli me tangere.
a&otwelU of Certioe, co. iUmetirfu
William Monsell, of Tervoe, Esq. High Sheriff of the county of Limerick, son
and heir of the late William Monsell, of Tervoe, Esq. by Olivia, his wife, eldest
daughter of Sir John Allen Johnson Walsh, Bart, bears the Arms of Mohsrll,
impaled with those of Quin, in right of his wife, the Lady Ann-Maria-Charlotte
Wyndham Quin, only daughter of the second Earl of Dunraven. The Family
of Monsell went to Ireland from the county of Somerset early in the reign of
Charles I.
Arms. — Ar. a chev. betw. three mullets, sa. impaling, for Quin, rert, a pegasus pass.
ar. a chief or.
Crest. — A lion ramp, holding in the paws a mullet.
iQottO. — Mone sale.
Cologan*
A Branch of the old and distinguished House of Walsh, of the county of
Waterford, settled in Teneriffe, one of the Canary Islands, in or about the year
1680, and eventually succeeded to the sole Representation of the Family, its
Chiefs exercising the right of nominating the Master of the Holy Ghost Hospital
at Waterford, founded by their ancestor, Patrick Walsh, as far back as the year
1545, in the reign of Henry VIII. which Monarch granted to the said Patrick
PLATE XXXVII.
this privilege as a reward for the munificent act which originated the Institution.
Subsequently the male line of the Walshes became extinct, and their property
and representation merged almost exclusively in the Cologan Family, also of
Irish extraction, John Cologan, Esq. (or rather Colgan, as the name is said
originally to have been written) having married one of the daughters of the first
of the Walshes that settled at Teneriffe. Of this alliance, the present Thomas
F. Cologan, of Teneriffe, Esq. is the great grandson and representative. He
bears a quartered Coat, Cologan, Fallon, Walsh, and Gant.
flrmfi. — Quarterly, first, az. a lion ramp. betw. three pheons ar. for Cologan.
Second, as. two greyhounds erect and respectant ar. supporting between them a sword
erect ppr. in the centre chief point a castle of the second, for Fallon. Third, ar. a
cher. gu. betw. three pheons sa. for Walsh. Fourth, gu. a bunch of grapes ar. sur-
mounted of a bend or, for Gant.
Crtft. — A dexter arm in armour, embowed, holding a lance, transfixing a stag's
Med, ail ppr.
i&Ottd. — In Deo spes mea.
Jotlt Cologan, b. in Dublin, 17 Dec.:
1710, m. 1742, d. in 1771.
Thomas Co-pCltjabet^,
logan, 6.
1743, d. in
1810.
eldest dau. of
Brpan^al*
IOH.ofSt.Lu-
car, in Spain.
Bernard, b.
in 1745,
m. Laura
de Fran-
chy, Mar-
chioness
ofSauzal.
Margaret, dau. of Bernard Sl&altffj, of
Teneriffe, Esq. the representative of the
great House of Walsh, of the county of
Waterford.
John, 6. in-
1746, m. 1st,
Anne, dau. of
Gen. Cogh-
lan, of the
French ser-
vice.
Bernard
Cologm,
b. 1772,
sa* in
1812.M*-
rade
Bobadfl-
la,aod4.
in 1814.
cimuw
John Co-
logan, of
Paris, 6.
1776, m.
Eliza-
beth, dau.
of Barth.
Costello,
of Cadis.
John An-
thony Co-
logan, for-
merly De-
puty of
the
Cortes.
:2nd wife, Ma-
rianne, dau.
of John Fitz-
gerald of Wa-
terford.
Frances Xa-
viera, b. in
1747, m. to
her cousin,
Thos. Quilty,
of Malaga.
1
:Eusta-
chia
delle-
redia.
Maria, m.
to Mons.
Reg.
nauld la
Soudiere.
Anne, m.
to Count
Bazzioli
diGozze
ofRa-
gusa.
Rose, m.
to Comte
Cabarrus,
of Spain.
Jose-
phine,
m. to
Coun-
sellor
De Le-
on Ben-
dicho.
ftotli*
ColOfaa, of Tene-
riffe, 6. in 1813, m.
in 1839, bis cousin,
Laura, dau. of John
Anthony Cologan,
Esq. and has issue.
T
John Ber-
nard Colo-
gan, b. in
1814, m. a
Greek la-
dy, and has
issue.
iEmilius
Colo-
gan, b.
in 1819.
ernard.
John.
Eustace.
Laura, m.
to her
cousin, T.
F. Colo-
gan.
Jacqueline.
Mana.
Candida.
Christina.
T
Xavier,
Deputy
of the
Cortes.
PLATE XXXVIII.
£Boot>t)> formed? of ©fjine GOooU, co. ©atop,
noto of Sork^ire.
Basil Thomas Woodd, Esq. Justice of the Peace for the North and West
Ridings of Yorkshire, eldest son and heir of Basil George Woodd, of London,
Esq. and sixth in descent from Basil Woodd, Doctor of Laws and Chancellor of
Rochester, who suffered severely for his devotion to the Royal Cause, bears the
arms of Woodd and Ballard quarterly, and impales Dampier and Digby in
right of his wife, Charlotte -Mary, eldest daughter of the Rev. John Dampier of
Colinshays, co. Somerset, by Mary-Charlotte, his wife, only child of the Hon.
and Rev. Charles Digby.
flrtf. — Quarterly, first and fourth, gu. three demi savages ar. holding clubs orer
their dexter shoulders, or, for Woodd ; second and third, sa. a griffin segreant erm. for
Ballabd. (George Basil Woodd, Esq. grandfather of Basil Thomas Woodd, Esq.
Justice of the Peace, having married Gertrude, daughter and eventual heiress of George
Ballard, of Leatherhead, Esq.)
itrpalittg — First and fourth, or, a lion rampant sa. on a chief gu. a label of five points
ar. for Dampier ; second and third, az. a fleur-de-lis ar. for Dioby.
CrtSt — A demi savage, as in the arms.
IBiitO.— Non nobis.
Pettier, of ag&ton Ho&ge, co. Lancaster.
James Pedder, of Ashton Lodge, co Lancaster, Esq. a Magistrate and Deputy
Lieutenant of the County, is son of the late Edward Pedder, of Bispham Lodge
and Preston, Esq. by Margaret his wife, only daughter and heir of Richard
Wilson, Gent, of Newton with Hardhom, and grandson of Edward Pedder, of
Preston, Esq. by Katherine his wife, daughter of John Clayton, of Stockport,
Esq. and great-grandson of Alderman Richard Pedder, Mayor of Preston in
1748 and 1756. (See Burke's Landed Gentry.) Mr. Pedder impales with
bis paternal Arms the Coat of Newsham, having married Jane, only daughter
of Richard Newsham, of Preston, Esq.
3nRf. — Quarterly, sa. and gu. on a bend ar. between two escallops or, a greyhound
courant between two quatrefoils of the second : impaling, az. on a fesse ar. three crosses
crosalet gu.
CrrSt. — Between two branches of olive ppr. as many lions' heads erased at the neck
and addorsed, erminois, gorged with one collar gu.
/HottO.— Je din la verile.
PLATE XXXVIII.
a^acpfjewon, of CUmp, co* 3(ntierne*0.
Ewen Macpherson, of Cluny Macpherson, Chief of the Clan Macpherson, and
Representative in the male line of the ancient Chiefe of Clan Chatt&n, derives
in direct descent from Gallichattan Moir, temp^ Malcolm Canmore. The hand
and dagger borne in the Arms were assigned to the Macphersons for killing the
last of the Cnmmings at Badenoch, and the cross crosslet as commemorative of
one of the ancestors having made a pilgrimage to the Holy Land.
flrttf . — Per fess or and az. a lympbad with her sails trussed op and oars in action,
of the first ; in the dexter chief point a hand couped grasping a dagger point upward*
gn. in the sinister chief a cross crosslet fitcbee of the last, impaling Davidson.
<ffrot. — A cat sejant ppr.
^upportrr*. — Two highlandmen with steel helmets on their heads, thighs bare, their
shirts tied between them, and round targets on their arms.
lltottQ. — Touch not the cat but a glove : in Gaelic, Na bean do*n chat gun Laimhn.
Clarson, of ©ron ana tfioucestetsfnte.
The Rev. Benjamin Saunders Claxson, D.D. of Eastgate House and Wotton
Lodge, Gloucester, Incumbent of St. Matthews, &c. only son of the late Ben-
jamin Claxson, of Eastgate House, Esq. Justice of the Peace, by Susannah, his
wife, only surviving daughter of Thomas Saunders, of Gloucester, Esq. bears the
Claxson Arms quartered with the Coat of Saunders, and impaled with that of
Eamer, in right of his wife, Charlotte-Anne, daughter of the late Sir John
Earner, Knt. Lord Mayor of London, 1801-2, and Colonel of the Royal East
London Militia. The family of Claxson have been proprietors of landed estates
at Woodcote in the parish of South Stoke, co. Oxford, from the year 1651, un-
interruptedly, to the present time.
flrtitf. — First and fourth, gu. a fess engr. paly enn. and or, between two porcupines
in chief and in base a stag lodged ar. attired and hoofed of the third for Claxson ;
second and third, per chev. gu. and or, in chief two elephants' heads of the last, in base
a crescent as. for Saunders, impaling the quartered Coat of Eamer and Robinson.
(Trial. — A mount vert, thereon a stae lodged ar. attired and unguled or, supporting
with his dexter foot an escutcheon gu. charged with a porcupine ar.
iftuttO. — Sapereaude: incipe.
Lane jFor, of TBramftam, co. i?otfu
George Lane Fox, of B ram ham Park, Esq. eldest son of the late James Lane
Fox, Esq. M.P. who inherited the estates of his uncle George Fox, Lord Bingky,
and great-grandson of Henry Fox, Esq. by the Hon. Frances Lane, his wife,
sister and heir of James, Viscount Lanesborough, bears the quartered Coat of
Fox and Lake.
flfflW.— Quarterly, first and fourth, ar. a chev. between three foxes* heads erased go.
for Fox ; second and third, ar. a lion rampant gu. within a bordure am. on a canton of
the first, a harp and crown or, for Lane.
ffrtitS.— First, a fox passant gu. for Fox ; second, out of a ducal coronet or, a
griffin segreant sa
THE REV. B SAUNDERS. CLAXSOKDD.
EA8TCATE HOUSE. GLOUCESTER.
GEORGE LANE FOX. ESQ
HKAMHAM.CO TOIK.
/>-_;-»* _-„■
-I^Jjo. Ldwjrd Cmin- IX, n , u -.: -^e^ ; :^^± ;*^:.c.- u.VO.
PLATE XXXIX.
©tofieiti of ©lufieiu, co* Chester, ant) pecfc&am Cottage,
The very ancient family of 01d6eld derive their descent and their earliest quar-
tering from the marriage (temp. Hen. III.) of Guy of Provence with Alice,
daughter of William de Haselwall, of Oldfield in Cheshire. The descendant
in the ninth degree from this alliance, Richard Oldfield, of Oldfield, Esq.
married Margaret, daughter and heir of James Grosvenor, younger son of
Ralph Grosvenor of Eaton, and their great-grandson, William Oldfield, Esq.
baptized in 1586, wedded Elizabeth, daughter and heir of Ralph Leftwich, of
Leftwich, Esq. by whom he was great-great-great-grandfather of the present
male representative of this ancient line, Thomas Brame Oldfield, of Peckham
Cottage, Surrey, Esq. who quarters, by right of descent, the Arms of Hasel-
wall, Grosvenor, and Leftwich.
Arm*.— Quarterly, first, ar. on a bend gu. three crosses patt6e fitchee of the field
for Oldfield ; second, ar. a chief az. for Haselwall ; third, az. a garb or, for
Gaosvekor; fourth, ar. on a fesse dancett£ az. three garbs, for Leftwich.
Crefl — A demi wyvern, with wings displayed ar. issuing from a ducal coronet or.
/Bolt*. — Viresco rulnere.
Ralph Grosvenor, died 1356~Joan, living 1342.
I '
Sir Robert Grosvenor, (cast in suit with=pJoan, dau. of Sir Robert Pulford.
Scrope.) Sheriff of Cheshire, 1388
and 1395.
I '
Sir Thomas Grosvenor, of Hulme.=pJoan, dau. and coheiress of Sir Wm. Phesaunt,
I co. Stafford, Knt.
Robert, of Hulme,<J. leav- Ralph Grosvenor, second^pjoan, dau. and heiress of
ing six daughters. son, but eventually heir Eaton, of Eaton,
of Sir Thomas Grosve-
nor, of Hulme.
Robert Grosvenor, of Ea- Ralph Grosvenor, James Grosvenor,=pMargaret, dau. of
ton, eldest son, from of Chester, Be- third son. Piers Stanley, of
whom derives the pre- cond son.
sent #UrOUfe Of
OUftwiiiitfr.
Ewloe.
fiBUrqavtt, only dau. and heir.=pRichard de Oldfield, Esq.
Philip de Oldfield, of Oldfield, Esq. ancestor of C|om«0 VrautC <&Rtff ft, Esq.
PLATE XXXIX.
TBroWe, ofHet&en-
James Campbell Brodie, of Lethen and Coulmony, in the counties of Moray
and Nairn, Esq. descended of the Family of Brodie, of That Ilk, bears bis
Paternal Arms of Brodie, with part of the Arms of Campbell, of Calder (now
Earls of Cawdor), of which Family he is descended by his great-grandmother,
Sophia Campbell, daughter of Sir Hugh Campbell, of Calder. These Arms
were confirmed by Alexander Brodie, then Lord Lyon of Scotland, to Alexander
Brodie, of Lethen, paternal granduncle of the said James Campbell Brodie, and
to his heirs, by grant recorded in the Lyon Office, dated 12 January 1753.
flrM. — Ar. on a chev. go. betw. three mullets as. a galley or lymphad sa.
Crtit. — A dexter hand holding a bunch of five arrows ppr.
£|*ttS. — Above the Crest, Be mindful to unite.
Jo|«, Clan* Of lirotoir, (lineally descended from Malcolm, Thane of Brodie, who
lived in the time of Alexander HI. 1246-1285), d. before 1511.
Alexander Brodie, of That Ilk, d. before 1540.
Thomas Brodie, of That Ilk, d. before 1550.
Alexander Brodie, of That Ilk, d. in August 1583.
David Brodie, of Thatllk. 6. 1553, d. 1626.
David Brodie, of That Ilk, the eldest Alexander Brodie, of Lethen, the
son, 6. 1586, d. 1632, ancestor of second son, <L 1672.
the present Brodie of Brodie. =p
Alexander Brodie, of Lethen, David Brodie, of Lethen, Mr. James Brodie, of Kinlee,
d. 1688, without issue male. d, 1704, s. p. predeceased his broth*
=P David.
Janet Brodie, his only dau m. 1671, Lu- Alexander Brodie, of Lethen, 6. 1667,
dovick Grant, of Grant, and was progene- d. 1 745.
trix of the present Duke of Roxburgh, =p
and of the Earls of Fife and Seafield.
Alexander Brodie, of Lethen, M. P. for Thomas Brodie, Writer to the Signet,
Nairnshire, d. 28 April 1770. and Lyon Depute of Scotland, d.
=P 19 August 1770.
Alexander Brodie, John Brodie, Miss Anne Brodie, Mrs. Sophia Dunbar Thomas Brodie,
of Lethen. d, unm. of Lethen, d. of Lethen, d. unm. Brodie, of Lethen Writer to the
Nov. 1770. unm. 1773. 1805. andBurgie,<2.inSep- Signet, d. Sep-
tember 1829, i. p. tember 1825.
JSKf* Campbell Vnftfe, Captain Thomas Brodie, H. John Clerk Brodie, Writer to
now of Lethen and Coul- £. I. C.'s S. the Signet,
mony.
PLATE XXXIX.
iBarrp, of iRocfelatieston o^anor, co. Bom.
Pen* dock Barry Barry, of Rocklaveston Manor, Esq. Deputy Lieutenant for
Notts, (the representative of the great house of Barry, of Tollerton, founded in
England at the time of the Conquest, of which was Sir John Barry, of Toller-
ton, one of the Knights of the Shire in Parliament, who is mentioned in the siege
of Caerlaverock, See Burke's Landed Gentry ,) bears a Shield of six quarterings.
flrmfi. — Quarterly, first, gu. three bars embattled ar. for Barry ; second, ar. a fess
gu. between in chief two crescents az. and in base a bugle horn of the same stringed
vert, for Nkale; third, az. sem^e of cross crosslets or, two barbies endorsed of the
last, within a bordure engrailed gu. ; fourth, az. a stag trippant ar. for Lowe ; fifth, gu.
four bars gemelle ar. a chief of the last charged with five trefoils az. three and two,
for Pen dock ; sixth, quarterly, ar. and az. a cross engrailed counterchanged, for Hey-
DON.
Crtfttf. — The embattlement of a tower gu. charged with three roses in fess ar. for
Barry ; on a mount vert, a stag trippant, ppr. charged with three lozenges az. for Lowe;
and a demi pelican or, vulning herself and issuing from a castle gu. masoned ppr.
J^upportfTfi. — Two lions guardant ar. each gorged with a collar embattled gu. and
thereto affixed a chain, passing between their forelegs, and reflexed over their backs or,
each holding in its fore paw a flag staff, and therefrom flowing a banner gu. charged
with three bars embattled ar. fringed or.
illOttO. — A Rege et victoria.
lomar, of Clapton Ml, co. Lancaster.
John Lomax, of Clayton Hall, co. Lancaster, Esq. son of the late Richard
Grimshaw Lomax, of Clayton Hall, Esq. by Catharine, his wife, daughter and
heir of Thomas Greaves, Esq. Banker, of Preston, and grandson of James
Lomax, Esq. whose father, Richard Lomax, of Pilsworth, Gent, married Rebecca,
daughter of Heywood, of Urmston, sole heiress of the Grimshaws of Clayton,
bears a Shield quarterly, Lomax, Grimshawe, and Clayton.
flrilti. — Quarterly, first and fourth, per pale or and sa. on a bend cottised erm. three
escallops gu. for Lomax. Second, ar. a griffin segreant sa. armed or, for Grimshaw.
Third, ar. a cross sa. betw. four bezants for Clayton.
Crrtt. — Out of a mural crown a demi-lion gu. collared and holding an escallop.
JllottO. — Fato prudentia major.
CQclD, of Ctoicfeenbam.
Samuel Weld, of Twickenham, co. Middlesex, and of Oxford Square, Esq.
eldest son of the late William Weld, of Twickenham, Esq. and grandson of
Joseph Weld, tenth in lineal descent from Richard Weld, of Rushton, third son
of William Weld, of Eaton, co. Chester, bears the Arms of the ancient Family
of Weld, differenced by a bordure gobonny.
fltmS. — Az. a fesse nebulae erm. betw. three crescents or, all within a bordure dove-
tailed ar.
Crtft — A wyvern sa. bezantee, gorged with a collar, and chain reflexed over the
back or, the wings expanded erm. each charged with a crescent of the first.
£ftottO. — Nil sine nomine.
***«
^XFBSU WW***
***H» A L'OlIUtOSY.^^" 1 ^
PENDOCK BARRY BARRY, ESQ.
ROCKLAVLSTON MAX OK. XOTT*
JOHN LOMAX.ESQ
CLATTOX HALL. CO. LANCASTER.
SAMUEL WELD. ESQ.
TWICKKXMAM. MIDDLES**.
Xt/r. ..-
/ I 'J
iK,[ io ,<VioIJ
.ft
PLATE XL.
iLiopt), of IPigmog, ^tocrcias, anu TBatWl
ciiard-Walmesley Lloyd, Esq. as Representative of the Houses of Lloyd
Plymog, Hughes of Gwerclas, Walmesley of Coldcoates, and Talbot of
•bally bears a Shield of Thirty-five Quartering^.
ftrm.— Quarterly :—
f. Lloyd op Ply moo. The Arms of Ednyfed Vychan, Lord of Brynflfenigl, Gu.
t chev. ermine betw. three dead Englishmen's heads in profile, couped
and betrded ppr. two and one.
II. Lloyd of Plymog. (Ancient) The Arms of Marchudd ap Cynan, Ix>rd of
Brynflenigl, Gu. a Saracen's head erased at the neck ppr. wreathed about the
temples sa. and ar.
III. Hwfa AP Kendrig, Lord of Christionydol, derived from Tudor Trevor, Lord
of Hereford. Per bend sinister ermine and ermines, over all a lion ramp,
or, armed and langued gu.
iv. Rhys ap GRirriTH, derived from Llewelyn ap Ynyr o'lal, Lord of Gelligy-
ynan in Denbighland. Paly of eight or and gu. a bordure as. bezantee.
v. Davies or Denbigh, derived from Ednowain Bendew, Lord of Tegaingl. in
Flintshire. Ar. a chev. betw. three boars' heads couped sa.
vi. Hog he* or Gwerclas, Barons of Kymmer-yn-Edeirnion, co. Merioneth,
derived from Owain Brogyntyn, Lord of Edeirnion, Dinmael, and Abertanat,
sou of Madoc ap Meredith, last Prince of Powys. The Royal Arms of
Powys, Ar. a lion ramp. sa. armed and langued gu.
vir. Madoc, Lord of Mawddwy in Merionethshire, son of Gwenwvnwyn, Prince of
Powys- Wenwynwyn. The Arms of Bleddyn ap Cynfyn, King of Powys, Or,
a lion ramp. gu.
viii. Cadwgan, Prince of Fferlys, son of Elystan Glodrydd. Ar. three boars' heads
couped sa. langed gu. tusked or.
ix. Elystan Glodrydd, Prince of Fferlys, founder of the IV Royal Tribe of
Wales. Gu. a lion ramp, reguardsnt or.
x. Margaret, Baroness of Crogen and Branas, dau. and h. of Ievan ap
Llewelyn, Baron of Crogen and Branas, co. Merioneth, derived from Owain
Brogyntyn, Lord of Edeirnion, Dinmael, and Abertanat. Ar. a lion ramp.
sa. armed and langued gu.
xi. How el ap Meuric, Lord of Nannau, co. Merioneth, derived from Cad wean,
Lord of Nannau, son of Bleddyn ap Cynfyn, King of Powys. Or, a lion
ramp. ax.
xii. Rogers or Bryntangor, derived, through Osborne Fitzgerald, Lord of
* Ynys-y-Maengwyn in Merionethshire, from Walter Fitt-Otho, progenitor
of the Ducal Ifaue of Leinster. Erin, a saltire gu. with a crescent for
difference.
PLATE XL.
mi. Tudor, Lord of Gwyddelwern, co. Merioneth, (brother of Owen Glendower),
younger ton of Griffith Vychmn, Lord of Glvndwrdwy, co. Merioneth, derived
from Griffith Maelor, Lord of Brom field, eldest ton of Madoc, ap Meredith,
last Prince of Powys. The Anns of Griffith Maelor, Paly of eight ar. and gu.
over all a lion ramp. sa. armed and langued gu.
xiv. Thomas ap Llewelyh, Lord of South Wales, representative of the Sovereign
Princes of South Wales. The Royal Arms of South Wales, Or a lion ramp,
within a bordure indented or.
xt. Philip ap Ivoa, Lord of Iscoed in Caerdigan. Az. an eagle displ. or.
xvi. Llewelyn ap Griffith, Prince of North Wales. Quarterly, or and gu. four
lions pass, guard, counterchanged.
xvu. Owen Gwynedd, Prince of North Wales. Vert, three eagles displayed in
(esse or.
xviu. Griffith ap Cynan, King of North Wales. Gu. three ltoneh pass, in pale ar.
xix. Walmesley of Coldcoates, co. Lancaster. Gu. on a chief ermine two
hurts.
xx. Ferrers of Bash all, co. York, derived from William de Ferrers, VII Carl of
Derby, and Margaret his wife, dau. and co-h. of Roger de Quinci, II Earl
of Winchester. The Arms of De Quinci, assumed by the Ferrers's Earls of
Derby, Gu. seven mascles voided or, three, three, and one.
xxi. William de Febrers, VI Earl of Derby, derived from William de Ferrers,
III Earl of Derby, and Margaiet his wife, dau. and h. of William Peverel,
Lord of Nottingham. The Arms of Peverel, assumed by the Ferrers's Earls
of Derby, Vaire or and gu.
xxu. Ferrers's, Earls of Derby, (original) Sa. six bone shoes ar. three, two, and
one.
xxiu. Hugh Cyfeilioc, Earl-Palatine of Chester, Ax. six garbs or, three, two, and
one.
xxiv. Handle Gerkons, Earl-Palatine of Chester, Gu. a lion ramp. ar.
xxv. Handle de Meschines, Earl-Palatine of Chester, Or a lion ramp. gu.
xxvi. Richard, Earl-Palatine of Chester, Gu.semeeof cross crosslets or, a wolfs bead
erased ar.
xxvii. Hugh Lupus, Earl-Palatine of Chester, As. a wolfs head erased ar.
xxviii. Robert Fitz-Parnbll, IV Earl of Leicester, Gu. a cinquefoil era. pierced
of the field.
xxix. White of Duffield, co. Derby, Gu. a chev. betw. three goats' heads erased a
xxx. Talbot de Bash all, of Bashall, co. York, senior line of the House of Shrews-
bury, Ar. three lioncels saliant purpura.
xxxi. Ferrers of Egg into n, co. Derby, derived from William de Ferrers, III Earl
ofDerb ■" - - " " "
Nottingl
of Derby, and Margaret his wife, dau. and heir of William Peverel, Lord of
hum.
xxxu. Ferrers, Earls of Derby, (original) Sa. six horse shoes ar. three, two, and
one.
xxxiu. Halton de Halton, Lord of Hallon, co. York, Ar. two bars ax.
xxxiv. De Knoll, Lords of Knollsmere, Wigglesworth, and Hdlifield Peel, co. York
Ar. a bend cottised sa.
xxxv. Da Arches, of Wigglesworth, co. York, Gu. three arches ar.
Cmt.— A dead Englishman's head in profile coupvd and bearded ppr.
UtOttO. — Hcb Dduw, lieb ddim DJuw a digon.
Z^ 9 . de Hahon
~~ hand Anas-
fend co-h. of
QmBm ^ Jdof KncU- __ _ r
Earl-Palatine of Chester, ]
ad Earl of Lincoln. ( qui !
ob. 1232.^ she <L 1247.
Era.
Reginald de CBlTllim to farm. VD==
^re. dt fid? Earl of DerbT. had brerr
of Wiggles- of Chartler Castle. co. Staf- j
ford, ud the other lands of
his mother's inheritance j
upoc doxnr hcanac* 32
Hen. 111. Y 1*2 March
1254. 38 Hesirr III.
h-~< br Ellen, riia.— dco-h.of
Alan; Lord of GaBomO of
IfUfrr to #Hi«i n Eari
of Win
by Bashall
of John Ar-
iHr-rm. co.
qui oh. ante
of Saier. 1 Earl of Wmchea
ter. br Margaret, aastar asai
co-h. of uAnx .fttHNr-
■rn.IVEsrfof"
af FH.
rts aw ii
* MM.
r-4 r«hra-
IflbS
I. .-r.
•Blttr.Eaq.
I. co. Derby,
b the Long
fell. dan. and hcir.=-=Ed«-ard Frnm. Esq.
all. will dated 15= The sister and, m her iasoe v _
rt. 1707. | Wmon. Esq. of Wakefield.
of Rich.
! 11. «c:rr ud co-=Riebard Walawlrr E*». ofColdeoates Hall.
I in*. £$.£. ofj and Eares Hall. eo. Lancaster, a. *
' r-:il732-» 22 ' 1718.
1 1 A*z. 1737.
Ls^ of Cc^droate* and ftashafl <L 29 An*. 1767. rt. 6Y».
tlB HO J
Denb
aesss
Mar
H-.ce-P"- *"*• *-6 May 180(1.
Rare^a/l- a 23 Xor. 1816.
i. FucFij^* a^,/, of the Inner Tessple, E*q. „-.„_^
try Lic-tx . E^q. f uncw son of the hate Wffliasa Hughe*,
3 Avr. 1 BvlTa? fn-J-Oaardd, co. Denbigh, Tliiw«iita
A«g. l«2e. ^^aftheftuf^jf Cfcmta.
lf Klftni&fMEMnim. k. 6 Oct.
Dorothea, au
5Jary 1832.
n. Jane Lloyd,
of Chester.
Tafts<d«B«haDHnfW,b.\ST>a^\W^
Kfprssentative of tlie 'Houses of
fbmag, $itomlaa, Culdttaifd, & AfosJt&il
1 -'-i 1,ti E.jTnr.i "rm-.rsa ."^ HolU»i 'J>G«?«*l •"'»*' ;.i\v\\» .vvy.^1<* V*>\&
J \
:-• .: 'K'r ■ }
PLATE XLI.
3acfc*on, of <£nni»coe anu Carramore, co, flgago,
George Vaughan Jackson, of Carramore, Esq. M. A. a Magistrate and
Deputy lieutenant, and High Sheriff of Mayo in 1842, son of the late
George Jackson, Esq. Colonel of the North Mayo Militia, by Sidney, his wife,
only child and heir of Arthur Vaughan, of Carramore, Esq. a descendant of the
Vaughans of Wales, descends from the ancient Devonshire family of Combhay,
whose Arms he bears, quartered with those of Cuff, Aungier, Rutledge,
and Vaughan of Wales.
ft. in
9r«f.- Quarterly of six .—
I. Ar. mi a chev. ia. betw. three hawks' heads erased az. as many cinquefoils of the
field, for Jackson.
II. Ar. oo a bend indented sa. betw. two cottises az. bezantle three fleurs-de-lis of the
field, for Corp.
III. Erm. a griffin ramp. az. for Aungier.
IV. Ar. a stag pass. ppr. on a chief az. three estoiles or, for Rutledge.
V. Or, a lion ramp. gu. for Vaughan.
VI. Sa. a goat ramp, feeding on an ivy tree ppr. for Vaughan of Wales.
Cmt-A horse pass. ar.
Jetettu.— Celer et audax.
s JsVlfft*, of Enniscoe, co. Mayo, Etq.=pJane, dau. of the Right Hon. Jam** Cttf, of Bal-
1717, great grandson of Francis Jackson, Unrobe, and, in her issue, heiress of James Cuff,
~ - • - - * ~ Lord Tyrawley. The Right Hon. James Cuff
was grandson of Sir Jatttt Cuff, Master of the
Ordnance, and M. P. for co. Mayo in 1661 , by
SliCf, his wife, sister and co-h. of jgttfirose
2U*gkr, Earl of Longford.
Esq. Captain of Dragoons in Cromwell's Army,
a younger son of Joseph Jackson, of Sneyd Park,
co. Kent, Esq. descended from Jackson of
Combhay, co. Devon.
Elizabeth
Jackson,
m. to
John
Onnsby,
of Gort-
ner Ab-
bey, Esq.
and d, in
1830.
Anne
Jackson,
m. to
William
Orme, of
Abbey-
town, co.
Mayo,
Esq.
'itiisige
" fcft,efEonis-
ttt.Eeq.ft. in
1761, m. in
17B3, and d.
■ 1806. He
Hi Col. of
Lis North
jlbMlGRcta,
[nrthsco. of
})ff in the
Undlsa-
• foal Parlza-
Jack— p Maria,
onlydau.
and h. of
lira
Ubqt , of
Fox ford,
co.Mayo,
Esq.
James Jack-
son, a military
officer, b.
1765, m.Ma-
?\ dau. of —
enry, of
Cork, Esq.
and d. in
1825, leaving
two da us.
Jane, wife of
William de
Mesurier, of
Guernsey,
and Mary-
Pery.
Francis Jack-
son, ft. in
1769, m. Eli-
za, dau. of
John Martin,
of Cleveland,
co. Sligo,
Esq. and d. in
1834, leaving
George Fran-
cis, and other
issue.
OliverJack-
son, m. in
1812, Sa-
rah, dau. of
Humphrey
Jones, of
Mullina-
bro', co.
Kilkenny,
Esq. and
had
George-
Humphrey,
and other
Catherine
Jackson,
d. in
child-
hood.
PLATE LXI.
iSottwtp, of ©fceretti&e* co, Watczmt.
Thomas Norbury, of Sherridge, Esq. Justice of the Peace for the counties of
Worcester and Hereford, and a Deputy Lieutenant of the former, son of
Thomas Jones, Esq. by Ursula, his wife, third daughter of Benjamin Johnson,
Esq. Alderman of the city of Worcester, assumed, by Royal Licence, his
present Surname and Arms in lieu of those of Jones, in consequence of his
marriage with Mary Anne, only child of Coningsby Norbury, of Droitwich,
Esq.
flint*. — Sa. a chev. indented erm. betw. three bulb' heads cabowed ar. armed ec
Crest.— Out of a crown vallery or, a ball's head sa. armed or, in the mouth a trefoil
vert.
bLL ASHY NULDOtH
RODEKT UtDDULPH PHILLIPPS. E S if.
LOSGWOITH CQ HEREPOMLi.
W.HENRY TOOVEY HAWLEY. ESQ.
VEST GBEEK HOUSE. HANTS.
THOMAS NOKDUKY. ESQ.
SHLKK1DCL CO. VOBCEHTEt.
:?■ vr. ! .^x-:
Ui-Vl J»lIA*
>
' i .'run*
PLATE LXII.
Craufttirn, of TBatolanti,
ana subsetpientlg of gtrtmullan, to. &**♦
Thomas Craufuird, of Grange, co. Ayr, Esq. Male Representative of the
Craufuirds of Braidland, and the Kennedys of Ardmillan, bears the Quartered
Coat of Craufuird and Kennedy.
80*0.— Quarterly, first and fourth, Gu. on a fease erra. betw. three mullets ar. two
crescents interlaced of the field, for Craufiubd, of Baidland. Second aod third, Ar. a
cbev. gu. betw. three cross crosslets fitchee sa. for Kennedy, of Ardmillan.
Crtft.— A game hawk hooded and belled.
Jetotto. — Durum patientia frango.
ftmOYtb Cttttfufrt, of Baidland, lineally derived from-r-Jean, eldest dan. of Sir James
a younger brother of Sir ttfgiftalft Ctaufurfc, of
Loudoun, Sheriff of Ayrshire in 1296.
Lockhart, of Lee, m. about
1570.
David Craufuird, of Baidland.
J
Patrick Craufuird of Baid* Margaret, m. in 1617, to James Boyle, of Hawkihill,
land. Esq. ancestor of the Boyles, Earu of Glasgow.
William Craufuird, of Baidland.
r 1 n
James Craufuird^One of the daus. and co-heirs of Aug) Isabel, m. to James Craufurd, of
of Baidland. tUltlUtrp.of Ardmillan, Esq. by Mar- Jordan Hill, Esq. ancestor by
garet his wife, dau. of John Blair, of her of Sir Robert Craufurd
Blair. Pollock, Bart.
r
~i
William Craufuird, of Ardmillan, di8tin-=fMargaret,dau. James, ancestor A dau.=David Crau-
guisbed for his defence of the for- of Kennedy, of the Craw- furd, of
~ ~ * ' "~ of Baiter- funis of Sus- Drumsoy.
sane. sex.
tress of the Bass in the Frith of Forth,
against King William, in 1691.
Archibald Craufuird, of Ardmillan ^Marion Hay.
Archibald Craufuird, of Aid- Anne, dau. of John*f=-Thomas Craufuird, an officer in the army,
millan, i. in 1784, m. Taylor, of East I purchased Ardmillan from his elder bro-
A one, dau. of Robert Ken- Sheen, co. Sur- I ther; m. 2dly, Jane, dau. of the Rev.
ncdy, Esq. rey, Esq. | Hugh Hamilton, of Girvan.
Archibald Crmufuird^Margaretta Archibald-Clifford-Brackwell Craufuird, Anne, m. to
of A rdmillan , Esq.
4. 16 May, 1824.
Craufuird. Major in the Army, m. Jane, dau. of Mac Miken,
Dr. Leslie, and has issue. of Grange.
0Ut Jetfkftt Ctaufufrtr, of Grange, Esq^Elizabeth-Fraser, 2nd dau. of Other
6. in 181 4, Male Representative of the Craufiiro* David Steuart Galbraith, ol issue.
Of Batoianfc, and the HeitM&ff* of art»mtlUn. Machrihanish and Dro-
more, co. Argyle, Esq.
PI ATE XLII.
»eitg, of iSetotottm $ou*e, co, ealtoag.
James Kelly, of Newtown House, Esq. son of the late James Kelly, of co.
Cork, Esq. by Mary, his wife, daughter of Robert French, of French Grove,
co. Mayo, Esq. and a descendant of the ancient Family of Kelly of Aughrim
Castle, co. Gal way, bears the Ensigns of the ancient Irish Sept of O'KeHy.
(See Burke's Landed Gentry.)
Ini — Gu. on a mount vert, two lions rtmp. supporting a tower ar.
CrtSt— An Enfield passant ppr.
JstStlS.— Turrii fortis mihi Deus.
e&mnz, of fl^oot $oui*e, co. gotfu
John Maude, of Moor House, Esq. a Magistrate and Deputy Lieutenant for the
West Riding of Yorkshire, Author of a '< Visit to the Falls of Niagara in 1800/'
is the chief landed Representative in Yorkshire of the old and distinguished
Baronial Family of Maude, and bears the ancient Arms which were proved and
recorded in Glover's Visitation, a.d. 1585, by Arthur Mawhaut or Maude, of West
Riddlesden. The Patriarch of the Family in England was Eustace de Mom
Alto, surnamed the " Norman Hunter,*' one of the soldiers of the Conquest in
the immediate train of Hugh Lupus (see Burke's Landed Gentry). The present
head of the senior line is Cornwallis Maude, Viscotnnr Ha wards*.
•rws.— Ar. three bars gemelles a*, over all a liom ramp, go* charged oa the shoulder
with a cross crosslet fitchee or.
Crest. — A lion's bead couped gu. charged with a cross crosslet fitcbee or.
i&Otto.— Do Monte Alto.
JSOeicf), of 9rle &ou*e co. Glouttum.
George Asser White Welch, of Arle House, Esq. a Magistrate for the counties
of Gloucester and Essex, and also a Deputy Lieutenant of the latter, son of John
Gregory Welch, Esq. Justice of the Peace of Gloucestershire, by France*
Asser, his wife, only surviving child and heir of .the late Thomas White, Esq.
and grandson of the late Walter Welch, of Arte, Esq. by Mary Gregory, Us
wife, bears a Coat quarterly of four, and the Arms of Manxock, on n
Escutcheon of Pretence, in right of his wife Anne-Catherine-Gardiner, oaly
child of the late Lieutenant Mannooch, of the 68th Regt. and niece of Vice-
Admiral Sir Edward Brace, K. C. B.
iPOfATE/.XUI.
InH. — Quarterly, first and fourth, as. on a fesse engr. betw. six mullets, a lion pass.
Second, Per pale ar. and or, a chev. engr. cheouy gu. and of the second betw. three
roses of the thud on a canton ax. a fleur-de-lis. Third, Gu. a pale surmounted of two
lions passant.
fil ««^Tt^r^*>pe^ k^tffff^>iVff!r^1flr¥^:Pl^ W*>1 # cr0M cro8slet
•iO
J f ^WrrMani Welch, Esc^^lfrtfiret Biggs. "
;'-( ■ • ■-,( [■ '■? ( v 1 " ' ' '■
William Welch, of Arle, Esq ,=pMary Gregory.
.ui. !!•-■«./■ ' .*! ,-. » • ■ r ^ ,/-, ^^ ;
. i|m 2li#fT $©Wf » only sur-=pjphq Gregory Welsh, of Mary Buik=William Fanner,
'-trrrajr chili and heiress of fane Arte House, Esq. S.P. E**f.
late Thomas White, Esq. m. 28 Sept. 1797. . :
George Asser=
White Welch,
Esq. 6.13 Jan.
1800, m. in
1838.
Anne Catherine Qar-
diner, only child of
the late Lt-Col.
Mannoocb, of the
68th Regt. and
niece of Vice-Adm.
Sir Edw. Brace,
K.C.B.
John Gregory,
Jan. Captain
Royal North
Gloucest. Mi-
litia.
Walter, late
a Lieut.
95tfcBegt ?
Thomas
White.'
_ L.I II l
Caroline-Mary.
Louisa-Maria.
regory.
nma-Matilda.
Hajptt.
George Aster Edward. Frederick Catherine Barbara Hen- Louisa Frances. Maria Eliza-
While, Royal . William. Anne Ma- rietta. beth.
Navy. '!;'."' .. ry.
Hec&e, of Caruen, co. C&egtet.
!><fl V*i !ii..iT'^- • ■ :
baa Iriv.n-] ,-*>>»
s rf4ik* #to&&r6x LficTTE, ofCarden Park, Esq. High Sheriff of Cheshire in
" T 18^3eiVreseritatite of the Very ancient Family of Leche, bears a Shield of
(, » 8W<W«ileAigt.
flOBii- -. Quarters^ I.. $nn. qn a chief indented gu. three crowns or, for Leche.
Second, ta. a sling betw. two pheons ar. for Cawarden. Third, ar. two bars gu. aT
crescent for difference, for Mainwaring of Ightfield. Fourth, ar. four ermine spots in
-■' eso l ssu<ss B#*L**ta8. Jttftkv quarterly, £u» and or, in the first and fourth t^rters,
three fleurs-de-lis of the last, for Masse y. Sixth as first.
Ctff t-rQni of a ducal coronet or, an arm erect ppr. grasping a snake, environed
round the arm, vert. ' '
• H
Joffl l*tl* , of Carden, Esq. great grand^JBargartt, dau. and sole heir of George
son of John Leche, by 1Luc$, his wife,
2nd dau. and co-h. of Wiilliam Of
Catoarom.
From which marriage derived
John ~
ftUintoatinq, of Ightfield, co. Salop,
Esq.
sISBBBW of ™ n
^ lUul ^iill^^d^. d Caxde^ [I^ u A^l^M^Uanna|i Weweil, *. « 1*05.
JOtH Jfef tlrfitOtt Ittfa W pf fa^n. ,E*r. ,
^il) bus f iuo> 'Jo ^h'3tix:."p Jr.. ')
. -v...A
B»ir»1. t.
p*3 ,>;■ >>/ f . ■
■ft oo ..r*js:lf •• » *-n-, A ^il) bus f iuo> 'Jo 7jh'3t*u:."p jr., '? >» air.'yi Xt;''
rloo ."reunm* i-.uui.'.itbl «nnA «Arw aid 1^ )»^n jt: .-uml-i: 1 ! V' i< j*! -ur ?A
•x* / Vj • • mu bns J;sp.»l dT8r> DilJ "lo .rfooonnnM inemtu^J *»f:l or!* f- •>! 1 ^f
H j A .rjBid. bi*»>'u2I nr" !»»:i:ni"'i-
•1
\
mr
THOMAS M. M IK EN CRAUFUIRD. ESQ.
CIAKCE. CO. ATI .
JAMES KELLY. ESQ.
_ ^^ irhwrnwK house, co. calvat.
GEORGE ASSEK WHITE WELCH. ESQ
AILE HOUSE. CO. CLOUXESTE*.
JOHN HURLESTOK LECHE. ESQ.
CAIDEN PARK.rO. CHtSTEt.
PLATE XLIII.
aisston, of jSeplann, co. Suffolk.
The Rev. George Alston, of Neyland, a descendant of the ancient Baronetical
Family of Alston, whose Pedigree is traceable to the time of Edward I. bears
the Arms of Alston impaled with the Coat of Oxen den of Brome, in right of
his wife, Anne Charlotte, third daughter of the late Sir Henry Oxenden, Bart.
Sarah Alston, wife of John, fourth Duke of Somerset, was daughter and co-heir
of Sir Edward Alston, of London, President of the College of Physicians.
flrmi. — Ax. ten estoiles or, four, three, two, and one, for Alston ; impaling, ar. a
chtv. gn. betw. three oxen sa. for Oxenden.
Crtit. — A crescent ar. charged with an estoile or.
UtottO.— Immotns.
Kattrap, ofBatfotD &ou*e, co. Zftattoicfu
James Rattray, of Barford House, Esq. Captain R. N. a Magistrate for
Warwickshire, son of David Rattray, M. D. by Dora, his wife, daughter of
Richard Arnold, Esq. and great grandson of Sir Rullion Rattray, of Runy-
gullioo, co. Perth, Kt. descends from the very ancient Scottish Family of
Rattray, and bears their Shield, impaled with that of Vivian, in right of his
wife, Emily, daughter of John Vivian, of Claverton, co. Somerset, Esq.
flrotf.— Ax. a (esse betw. six cross crosslets fitchee ar. impaling for Vivian, or on a
chev. az. betw. three lions' heads erased ppr. as many annulets of the field, on a chief gu.
three martlets ar.
Crtit. — A star ensigned by a flaming heart ppr.
HlottO. — Super sidera votum.
gvatcp, of Opne ipatfe, co. ©Heatmeatfc.
John D'Arcy, of Hyde Park, Esq. Representative of the great Norman House
of D'Arcy, bears the ancient Shield of the D'Arcys of Nocton, and Quarters
Bertram, Tuite, Nugent, Judge, and Grierson.
flnW- Quarterly :—
1. Az. semee of cross-crosslets and three cinqnefoils ar. for D'Arcy.
II. Go. an orle and eleren cross-crosslets or, for Bertram.
PLATE XLIII.
III. Quarterly, gu. and ar. Ibr Tdite.
IV. EnD. two ban gu. for Nugent.
V. Or a chev. ?ert for Judge.
VI. Ar. a fir tree growing out of the middle base vert, surmounted of 4 sword m bend
az. hilt or, in the dexter and sinister chief an antique crown of the last, for GftTtRSOR.
Cwit."~On a chapeau go. turned up enn. a bull sa. armed or.
gttnnertrr*.— Dexter, a tiger ppr. ; Sinister, a bull sa. armed or.
itUttt.— Un Dieu, un Roy.
Norman D'Arcy, Lord of Nocton, co. Lincoln, temp. Conquestoris, living 1092.
T
Robert D'Arcy, of Nocton, d. 9 Hen. II.
X
Thomas D'Arcy, Bason of Nocton, d. 27=f=Alice, dan. of Ralph Deinceurt.
Hen. II.
T
Thomas D'Arcy, Baron of Nocton, 6 Ric. I. and 5 John.
T
Norman D'Arcy, Baron of Nocton, in arms against King John, tiring 90 He*. HI.
7
Philip b'Arcy, Baron of Nocton, <L 48= 7 daabel, sister and eventually co-h. t/ KC tj IT
Hen. III. tttrtaP*, Baron of Mitford.
Norman D'Arcy, Baron of Nocton, summoned to Parliament 49 Hen. III. and 22 Edw. I.
1. Philip D'Arcy, 3. Aobert Emmeline,^=Sir John D'Arcy, Knt. 2nd*pJoane, ska. of Ri-
son, called le Cosin, 13 cfcasd de Burgh,
Edw.ll. Sheriff of Nottmgw Earl of Ulster,
ham and Derby 16 Edw. IT. tad widow of
Lord Justice of Ireland: Tbotsaa fits-
called Le Neveu 2 Edw. Uli John, Earl of
and finally styled le Pert, KUdara, 2d wife.
One of the heroes of Creasy.
Baron of Noc- D'Arcy, dau. and
too, summon- of StaJ- heir of
ed to Parlia- lingburg, Walter
ment 28 Edw. co. Lin- Heron, of
I. to 84 Edw. coin. Haddes-
I. d. 6 Edw. don, Esq.
II. 1st wife.
John D'Arcy, Baron&pElizabeth, dau. and h
of Knayth, Constable
of the Tower of Lon-
don for life,
r
of Nicholas, Lord
Meynell, of Castle
Levington.
William D'Arcy, _
Plattyn, co. Meath,
Esq.
i v dan. of Sir
Robert Fitzgerald, of
Alen, co. Kildare.
PhiliD D'Arcy, Baron D'Arcy and Meynell,
Admiral of the King's fleets, summoned to
Pari, from I Ric.II.to21 Ric. II. d. 22 Ric.
H.ancestorofthesB'flttl^.lSarottisB'fllrtS
and #tfgne II, and the Carta offcotorr*
nt**, now represented by the Bmtf if
Sir John D'Arcy, of^=Joan, dan. of Petit,
Platyn, 1389, 8herifT | Baron of Mulfingar,
of Meath 1404 and co. Weatmeam.
1415.
Sir William D'Arcy,=y=Margai
of Platyn, liring I Flemi
Slane
1416.
_ ret, dau. of
Fleming, Lord of
Slane.
John b'Arcy, of Pla-
tyn, Esq. .
-=j=Anne, dau.
. I Chnstopher
-J wallTofCrk
dau. of Sir
Bane-
v>ncsswwB.
r ~
John D'Arcy, of Platyn, living 1477^Elizabeth, dan. of Chrisfepbtr Phmket, Bare* of KiMesa.
Sir' William D'Arcy, of Platyn, Vice Trea^Margaret, 2nd dau. of Christopher St^=Catherbe
surer of Ireland, seised of the Manors of
Rathwire and Lynn, co. Westmeafli, 1
Hen. VIII.
Lawrence, Baron of Howth,aad relict .
of Cruise of Drogheda, 1st wife.
2d wife.
k
9SV t ATf P' ot r J "? e ! da ?i *"4 h - of JohnD'AlrcyofClon- Christopher D'Arcy.
— - *" • dalea and Ralhwyr*. «ss,-
Platyn, Esq. d. v. p.
ofSonnagh.
b c
e
PLATE XLIII.
Sir William D'Arcy, of Platyn,
Kou will dated 18 Jan. 1545,
ancestor of the B'flttt* of
Platyn, co. Meatb, now ex-
tinct.
b e
Robert.
Walter.
Edmund, of
Martry,
Balriib,
Halton.
and Stidalt.
Thomas D'Arcy, of=»Margaret,
Dunmow, Esq.
next brother of Sir
Wniiam D'Arcy,
of Platyn, Knt.
dau. of
Richard
Kiltole, of
Trim.
Elisabeth, dau. of .
John D'Arcy, of Dunmow, Esq. d. 20=p:
Sept. 1639.
I '
William D'Arcy, of Dunmow, Esq. d. v.p^=Margaret, dan. of Brandon, and niece of
Thomas Brandon, of Dundalk,d. 14 Car.
II.
his grandfather.
George D'Arcy, Esq. declared an innoceni
papist 20 Aug. 1663, d. 1718.
P-yB
to^=»
r
Haggard, co. Meath.
licia, dau. of Thomas Nugent, of Clon-
lost, co. Westmeath.
Thomas D'Arcy, of Dunmow,
son and heir.
Esq. only^sjane, dau. of Bellew of BeUewstown.
y
John D'Arcy, Esq. d. at Dunmow, MarchspElizabeth, dau. and co-h. of
1758. *
Ctoutaf
Judge D'Arcy, of Dui
mow and Grangebegg,
Esq.
fU&Qf, of Grangebegg, co. Westmeath,
jq.: will prored 1773.
■Eliza, dau. of
" 1 Nu-
Ro-
n-ov-Eliza, dau.
Eg, I Richard *
I gent of I
I binstown.
Euza-Judge, only dau. and h. m. Gorges
Marcos Irvine, of Castle Irvine, co.
Fermanagh, Esq.
r-
i i i
Francis, of Bath,
d.«.p. in 1813.
Arthur, d, unm.
Thomas, d. s. p.
Lavallen, d. unm.
James D'Arcy, o£=f=Martha, dau.
Hyde Park, co.
Westmeath,
Esq. d. about
1803.
and h. of
malum
Urtoson, of
Deanstown,
co. Dublin,
Esq.
EBnfly,deu.~*iottt B*fllYS.*f Mary
of Thomas
Pa
D,0f
don, co.
Wert-
meath,
Esq.
of Hyde Park,
co. West-
meatk f Esq.
George-James Norman,
eldest son and heir,
b. in 1820.
Rev. Joshua D'Ar-
Anne, cy, Rector of Kil-
dau. of lalon, co. West-
Thomas meath, m. 28 Aug.
Cary, 1811, Sarah, dau.
Esq. of CapU Fleming,
of Hermitage, co.
Kildare, ana sister
of Robert Crowe
Fleming, of Nut-
field, co. Clare,
r T
John Samuel, of Bagatelle, co.
Westmeath, eldest son, m. in
1834, Louisa, only dau. of
William Handcock, of Car-
rintrilly, Esq. and hat issue.
Thomas =
D'Arcy,
Major in
the Army,
Inspector
Gen. of
Police
Province
of Ulster,
4.183&
Elixa, dau. Seve-
ofWm. ral
Buchan- daus.
an, Esq.
William-James, Banister-
at-law, eldest son.
(Salbrattb, of flEacfcrifranigfr anD Drumore, co. atgpiL
David Steuart Galbraith, of Machrihanish and Drumore House, Esq. a
Magistrate and Deputy Lieutenant for Argyllshire, descends from the Gal-
braiths of Grigha, derived, themselves, from a scion of Galbraith of Baldemock,
one of the oldest Families in Scotland. (See Burke's Dictionary of the
Landed Gentry.)
flntt*. — Gu. a fesst chequy ar. and az. betw. three bears' heads erased of the second,
muzzled of the third.
Crtft.— A lion's head erased.
IttsttS. — Vigilo et spero.
PLATE XLIII.
&a?man,of£ougt)aI,
The Haymans of Youghal descend from a younger ton of the Somersetshire
branch of the ancient Baronetical family of Heyman, of Somerfield, co. Kent.
The present Representative of the Irish branch is Matthew Hayman, of South
Abbey, co. Cork, Esq. son and heir of the late Samuel Hay man, Esq. M.D. by
Melian, his wife, second daughter and co-heiress of Matthew Jones, Esq.
Collector of Youghal, and grandson of the Rev. Atkin Hayman, by his first wife,
Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Atkin, of Leadington, Esq. (See Burke's
Landed Gentry.) Mr. Hayman married, 1816, Helen, daughter of Arundel
Hill, of Doneraile, Esq. and has issue surviving, viz. i. Samuel, in Holy Orders,
ii. Matthew Jones, an Ensign in the 18th Royal Irish, i. Melian. n. Helen,
in. Elizabeth, iv. Maria Lucy Anne. v. Susan.
flWIS.-— At. on a chev. engr. az. betw. three martlets ta. as many cinquefoils pierced or.
Crtfit. — A derai Moor, full faced, wreathed about the temples, holding in the dexter
hand, a rose slipped and leared, all ppr.
jttotto.— Coelum, non solum.
THE HEV. GEORGE ALSTON.
METLAND, CO. SUFFOLK-
JAMES RATTRAY. ESQ. C APT. RN.
BARFORD HOUSE. CO. WARWICK-
JOHN D'ARCY. ESQ.
HYDE PARK CO WESTMEATH.
DAVID STEUART GALEJH AIT H . E S^.
MACMRlHAX19H.fr DRUMORE HOUSE. CO. ARCTLL.
MATTHEW HAYMAN.ESQ.
SOUTH ABBEY. YOUCHAL.
La£x^ Ldyrzrd '."hurrou. 2C Ik*li#« Slif^r r«wr^.»\i 7ct\jc* > *
PLATE XLIV.
(fciffatto, of einiiington, co, ^taffotu
Thomas William Gifpard, of Chillington, Esq. Representative of the great
House of Giffard, derived from Walter Giffard, Count of Longueville, living
in 1025, (see Burke's Landed Gentry ,) bears a Quartered Coat, first and
fourth, Chillington ; second and third, Buckingham.
Arvtf. — Quarterly, first and fourth, az. three stirrups with leathers or, two and one ;
second and third, gu. three lions pass. ar.
CrfCt. — A tiger's head cooped, full faced, spotted, flames issuing from his mouth ppr.
and a demi archer bearded and couped at the knees in armour ppr. from his middle a
short coat paly ar. and gu. at his middle a quiver of arrows or, in his hands a bow and
arrow drawn to the head or.
#t0tt0.— Prener haleine tirez fort.
jFtancfeiin, of <£onaigton, co. jRotts.
John Francklin, of Gonalston, Esq. son and heir of the late Richard Francklin,
of Great Barford, co. Bedford, Esq. by Judith Reddall, his wife, third daughter
and co-heir of Sir Philip Monoux, of Sandy Place, Bart, and representative of the
ancient Family of Francklin, (see Burke's Landed Gentry), bears a Quar-
tered Coat, first, Francklin; second, Foster; third, Monoux; and fourth,
Walsh.
flm*. — Quarterly, first, ar. on a bend engr. betw. two lions' heads erased gu. a dolphin
embowed of the field betw. two birds close or, for Francklin ; second, sa. on a cner.
betw. three bugle horns or, as many pheons az. for Forster ; third, ar. on a chev.
sm. betw. three oak leaves vert as many bezants, for Monoux ; fourth, sa. a bend ar.
betw. three columbines of the second, for Walshe.
fTmt. — A dolphin's head in pale or, erased gu. betw. two sprigs vert.
iBfittD.— Sinceritate.
Dicfunaon, of JFarlep $ill* co. Vetfcff*
Catherine, widow of the late Charles Dickinson, of Farley Hill, Esq. and
daughter of the late Thomas Allingham, of the city of London, Esq. by Mary,
his wife, second daughter and co-heir of John Taylor, of Furzeyhurst, in the
Isle of Wight, Esq. which John Taylor was son of Richard Taylor, of Newport,
M. D. by Grace, daughter and co-heir of John CHEKE,of Newport, Esq. son of
Edward Cheke, of Merston, Esq. bears the Arms of Dickinson impaled with
the quartered Coat of Allingham, Taylor, and Cheke. The family of Cheke
PLATE XLIV.
descended from Richard Cheke, by the daughter of Lord Montacute, and about
the time of Edward VI. and Queen Elizabeth was of great distinction. Sir
John Cheke, Knt. was Tutor to the former Monarch, and his sister, Mary
Cheke, was married to Lord Burleigh, the celebrated Lord Treasurer. The
Chekes of Moston, from whom Mrs. Dickinson derives, were the senior line,' and
sprang from an uncle of Sir John Cheke.
Arms. — Or, a bend engr. betw. two lions ramp. gu. for Dickinson.
Jmpaling— Quarterly, first and fourth, bendy of eight or and ar. in base a Bon ramp,
az. in chief two chaplets vert, roses gu. for Allinoham ; second, perpale sa. and ar. in
base a lion pass, and in chief three annulets, all counterchanged, wr Taylor ; third, ar.
three crescents gu. for Cheke.
<$tcgotp*
A. £. Gregory, Esq. formerly High Sheriff of Bedfordshire, descended from a
younger son of the ancient Family of Gregory, of Ashfordsby, co. Leicester,
now represented in the senior line by Arthur Francis Gregory, of Stivic Hall,
co. Warwick, Esq. bears a Shield of Six Quartering^.
flrntf .— Quarterly :—
I. Or two bars az. in chief a lion pass, of the last, for Gregory.
II. Sa. a lion ramp. ar. ducally crowned or, debruised by a bend gu. for Seagrave.
III. Erm. a fess paly of six or and gu. for Malyn.
IV. Sa. two lions pass. ar. crowned or, for Dymoke (Champion of England).
V. Az. three lions pass, guard, in pale ar. for Ludlow.
VI. Vairy ar. and az. a fess gu. fretty or, for M arm ion.
Crest.— A demi boar ramp. sa. collared or.
i&OttO. — Vigilanter.
3[one#, of 5)art0t)eatf), co. JFiint
Wilson Jones, of Hartsheath, co. Flint, and Cefn Coch, co. Denbigh, Esq.
High Sheriff of the latter shire in 1831, thrice M.P. for Denbigh, son of the
late John Jones, of Cefn Coch, Esq. by Elizabeth, his wife, daughter and heir
of Edward Wilson, of Liverpool, Esq. grandson of Maurice Jones, of Cefn
Coch, Esq. by Catherine, his wife, daughter and heir of Peter Williams, of
Bala, Esq. and great grandson of Hugh Jones, of Dole, co. Merioneth, Esq. by
his wife, the daughter and heir of Maurice Lewis, of Pant Glas, co. Denbigh,
Esq. bears a Shield of Six Quarterings, and an Escutcheon of Pretence in right
of his wife, Cecil, daughter of the late John Carstairs, of Warboys, co.
Huntingdon, Esq. F.R.S.
Arms. — Quarterly, first and sixth, ar. three boars' heads erased sa. ; second, vert a
chev. betw. three wolves' heads ar. ; third, per pale fesse sa. and ar. a lion ramp, coun-
terchanged ; fourth, gu. a fess betw. three boars* heads couped or ; fifth, sa. a wolf
saliant ar. in chief three estoiles of the last.
An Escutcheon of Pretence for Carstairs.— As. on a chev. ar. betw. three green
roses slipped ppr. three buckles of the field.
Crest — A boar's head erased sa, langued gu. transfixed by an arrow.
JStottO. — Heb nevol nerth nid sier saeth. In EnglUh, Without help from above, the
arrow flies in vain.
A I GREGORY. ESQ.
rOSMEKLT BICR SHERIFF OF BEDFOKDSHItE-
WILSON JONES. ESQ.
HASTSHEA.TH. CO FLINT
k>
PLATE XLV.
Corbet, of fl^oteton Corbet, ana acton Eepnato,
co. fealop, Bart.
Sir Andrew Vincent Corbet, of Moreton Corbet and Acton Reynald, Bart.
Representative of that most ancient and distinguished family, bears a Shield of
twenty-five Quartering.
Arm:-
i. Or, a raven sa. for Corbet,
ii. Or, an escarbancle ia. for Turett.
hi. Az. two lions pass, or, for Erdington.
iv. Gu. a lion ramp, or, within an orle of cross crosslets of the second, for Hopton.
v. Gu. a mermaid ppr. for Guros.
vi. Vaire* ar. and aa. a canton go. for Erdington.
vii. Az. six lions ramp. ar. three, two, and one, within a bordure engr. or, for Ley-
bournb.
viii. Gu. two lions pass. ar. within a bordure engr. or, for Strange.
ix. Per bend az. and gu.a bend betw. two crescent* or, for Langbergh.
x. Paly of six sa. and or : on a chief of the second two palets of the first : an ines-
cotcbeon barry of six erm. and gu. for Bdrley.
xi. Barry of six or and as. a bend gu. for Penbruge.
xii. Or, three roses gu. for Younge.
xiii. Or, an eagle displ. vert, oppressed with a bend gobonated ar. and gu. for Sibton.
xiv. Barry nebulee of six or and vert, for Hawburk.
xv. Gu. semee of cross crosslets, three lucies haurient ar. for Luoy.
xvi. Ar. three chev. sa. for Archdeacon.
xvii. Gu. three roches naiant ar. for Roche.
xviii. Ar. three bends sa. for Haccombe.
xix. Gu. a lion ramp, or, oppressed by a bend az. all within a bordure engr. of the
second, for Talbot.
xx. Barry of six ar. and vert, eighteen fleurs-de-lis, three, three, three, three, three,
and three, counterchanged, for Mortimer.
xxi. Gu. two bars vair, for Say.
xxii. Gu. ten bezants, four, three, two, and one, a label ax. for Zouch.
xxiii. Gu. a saltire or, surmounted of a cross engr. erra. for Prince,
xxiv. Ar. on a bend az. betw. two cornish choughs sa. three garbs or, for Wickstead.
xxv. Or, a raven sa. for Corbet.
Crtflf .— First, an elephant ar. armed or, on his back a castle triple-towered of the last,
trappings or and sa. Second, a squirrel sejant or.
iBtoltaff.— Under the Arms, Deus pascit conros. Above the first Crest, Virtutis laus
actio. Above the second, Dum sptro spero.
PLATE XLV.
&tr Ktcfjarto Corfet, Knt. son of Rogei
Corbet of Wattlesborough, co. Salop,
From vhem derived
1
Joail, dan. and heir of ItertiolOfltfto
Ctttftt, of Moreton, co. Salop.
Sir Roger Corbet, of Moreton Corbet, co.=F=£ftargaret toe ttrtofagtoil, heiress of Shaw-
Salop, Knt. living temp. Edward III. bury, co. Salop.
Robert Corbet, of Moreton Corbet, Esq.«F=Margaret, dau. of Sir William Mallory,
High Sheriff of Shropshire in 1419. Knt.
Sir Roger Corbet, of Moreton Corbet, KnUsMPlfyaftft), dan. and sole heir of C|i
son and heir. fe0^t01t,ofHoptoo Castle, co. Salop, Esq.
[which marriage brought into the Corbet
family nineteen quarterings.]
J" ran wA#m utrtoem
Andrew Corbet, of Moreton Corbet, Esq,
d. in 1757.
TJfrailtf*, dau. and heir of William
9tiUU, of Shawbury, Esq.
Richard Prince Corbet, Esq. d,
1779.
30 Jan.«p|9larfi, dau. and heir of Jfo|ll Ulirfe
I tttitJ, of Wem, co. Salop, Esq.
Sir Andrew Corbet, of Moreton Corbet,=j=Mary, eldest dau. of Thomas Taylor, of
created a Baronet in 1808: d. 5 June
1835.
Lymroe Hall, co. Chester, Esq.
&tr anlrrrto 17tacent=i=Rachel-Ste
tforbft, of Moreton
Corbet and Acton Rey-
nald,Bart.: b. in 1800,
m. 19 Sept. 1820.
-f
phei>8, sister
of Rowland
Viscount
Hill.
Richard Corbet, of Ad-
derley Hall, co. Salop,
Esq. 6. in 1804: m.in
1830,Eleanor, young-
est dau. of the Rev.
C. Johnson.
Robert Cor- Vincent Roger
bet, d.unm. Corbet, m. 1
in 1829. May 1838, Ms-
Judith, d. ria, dan. of —
itnwr. in Humberttoo,of
1829. Chester, Esq.
X
\
Colston, of iRounUtoap J?atfr, co. milts.
Edward Francis Colston, of Roundway Park, Esq. son and heir of the late
Edward Francis Colston, of Filkins Hall, co. Oxford, Esq. by Arabella, his
wife, daughter of Michael Clay field, of Bristol, Esq. and grandson of the Rev.
Alexander Colston, Vicar of Broadwell and Henbury, who was great-grand-
nephew of the ever memorable philanthropist, Edward Colston, of Bristol,
bears a Shield of four Quarterings : first and fourth, Colston ; second, Ed-
wards ; and third, Hatman.
Arms* — Quarterly, first and fourth, ar. betw. two dolphins haorient respecting each
other an anchor, all ppr. for Colston. Second, per bend sinister erm. and ermines, over
all a lion ramp, or, for Edwards. Third, ar. on a chev. engr. ax. betw. three martlets
sa. as many cinquefoils or, for Haym an. On an Escutcheon of Pretence or, a lion ramp,
reguard. sa. for Jenkins.
CrWt. — A dolphin embowed ppr.
JStottO.— Go and do thou likewise.
/Harp <EToUt01t, dau. of William Colston ,=p&tt WMUam fcanmait, Knt Mayor of
Sheriff of Bristol, and sister of 4PtotDarto I Bristol.
(JToUUm the philanthropist.
1 '
Mary Hayman.=y=C|omaf IRfoatift, of Filkins Hall, co. Oxford, E#q.
Sophia Edwards.=pAlexander Ready, of the Inner Temple, Esq. who assumed the sur-
name of Colston.
I '
The Rev. Alexander Colston, Vicar of=pLouisa Minshull, dau. of Paul George Elers,
Broadwell and Heobury, 1744. | of Black Bourton, co. Wilts, Esq.
Edward Francis Colston, of Filkins Hal I, =j= Arabella, dau. of Michael ClayfieW, of
co. Oxford, Esq. Lieut.-Col. in the army. Bristol, Esq.: she d. 24 Feb. 1812.
I '
(RriDarto Jfrancif <ETol0tOll,of Roundwayr=Marianne, only child of William Jenkins,
Park, co. Wills, Esq. f Esq.
PLATE XLV.
Eotucfe, of<£ateacte.
Thomas Rodick, of Gateacre, co. Lancaster, and Woodclose, co. Westmore-
land, Esq. one of her Majesty's Justices of the Peace for the former county,
bean for
flttt*. — Go. a chev. party per pale wavy ar. and or, betw. two roses in chief and
one in base of the second, all barbed and seeded vert, a crescent for difference.
Crtft. — In her nest ar. a pelican and young sa. winged or, vulning herself gu. charged
on the breast with a crescent as in the arms.
HlottO. — Omnia vincit amor.
Thomas Rodick, of the
co. Dumfries.
Thomas Rc-=f= — , dau. of
Flosh-end, Kirkpatrickfleming,=j=Mary, dau. of Mathew Byars.
dick, of
Kendal, co.
Weetmore-
— Miloer,
of Mans-
field House,
co. Notts.
John,
ob. *•
Wil- =pA dau. of Ma the w,=j= Elizabeth, only
Ham.
— Thomp
son, of
Richmond,
co. York.
of Ken-
dal.
Thomas
Rodick,
M.D.of
Man-
chester,
J
William,
now of
Floah-
end, m.
and has
Tho-
mas.
•s. jp» issue.
Mary,
wife of
Septi-
mus El-
lis, of
Glas-
gow.
Anne, dau." 1
of William
Fell,of Haw-
thorn Hall,
co. Chester :
first wife.
r
child who sur-
vived of Henry
Gibson of Ken-
dal.
Thomas =pJudith, dau. of
Rodick,
now of
Gate-
acre and
Wood-
close,
Issue d. young.
Robert Preston,
of West Derby
Lower House,
co. Lancaster,
Esq. second
wife.
Mary.
Margaret.
Elizabeth.
Agnes.
Robert Preston Ro-
dick, bring 1843.
Thomas, living
1843.
James Dawson,
living 1843.
Margaret, liv-
ing 1843.
Janet Preston,
living 1843.
r^
\i*7*
&
SIR ANDREW VINCENT CORbET, BART
MORLTON CORBL7 AKU ACTON RtYNALD. CO SALOP
EDWARD FRANCIS COLSTON. ESQ.
tfOl-HSfWAT HARK. CO VILTS
THOMAS RODICK, ESQ
CAltACRt CO. LAKCA8TLR
." v..'^ .' iTTi i 's:-i; j! I'w'i".-. ; ;■»* ■**»•. i.y. -\ cs* V'V
PLATE XLVI.
Iparfaurp, of JLonnon,
George Parbury, of Mansfield House, Russell Square, Esq. M.R.A.S. (eldest
son of the late Charles Parbury, of London, Esq. and grandson of George
Parbury, Esq. by Mary, his wife, daughter of Edward Pollen, of New Inn, Esq.
son of Edward Pollen, elder brother of John Pollen, Esq. M.P. the father of
the 1st Sir John Pollen, Bart.) bears the paternal Arms of Parbury, with the
Ensigns of the family of Ellis, on an Escutcheon of Pretence, in right of his
wife, Mary- Anne- Joanna, only child of Edward Ellis, of the Priory, Hertford,
Esq. several times Mayor of that town.
flrv*.— Or, on abeodengr. cotised, also engr. at. betw. six torteaux, five escallops ar.
on an Escutcheon of Pretence for Ellis, or, on a cross sa. five crescents ar.
GttiL — Two branches of laurel in saltire ppr. surmounted by a pelican or, senile of
torteaux, in her nest ppr. feeding her young gold.
4&Otto. — Cras mihi.
®ap, of counting l^all, co< iftorfolfu
James Gay, of Thurning Hall, Esq. who formerly filled the appointments of
Under Secretary to the Government of Ceylon, and Second Commissioner for
the Affairs of the Kandyan Provinces, is younger son of the late John Gay, of
Alborough, Esq. by Frances, his wife, daughter of Richard Johnson, of Clay-
next- the-sea, Merchant, and bears the Ensigns which his ancestors, settled at
Thurgarton and Alborough since the time of Elizabeth, have used for a long
series of generations. (See Burke's Dictionary of the Landed Gentry.)
Strut*. — Ar. on a fess, per pale or and gu. betw. three mullets of the third, a demi
lion ramp. betw. two fleurs-de-lis countercnanged.
Ctfft. — A fleur-de-lis or.
#IOttO.— Toujours gai.
PLATE XLVL
©Hfcellp.
Edmund de Pentheny O'Kelly, Esq. b. 5 Feb. 1800, m. 16 July 1822*
Blanche Arundell, a Countess of the German empire, second daughter of tte
Hon. Raymond Arundell, brother of James-Everard, 9th Lord Arundel of War-
dour, and has issue, i. Augustus, b. 3 March 1825. n. Arundell Clan-Eugene,
b. 27 Jan. 1828. m. Pentheny, b. 25 Dec. 1831. iv. Raymond, b. 13 Jan.
1834. i. Blanche, n. Emily. For a history of the O'Kblly Family, see
Burke's Landed Gentry.
Bra*.— Quarterly, first and fourth, for O'Kf.lly. Second and third, for De Pen-
theny, sa. a chev. arm. betw. three pheont, ar. on a bordure of the last, engr. thirteen
roundkts ax.
Cmtf .— First, for O'Kelly. Second, for De Pentheny, on a wreath of the colours
sa. and ar. an oak tree ppr. fructed or.
Afattoc*.— First, for O'Kelly. Second, for De Pentheny, Malo mori quam foadari.
Peter de Repentenye, a.d. 1252, was the first of the family that Raymond le
appears to have settled in Ireland. The name is from Pentney, Repentheny*,
near Lynne in Norfolk, and was introduced into England by a.d. 1266,
Robert de Repentheny, styled " de vallibus," founder of the Kinsman of
Priory of Pentney, temp. William the Conqueror, a.d. 1066, Peter,
et seq. (See Deo dale's Monasticon.)
Peter de Repentheny, his=pRose, dau. of Dompnal,
eldest son, possessed of
estates in the counties
of Louth and Meath,
a.d. 1286.
or Donald Mac Molis-
sa, relative of Nicholas,
Archbishop of Armagh,
A.D. 1272.
Gilbert, Lord
of Dromcar,
and Adam,
a.d. 1273.
Peter de Repentheny ,=pMargery , dau. of
his eldest son, a.d. | afterwards with
1325.
D, A.D. afi
D
I of
Thomas
'Arditz, an ancient family
the co. Meath.
Simon
and Sir
Alexander,
extinct.
Peter de Repentheny,
his eldest son, who
d. without issue.
Philip de Repen-s
theny, Lord of
Tara, a. d.
1327.
■The dau. of
Sir James
de Stanley.
-L
Sir
Simon. . extinct
and Ber-
tram, Lord of Kylskir.
William de Rep
, his eldest John de Repentheny rnplsolda de Passowjke,
son succeeded to the Lordship of Lord of Kintale, and
Dromcar, on failure of issue to heir to his grand-
his kinsman, William, son of father, Sir James de
Hugh de Repenteny. Stanley, a.d. 1387.
Peter de Repentheny, d. without issue, A.D. 1366.
heiress of
a.d. 1373.
Molary,
Peter de Repentheny, only son of John, Lord of Kintale, Sheriff of Louth, a.d. 1384,
and living a.d. 1412, m. and had issue.
Richard de Repentheny, Lord of Castleton Tarvah, Barony of Skryne, co. of Meath,
a.d. 1431 to a.d. 1460, m. and had issue. ; ; j
r ^
Christopher de Repentheny, Lord of Tara, a.d. 1620»Dau. of ■ Eustace.
Richard de Repentheny, Lord of*»Mary, dau. of Bellewe of Marion de Rosea*
Tara, unjustly attainted and exe- Bellewe. theny, his dau.
cuted for high treason in the reign
•f Queen Elisabeth.
PLATE XLVI.
Edward de Repentheny, restored by King James I. to hi
father's estates, who was declared to hare been wrong
fully attainted.
±
atherine, dau. of Michael
Barn wall, Esq. of Ath-
ronan, co. Meath.
Mathew, forfeited his=pElinor, dau. 2. Gil-
estates io the Great of Christo- bert,who
Rebellion of 1641, pher d. young,
Cruise, i. p.
Esq. of the
Naul.
io the Great
Rebellion of 1641
which were granted
to James, Duke of
York.
3. Francis de=f=Eliiabeth,
Pen the ny, dau. of
chief of his Luke de
name, a. d. Bathe, of
1641. Waterside,
co. Meath,
Esq.
Issue extinct.
Luke de Pentheny,:
his only son.
=Margaretta, dau.
f Ashe of Ash-
, co. Meath.
=r=Margare
of Ash
J 6eld,c
James, 4th
son, and five
daughters.
Mary.
Elinor.
Elizabeth.
Margaretta*
Margery.
Catherine, m. to Plunkett,
of Tullo, co. Kildare.
Lake, who d. n. Christopher de Penthenv, who=pElizabeth, dau. of James Gay nor,
young, s. p. </. a. d. 1768, great-grandfather I of Black-Castell, co. Meath,
of the present representative. Esq.
John, d. at=pMary, dau. of
his residence
at Kill, co.
Meath.
I i I 1 I
Peter.
Michael.
James.
Elizabeth.
Catherine,
extinct.
Michael Dease,
of Tourbotstown,
E-q-
Elizabeth,
d. young.
II. Peter de Pentheny,=
chief of his name, grand-
father of the present re-
presentative.
Mary, relict of
Charles O'Mal-
ly, of Castle-
Mally, Esq.
r-r-m
in. James,
iv. Augustine.
v. Mary,
vi. Elinor.
ii. Maria de Pentheuy, heir-
ess of the above, m. to
George - Bourke 1 - Kelly
O* Kelly. (See Burke's
Landed Gentry.)
in. Elinor, co-heiress with her
sister Maria, relict of William
Bourke, of Springfield St.
Croix, Esq. i. p. v.
v, the
Edmund de Pentheny, their eldest son, is the present
representative of this family, a.d. 1843.
3[oim8on, of iRuncorn, co. C&ejeiter.
Johk Johnson, of Runcorn, co. Chester, Esq. (See Burke's General Armory)
bears for
arm*. — Or, a saltire vair betw. two cocks' heads erased in pale sa. combed and
wattled gu. and two pheons in fesse of the third.
Cmt.-On a wreath of the colours a crescent or, issuant therefrom a pheon, the whole
betw. two wings sa.
/HottO.— Scrvabo fidcm.
<H!iU>et\ of Ipurlep $all, ann $ul&am, co. IBtxkt.
The Wilders has been seated in Berkshire since the time of Henry VII. (See
Burke's Landed Gentry) and have intermarried with heiresses of the families of
Saunders and Boyle, through which they Quarter the Ensigns of Saubders,
Boyle, Garth, Beaufoy, and Hugford.
PLATE XLVI.
_ a faese or, ifcii^iJ with two hamlets a*, a demi
far Wilms. Second, per. chev. a. and ar. three
Sec*ad ! pcr. chev. a. and ar. three
far Sacvbcbs. land, per bend creneilee ar.
betw. three cross cwlets fitchee sa.
farBoTix. Fonrifc, or, two ^ _
Fifth, en. on a head as. three daqoefaihi ar. far Beaofoy. Sixth, vert
a ene*. act*, tam sn*V heads r ill ■titer, three mnDefti gn. for HocrofcD.
at the shoulders, Ac templet entwined
r, Eeq. <iT XeBhide,co.B«fffcs^^li|ihc4 v yoimger dan. and co-heir
^boxaed at SoJhass, 10 June, 1755. ( of C|UU* £**ft*tTf , Eeq. of Pur-
I ley, co. Berks; shed, in 1741.
John Wilder, of Nuchide. E*q.=BoiCq|, eldest dan. and co-hearof Colonel MUllfett
Mazistrale and Depatr Lieu-
tenant of Berkshire : buried
at Sulham, 13 Joly. 1772.
Stilt, (brother of Henry, Earl of Shannon), by
JBtrttl BcsaiSf , ha wife, dan. and heir of Sir
&*wl #art|. KnL by Martha, his wile, dan. and
heir of BtJ l ff of Ednnndacote.
■
The Rev. Henrr Wilder, LL.D. of Parley Hall^Joan, dan. of William Tboyta, of
Berks, Rector of SoJham, ft. in Sept. 1744, d. Snlbamstead, Esq. ; she d. aged
22 Jan. 1814. I 89, in 1837.
John Wilder, of Parley Hall, Esq. eldest^Harriet, dan. of the Rev. Edwards Beadon,
son and heir, bapt. at Sulhaai in 1769, ( Rector of North Stoneham, co. Hants; she
d. 22 Feb. 1834. | d. 4 Oct. 1825, aged 52.
The Rev. Henrr Watson Wild- n. John, =Marr, dan. in. Charles, it. Fred- I. Jane.
er, of Purler Hall, Rector of lass Fellow of the Yen. Fellow of erick, II. Harri-
Salbam, 6. 3 Not. 1798 : w. of Eton Gilbert King's Col- d. in ei, d.
in 1829, Angnsu, sister of Sir College, Heatbcote, lege, Cam- infan- young in
Charles-Joshua Smith, of Snt- and now Archdeacon bridge, d. cy. 1823.
tons, Bart, and was drowned Rector of of Win- hi 1838,
together with his wife, 2 July, Snlham, a. Chester, at. aged 30.
1836. 9 July. 26 July,
= 1801. 1831.
Frederick, of Purley Hall, 6. 2 July, 1832. Henry Beanfoy, b. 25 Oct. 1834.
CEOKGE PARBURY. ESQ.
UAKSPIELO HOUSE. RUSSELL SQUARE.
JAMES CAY. ESQ.
THURNINC HALL. CO KORFOLK.
PL r£KTI!£H
W^RS»> Wiff
DELL UE WAjiOOUR,
JOHN JOHNSON. ESQ
■ UKCOHK. CO- CHESTER
WILDEK OF PIKLEY HALL AND SL'LHAM
CO HEKKS
\
PLATE XLVIL
Lecftp, of Castle Hecftp, co. Lontiontietcp, anti
BaUpfjoUanD Ijouste, co* SDoton.
The family of Lecky came originally from Stirlingshire in Scotland, and settled
in the counties of Derry and Carlow : the former branch is now represented by
Holland Lecky, of Castle Lecky, and Ballyholland House, Esq. only son of the
late Averell Lecky, Esq. Capt. 14th Light Dragoons, by Jane, his wife, daughter
of the late Hyacinth Daly, of Killimur Castle, co. Gal way, Esq. and the latter
by John James Lecky, of Ballykealy, co. Carlow, Esq. (See Burke's Dic-
tionary of the Landed Gentry.)
Arm*. — Ax. a cher. betw. three mallets or.
Crot.— A wild boar's head erased ppr.
£ftotto. — Semper peratus.
Catton, of ujOitfceiwfeato, co. Chester.
Thomas William Tatton, of Withenshaw, Esq. son of the late Thomas
William Egerton, Esq. who assumed the surname and arms of Tatton, on
inheriting the Withenshaw Estate, bears the Tatton Arms impaled with the
quartered Coat of Parker and Townley, in right of his wife, a daughter
of Robert Townley Parker, of Cuerden, Esq. The family of Tatton is of great
antiquity, and was in early times of Tatton, in Cheshire.
&rv*. — Quarterly, ar. and gu. four crescents countercbanged, impaling, first and
fourth, gu. a chev. betw. three leopards' heads or, in the mouth of each an arrow fesse-
ways, ar. Second and third, ar. a fesse sa. charged with a mullet of the first, in chief
three mullets of the second, for Townley.
Ctfft. — A greyhound sejant ar. collared and tied to a tree ppr.
4fattt.— Crescent.
Robertieion, of 3iwfeei8, co. antoerne***
Arthur John Robertson, of Inshes, Esq. Representative of the second branch
of the great house of Strowan, unquestionably one of the oldest and most dis-
tinguished in Scotland, descends from and is connected with many of the first
Scottish Nobles, the Sinclairs of Rattar, Earls of Caithness, the Mackenzies,
Lords Kintail, the Balfours, Lords Burleigh, the Murrays of Philiphaugh,
the Douglas's of Cavers, the Pattersons of Inshes, the Elphinstones, Lords
Balmerino, cVc. Arc.
Inshes quarters Patterson, Sinclair, and Mackenzie.
PLATE XLVII.
flrm*. — Gu. three wolvti' heads erased ar. armed and laogued az. within a bordure of
the last.
Crtft. — A swan ppr. This was the original Crest of the descendants of Duncan I.
King of Scotland, and is still borne by the present Robertson of Inshes, who sprang
from the Strowan family previous to the acquisition, by that house, of the Crest of' 4 the
imperial crown held up by a dexter hand," which was awarded for the services rendered
after the King's murder, by Robert, the 4th Baron of Strowan.
©unran |.
Maltolm iatn 0Mv, King of Scot-
land, ancestor of the Sovereigns of
that kingdom.
King of Scotland.
T
BonaQr ©ane, who usurped the throne
to the prejudice of his nephews.
j
Madach, sod of King Donald Bane,
first Earl of Atholl, a. d. 1115.
wasspA
daughter of Haco, Earl of Orkney.
Malcolm, 2nd Eart of Atholl.
Henry, 3rd Earl of Atholl.
T
Henry, eldest son, of whose daus. and
co-heirs the eldest succeeded as
€*untm of fltyoll.
Conan, " filius Henrici, Comitis
Atholie," received a grant of Gle-
nerochie (Strowan), co. Perth, from
his father, Ump, Henry II.
Fnm mknm ierimi I
Duncan, 3rd Baron of Strowan.
KoWt, 4th Baron of Strowan, a noted
Kotrrtflottf
lis day— an<
ofSrfrotoai
Duncan, 2nd son, settled el to
temp. James L
From rnkftm, 5tA in
J
William Robertson, oi
Inverness.
John Robertson,
Inshes.
f=f=fllargaret,
OSItUfaii
Inshes, cc
f=i=Jan
T of
dau. and heir of
tUfant VaUrton, of
co. Inverness.
of=j=Jane Sinclair, of the family
' Rattar, of the Noble
House of Caithness.
William Robertson, of=j=&ftltUa, dau. and heir of
Inshes, a distin-
guished statesman
temp. George 1. and
a principal actor in
the stirring events
which preceded the
rising of 1715.
r
the Hon. Sir Cfiomas
MadUTt\it, of Pluscarty,
(2nd son of Kenneth, Lord
Kintail) by Jean Grant,
his wife.
Bttftur KOM. the last Archbishop of
St. Andrews.
, T
A dau.=pColonel John Bal- Anne, m.
four, of Ferny, John,
2nd son of John, 4th Lord
3rd Lord Bur- Balme-
leigb. rinoch.
BrtftttT, Lord Balmeri-
noch, die ill-fated ad-
herent of Charles Ed-
ward in 1745.
John Robertson, of Inshes, m. in 1703. ^Barbara, dau. of Colonel John Balfour, of
Ferny, 2nd son of John, 3rd Lord Bur-
leigh.
William Robertson, of Inshes.=*=Jean, dau. of Colonel William Murray,
3rd son of Sir John Murray, of Phihp-
haugh, by Anne, his wife, dau. of Sir
Archibald Douglas, of Caver*, Heritable
Sheriff of Roxburghshire.
Arthur Robertson, of Inshes, d. in 1815^=Katherine, dau. of James Laurie, of Buna-
grange, and niece of Colonel James Mas-
terton, MJP. Akte-de-Camp to tfoeDuke
of Cumberland at Cullooen, nfm' in
descent from the Marriage of RoWd
Masteries, ef Parknill, hefrtsaejt of
Masterton of that Ilk, with Marjory
Bruce, granddau. of Sir David Bruce, of
Clackmanan.
PLATE XLVII.
a
Masterton Robertson, of Inshes, d. in=pMary Sherer, of an ancient Stirlingshire
1822. I family.
&rt)mt £o$lt ]So(ert^=lst wife, Marianne, only child of=p % 2nd wife, Charlotte-Maria-Bear
Richard Patison, of Petite Cote,
Canada, Esq. by Julia Shobert,
his wife, only child of Deputy
Governor Shobert, Upper Ca-
nada, d. 16 Sept. 1836.
0011, now of Inshes,
Esq. m. 1st in 1824,
and 2ndly in 1840.
da, dau. of T. B. Batard, of
Sydenham, co. Kent, Esq. m.
18 Sept. 1840, d. 10 February
1842.
"1
Arthur- Masterton, younger, Thomas Gilzean. Julia Isabella. Charlotte- Caroline-
of Inshes, b. 9 Jan. 1826. b. in 1827. Ellen Rose. Bearda.
Ipotoer, of (ZEUetmme, co. Zfterforti*
James Power, of Edermine, M.P. for the County of Wexford, Esq. son and
heir of Sir John Power, of Roebuck House, co. Dublin, Bart, bears, in addi-
tion to his paternal Arms, the Ensigns of Talbot, on an Escutcheon of Pretence,
in right of his wife, Jane, daughter and coheir of John Hyacinth Talbot, of
Talbot Hall, Esq.
flrntf. — Per sal tire or and ar. three lions ramp. az. armed and laneued gu. in the
centre chief section an open helmet affront 6, unbarred ppr. on a chev. gu. three
•scallops ar.on an Escutcheon of Pretence : gu. a lion ramp, within a bordure engr. or.
Crtft. — A buck's head cabossed quarterly gu. and or, betw. the horns counterchanged
a cross Calvary-erect gu.
JHotto.—- Per crucem ad Coronam.
Reap, of 0iii, co. Cumberland
Job* Reat, of Gill House, parish of Brom field, co. Cumberland, Esq. is repre-
sentative of the very ancient family of Reay, which is stated by tradition to
have had a grant of the lands of Gill, then very extensive, from William the
Lion, King of Scotland, in the 12th Century. The tradition records that the
Chief of the house received this favour in recompense for his fidelity to the
Monarch, and his extraordinary swiftness of foot in pursuing the buck, and that
the conditions of the grant were, that he and his descendants should pay a pep-
percorn annually, and that the name of William, after their Royal Patron, should,
if possible, be preserved in the family, which, with the exception of the existing
representative, and his immediate predecessor, has ever been the case. The
present John Reay, Esq. inherited Gill House, at the decease of his grandfather,
the late John Reay, of Gill, Esq. (See Burke's Landed Gentry.)
flaw— Ar. three bucks courant gu.
Ctlit— A buck, statant, guard, gu.
UltltO. — In omnia proroptus.
HOLLAND LECKY. ESQ
• ALLY HOLLAND. HOUSE. CO • JJOVN.
frClftlLK HCKT, CO LOKDQXULitRY
THOMAS WILLIAM TATTON. ESQ
VITHENSHAW, CO- CHESTEE.
JAMES POWEK. ESQ M P
tDLBMIKL. CO. WEXFOtU
JOHN REAY, ESQ
GILL HOUSL, CO CfM BtBLAXD.
K
PLATE XLVIII.
flHdlcs, of tfce Grange, mm a^oulsep, co. Surrey.
Edward Lionel Welles, of the Grange, Esq. youngest son of the late
Dymoke Welles, of Grebby Hall, co. Lincoln, Esq. by Anne, his wife, daughter
and coheir (with her sister Elizabeth, wife of Thomas Massingberd, of Candlesby
House, Esq.) of Thomas Waterhouse, of Beckingham Hall, Esq. High Sheriff of
Nottinghamshire in 1787, and great-grandson of the Rev. Thomas Welles,
Rector of Willingham, by Elizabeth, his wife, only daughter and eventual heir of
Robert Dymoke, of Grebby Hall, Esq. grandson of Sir Edward Dymoke, of
Scrivelsby, Knt. Champion at the Coronation of Charles II., bears a Shield of
Sixteen Quartering^, and Impales, in right of his wife Mary-Ann, daughter of
John Galliers, of Stapleton Castle, co. Hereford, Esq. the Quartered Coat of
Galliers and Vaughan.
flrntf — Quarterly — I. Or, a lion ramp. sa. for Welles, ii. Sa. two Hods pass. ar.
crowned or, for Dymoke. hi. Az. three lions pass, reguard. ar. for Ludlow, iv. Vaire*
az. and ar. a fesse fretty gu. for Marmyon. v. Sa. a sword erect in pale ar. hilted or,
for Kilpec. vi. Erm. five fusils in fesse gu. for Hebden. vii. Gu. on abend ar. three
rye stalks and ears sa. for Rye. viii. Or, a lion ramp, double queued sa. for Welles.
ix. Barry of six erm. and gu. ; over all, three crescents sa. for Waterton. x. Gu. a
fesse dancettee or, betw. six cross crosslets of the last, forENGAYNK. xi. A r. six sparrows
sa. three two, and one, on a chief indented gu. two swords in sahire betw. as many wolves'
heads erased or, for Sparrow, xii. Ar. a saltire gu. on a chief of the second three
escallops of the first, for Talboys. xiii. Gu. two bends or, for Fitzwith. xiv. Go.
a cinquefoil ar. within an orle of eight cross crosslets or, for Umfreville. xv. Gu. a
chev. or, betw. nine cross crosslets ar. for Kyme. xvi. Or, a pale engr. sa. in base two
fountains ppr. for Waterhoose. Jmpalhtg, quarterly, first and fourth, paly of six or
and sa. on a chief of the first three cocks gu. for Galliers. Second and third, az. three
boys' heads, couped at the shoulders, the necks entwined with snakes ppr. for Vaughan.
Crfftf . — First, a demi lion ramp. sa. Second, A sword erect ar. pomel and hilt or.
fSLottO — Semper pararus.
Sir Joftlt ©flinoke, Knt. M.P. for Lin-=p*flargarct to aufctoto, heiress of Scrivels-
colnshire, 46 and 47 Edw. III. Cham- by, co. Lincoln, dau. and heir of Sir
pion at the Coronation of Rich. II. I Thomas de Ludlow, Knt. byjpoait, bis
wife, dau. and co-heir of $1)tUp tot
I iHanmon ; she d. 2 Henry V.
S J
Sir Thomas Dymoke, K.B. of Scrivelsby t =F®\i\BL\n\\), dau. and heir of Sir Ktrtarfc
Champion to Henry V. d. last year of fte often, Knt. by his wife, the dau. and
that reign. heir of Itg*.
Sir Philip Dymoke, Knt. Champion of=r=Joan, dau. of Sir Christopher Conyers, of
Henry VI. j Sokeburn.
I '
Sir Thomas Dymoke, of Scrivelsby, Knt.=p|Hargaret, 2nd dau. and co-heir of UtOttt I,
beheaded temp. Henry VI.
Sir Robert Dymoke, Knight Banneret, of*
Scrivelsby, Champion at the Coronations
of Richard 111. Henry VII. and Henry
VIII.
EortT Qllf HtS, by Joane, his wife, dau.
and heir of Sir Kofeert 9$latrrt0lt, of
Watertoo.
:Jattf, dau. and co-heir of John Sparrow,
of London, 2nd wife.
Sir Edward Dymoke, of Scrivelsby, Knt.=j=attlte. dau. of Sir ©forge CalbOtf*,
Champion at the Coronations of Edward and sister and co-heir of (fttlfcert, Horfr
VI. Mary, and Elizabeth, d. in 1506. j CaltlOtf*, of Kyme.
I '
Robert Dymoke, of Scrivelsby, Esq. d. in==Bridget, eldest dau. and co-heir of Edward.
1580. ] lord Clinton.
\
PLATE XLVIII.
a
Nicholas Dymoke, Ecq. youngest son.=j=A daughter of Danvers.
I ~ J
Sir Edward Dymoke, of SriveUby, Knt.=j=Jane, dan. of Nicholas Creasy, of Fulnetby,
Champion to Charles II. d. 1663. I Esq. m. 21 June 1624.
I '
Edward Dymoke, of Grebby Hall, co. Li n-=p Abigail Soowden.
Award uymoKe, oi ureDny nan, co. 1-10-=™
coin, Esq. 2nd sod, d. 1 April 1694.
Robert Dymoke, of Grebby Hall, Esq. d^Elizabetb Knivcton
in 1714. I
= J
Elizabeth Dymoke, only dau. and eYentuafcy=The Rev. CfgflMf IffiUIUi, Rector of
heir, 6. in 1701, d. in 1780. Willingham and Springthorpe, co. Lin-
1 'in 1781, agedlo.
r
nafcpThe Rev.
Willing*
I coin, d. i
The Rev. Robert Welles, D.D. Rector of=*-SusanMb, dan. of John Clayton, of Owera-
Willingham and Springthorpe, if. 22 I by, co. Lincoln, Eaq. d. 18 Not. 1796.
March 1807.
\
Dymoke Welles, of Grebby Hall, Esq. 6.*f=8nnr, dan. and co-heir of Cftoua* UU*
in 1772, d.iu 1832. t*t$0tttt, of Buckingham Hall, co.
JNjQtU, Esq. by Anne Hurt, his wife,
- I niece of Eastland Hawksmore, Esq.
I —_— J -
Cftttuntr Etonel S&elU*, of the Grange,--=flUrtj Butte, dav. of f tim Gallim, of
West Moulsey, co. Surrey, Esq. youngest Stapleton Castle, co. Hereford, Esq.
son.
Kusscll.
Thomas John Russell, Esq. Representative of a distinguished branch of the
noble Family of Russell, which held for many centuries the dignity of Baron of
Killough, in Ulster, (see Burke's Landed Gentry), bears for
firms. — Ar. a lion ramp. gu. on a chief sa. three escallops of the first.
GTrCSt. — A goat passant ar. armed.
jHottO. — Che sara sara.
Rolte, of tfce tenure, co* fl©onmoutb.
John Ethekington Welch Rolls, of the Hendre, Esq. High Sheriff of Mon-
mouthshire in 1842, eldest sou of the late John Rolls, of Bryanston Square,
London, Esq. by Martha, his wife, only daughter and heir of Jacob Barnett,
Esq. and grandson of John Rolls, of the Grange, co. Surrey, Esq. High
Sheriff of Monmouthshire in 1794, by Sarah, his wife, daughter of Thomas
Coysh, of Camberwell, Esq. bears a Shield, quarterly of four, and impales, in
right of his wife, Elizabeth- Mary, third daughter of Walter Loug, of Preshaw,
co. Hants, Esq. the Quartered Coat of Long.
&rtlt&. — Quarterly, first and fourth, or, on a fesse dancettee with plain cottiset betw.
three billets sa. each charged with a lion ramp, of the field, as many bezants, for Rolls.
Second, Gu. an eagle displ. barry of six erminois and az. for Coyshe. Third, Or a
saltire sa. in chief a leopard's face of the second, for Barnett.
Jnrpalttig Long, quartering Trenchard, Ashpordby, Hippislet, &c.
Ctfit.— Out of a wreath of oak a dexter cubit arm, vested or, cuff sa. the arm charged
with a fesse dancettee, double cottised of the second, charged with three bezants, in the
hand ppr. a roll of parchment ar.
JRottO. — f'tlcritasct Veritas.
THOMAS JOHN RUSSELL. ESQ.
IfPtESEXTATIVE OF THE ■ AH OK 9 OF KILLOUCH
JOHN ETHERINGTON WELCH MU4 ESQ.
THE HENDIE. CO MOK MOOTS .
PLATE XLIX.
Potcfcer, of Clgffe, co. Dorset.
Charles Porcher, of Clyffe, co. Dorset, Snare Hill, co. Norfolk, and Borough
Green, co. Cambridge, Esq. third son of the late Josias Du Pr£ Porcher, of
Winslade House, co. Devon, Esq. M. P. for Old Sarum, by Charlotte, his wife.
second daughter of Admiral Sir William Burnaby, Bart, and the descendant of
an ancient and noble Family of the kingdom of France, where, on the banks of
the Loire, the Counts Porcher of Richebourg still exist (see Burkf/s Dictionary
of the Landed Gentry), bears his Paternal Coat, impaled with that of Redhead,
in right of his wife Ellinor, only daughter of the late Thomas Redhead, of Snare
Hill, Esq.
flrmf. — Per pale ar. and gu. barry of eight counterc hanged, a cinquefoil erm. for
Porcher ; impaling, sa. a bend eogr. or betw. two cottises ar. on a canton of the last a
sal tire gu. for Redhead.
Cmt. — A lion ramp, or, charged with three bare gu. holding betw. the paws a cinque-
foil, as in the arms.
j&OttO.— Pro Rege.
(fcarnett, of CUiecnmore Patfe anu TBleasuale,
co. ^Lancaster*
William Garnett, of Quernmore Park and Bleasdale, Master Forester of
Her Majesty's Forest of Bleasdale, and High Sheriff of Lancashire in 1843,
bears for
flrnii. — Gu. a lion ramp. ar. ducally crowned or, within a bordure nebulae, also or, a
canton of the last, thereon an eagle displayed with two heads sa.
gTrfft — A demi lion ar. gorged with a wreath of oak ppr. holding betw. the paws an
escutcheon gu. charged with a buglehorn or.
iHottfl— Diligentia et honore.
ISosc, of ftiltaooca.
The Family of Roos, or Rose, was settled in Nairnshire in the reign of King
Alexander III. Hugh Rose of Geddes, by marriage with Elizabeth Byset,
acquired the lands of Kilravock, and had a Crown Charter of the Barony from
King John (Balliol). From that period the estate has descended lineally to the
present proprietor, Hugh Rose, of Kilravock, Esq. ; and what is uncommon,
every link of the pedigree is proved by documents in public records or in the
family charter chest. In 1640 Hugh Rose, then of Kilravock, by a license
from the Lord of the Isles, built the present Castle, which stands on the bank
of the river Nairn.
The Baron of Kilravock in 1560 used a Seal of the Family Arms, with the
inscription " S. hugonis ros baronis" a style very unusual in Scotland, but
which seems to have been adopted by many of the Lairds of Kilravock.
ftrms. — Or, three water bougels, az.
<?Trttt.— A hawk's head couped ppr.
&upportfT0.— Two hawks ppr.
ittflttOfft. — VmUr the Arm*, Audeo. Ahove the Cre$t, Constant and true.
PLATE XLIX.
jBotton, offfiUngs Norton, co< ©Horcejiter*
Robert Norton, of the city of Dublin, Esq. Barrister-at-law, eldest son of the
late Brett Norton, Esq. one of the Commissioners of Bankrupts, and great-
grandson of Colonel Robert Norton, of Sherington, co. Bucks, Major of Duke
Schomberg's Regiment of Horse at the Boyne, represents the ancient Family of
Norton, of King's Norton, co. Worcester, derived from Theobald de Ryngville,
the Norman, and bears a Shield of Eleven Quarterings.
glrmft. — Ar. on a bend betw. two lions ramp. sa. three escallops of the first, quartering
St. Loe, Russell, De La Riviere, &c. &c.
(JTrot. — A greyhound's head or, gorged with a fesse engr, betw. two. bars gu. the fesse
ringed behind of the first.
C(oma0 jlorton, of Hingslon, co. Cam-=
bridge, and of Hundon, co. Suffolk,
Esq. grandson of Richard Norton, of
King's Norton, Esq. and representative
of Theobald de Ryngville, the Norman,
d. 41 Eliz.
/Bargaret, only dau. and heir of Sir $2ltU
Itam &t. VLOt, Capt. of Queen Eliza-
beth's Guard, grandson of Sir John St.
Loe, Knt. and Jsafcfl t»f la Ktbiere,
his wife, heiress of Torma^on.
William Norton, of Sherrington, co. Bucks,=pAnn, dau. of Sir John Brett, Knt. of Ed-
and of Hundon, co. Suffolk, Esq. d. in | monton, co. Middlesex.
1642.
. Bucks,=pAnn
q. d. in I m
Brett Norton, of Sherrington, Esq. 6. 1626.=r=Sarah Lamby
Col. Robert Norton, of Sherrington, Majors
of Schomberg's Regt. of Horse at the
Boyne, and a distinguished officer of
Marlborough's campaigns, d. in Ireland
in 1730.
1647.
Anne Smith wick, m. 26 Aug. 1716, d. in
Dublin in 1756.
Robert Norton, 6. 1719, d. 1778. Sidney, dau. of Patrick Sandys, of Dublin,
| Esq.
Brett Norton, Esq. b arri ster-at-1 aw, =j=B ridge t, only dau. of Luke Eife, of=f=Francis Talbot, Esq,
and one of the Commissioners of ] Donnymore, co. Meath, Esq. | 2nd husband.
Bankrupts, 6. 1747, d. 1791.
Hubert
Korton,
of Dub-
lin, Esq.
Barrister-
at-law.
Other
issue
de-
ceased.
John Norton, Esq.
late Captain 34th
Regt. served in six
campaigns under
the Duke of Wel-
lington, and is dis-
tinguished by his
valuable inven-
tions.
Mary Anne,
m. Rev. H.
R. Robin-
son, M. A. of
Granard.
Bridget-
Sidney ,m.
William
Clarke, of
Dublin,
Esq.
Grace.
Other
issue
de-
ceased.
"I
Letitia
Talbot,
wife of
the
Rev.
James
George
Pur-
cell.
George-Augustus-Frederick Robinson, 6. in 1821.
Bridget- Elizabeth.
$all, of (fctappen&all ©all, co. Cftegtet.
William Hall, of Grappenhall, Esq. an acting Magistrate for the counties of
Lancaster and Chester, descends from the Family of Hall, which has been
settled at Warrington for nearly a century, and which derived from the Halls of
Beverley, co. York. (See Burke's Dictionary of the Landed Gentry.)
ftriltf •— Sa. three poleazes ar.
Cr«t. — An erobowed arm holding a poleaxe.
i&otto. — Finem respice.
CHARLES PORCHER. ESQ.
CLYFFE. CO DORSET.
WILUAM GAKNETT. ESQ.
BLEASDALE AND yUEHKMORE PARK, CO- LANCASTER.
HUGH ROSE. ESQ.
KILRAVOCK CASTLE. CO- NAIRN-
ROBERT NORTON, mjk-
Ot THE CITY OF DUBLIN.
WILLIAM HALL. OF G HAPPEN HALL
CO. CHESTER
PLATE L.
I&atuep, of Castle temple, co* iRenfteto,
Lieutenant Colonel James Harvey of Castle Semple, K.H. (whose patronymic
was Lee) assumed his present surname and arms agreeably to the provisions of
the Settlements by which he and his wife (Margaret, daughter and heiress of
the Honourable John Harvey, of the Island of Grenada) succeeded to the ex-
tensive estates of Mr. Harvey. (See Burke's Landed Gentry.)
Struts. — Gu. on a bend erminois, three trefoils slipped vert, on a chief ar. a buck's
head cabossed az. betw. two mullets of the first, and tor distinction, in the sinister chief
point of the field, a cross pattee of the fourth : — Jmpaltttg, gu. on a bend erminois, three
trefoils slipped veit, on a chief ar. a buck's head caboased az. betw. two mullets of the
first, all within a bordure wavy of the second.
Cmt. — Issuant out of a crescent or, charged with a buck's head as in the arms, a
cubit arm ppr. the hand grasping a trefoil slipped, erect, vert; and for distinction, the
arm charged with an ermine spot gold.
HlOttO. — Omnia Bene.
Dolling, of flgagfceralim
Robert Holbeach Dolling, Esq. Barrister-at-Law, and Justice of the Peace,
son and heir of the Rev. Boughey William Dolling, of Magheraltn, co. Down,
Rector of Magheralin, &c. and great-grandson of James Dolling, of London,
Esq. by Mary his wife, only child and heiress of the Honourable J. Ratcliffe, of
Stockport, co. Chester, and Hatton Garden, London, cousin german of the ill-
feted Earl of Derwentwater, bears the quartered Coat of Dolling and Rat-
cliffe.
Arms. — Quarterly, first and fourth. Per fesse ar. and as. a fesse dancettee, per fesse
dancettee m. and of the first, for Dolling. Second and third ar. a bend engr. sa. for
Ratcliffe.
Create.— First, a buck's head ppr. attired or, gorged with two bars dancettee ar. for
Dolling. Second, a bull's head erased gu. ducally gorged or, for Ratcliffe.
HlOttO.— Spero.
PLATE L.
JFxt?ffetall>, Knigfct of $Un-
John Fraunceis Fitzgerald, fitnfjAt of Glin, of Glin Castle, co. Limerick,
High Sheriff thereof in 1830, is Representative of Sir John Fits-John Knt.
second son of John Fitz-Tiiomas Fitzgerald, Lord of Decies and Desmond.
This Lord of Decies, by Virtue of his Royal Seigniory, as a Count Palatine,
created three of his sons, by his second marriage, Knights, and their descen-
dants have been so styled in Acts of Parliament, Patents under the Great Seal,
and all Legal Proceedings up to the present time. From the eldest of these sons
derived the White Knights, from the second, the Knights of Glin, and from
the third, the Knights of Kerry.
flrmtf. — Erm. a saltire gu.
Crot*.— First, a boar passant gu. bristled and armed or. Second, a castle with two
towers, issuant from the sinister tower, a knight in armour, holding in his dexter hand a
key, all ppr.
$U9?0tUr*. — Two griffins, collared and chained.
iHottO.— Shanit a Boo.
«rcg, of JT3orcliffc^alL
Robert Hyde Greg, of Norcliffe Hall, co. Chester, Esq. a Magistrate for that
Shire, and formerly M.P. for Manchester, is son of the late Samuel Greg, Esq.
and great- grandson of John Greig, Esq. who migrated from Scotland, and
settled in the North of Ireland, at Belfast. (See Burke's Landed Gentry.)
flrvf. — Ar. a fir tree growing out of a mount rert, in base, surmounted by a sword in
bend ppr. on a dexter canton az. a royal crown ppr.
CttSI. — An arm embowed in armour, grasping a scimitar az. pommel and hilt or.
JttuttO. — Ein doe and spair not.
(HBbitebum, of tfje q^ount, neat dftretosftutp.
Branches of the Family of Whitehurst have been resident in the Counties of
Denbigh, Salop, and Herts, for several generations ; the direct Elder Line is
represented by John Whitehurst, of the Mount, near Shrewsbury and of
Wornerton Park, near Church Stretton, Esq. and a younger branch, by the
Rev. Edward Whitehurst.
Arnttf. — Long borne by tbe family, and confirmed 8 Geo. III. Per chcr. ar. and gu.
a chev. countercnanged betw. two garbs in chief p'pr. and a horse in base ar.
Crfit. — On a mural crown ar. a knight's helmet plumed, pierced with a jaTelin, the
point dropping blood ppr.
iHottO. — Je craios Dieu.
LIEU. COL. JAMES HARVEY, K H-
CASTLE SEMPLE. CO UENFKEW.
ROBERT HOLBEACH DOLLING. ESQ
MACHEKALIK. CO- DOWK-
JOHN FKAUNCEIS FITZGERALD
KNICHT OF CLIN
KOBKRT HYDE GREG. ESQ.
\ORCLIfFE HALL, CO. CHESTER -
JOHN WHITEHURST. ESQ.
THE MOUNT. 8HIEV&BURT.
i"tt-l -n f-ivru i :*tiu"- v. -•■ tt-nW :-'v»v\ ^vAi'A^u .-wc- v**:
PLATE LI.
Gilbert, of Dction ant) CorntoalL
Walter Raleigh Gilbert, Esq. Major-General in the Honourable East India
Company's Service, second son of the late Rev. Edmund Gilbert, Descendant
and Representative of the ancient and highly eminent Family of Gilbert. of
Compton Castle, co. Cornwall, (see Burke's Dictionary of the Landed Gentry,)
impales with his paternal Coat of Gilbert, the Arms of Ross, in right of bis
wife, Isabella, daughter of Major Ross, Royal Artillery, by Isabella, his wife,
fifth daughter of John Macleod, tenth Baron of Rasay.
Arms. — Ar. on a chev. sa. three roses of the first, leaved ppr. impaling, Ar. the sea,
thereon a ship, sails furled and flags flying, all ppr. ; on a chief embattled gu. three lion*
ramp, of the first for Ross.
Crett — A squirrel sejant, feeding on a bunch of nuts, ppr.
iHottO.— Malkro mori quam mutare.
Cantillon of TBallpfttgue, co. ftUtrp.
Antoine Stlvain de Cantillon, Chevalier Baron de Ballyhigue, Lieutenant-
Colonel of Hussars in the French Service, Officer of the Legion of Honour,
Knight of St. Louis, &c. is Representative of the ancient Irish Family of Can-
tillon, and as such bears their Armorial Ensigns.
Siring. — Az. a lion ramp, or, armed and langued gu. betw. two arrows in pale of the
second, the points in base ar. feathered ppr.
Creat. — A naked dexter arm em bowed, the hand grasping an arrow.
SbUftportfTf . — Dexter, a wolf reguardant, sinister, a lion reguardanl (
^JottO.— Fortis in bello.
Sir Henry de Cantillon, Knight, Lord of Cantelon in Normandy, accom-
panied the Conqueror to England, and being wounded at the Battle of Hastings,
received from that Monarch in return for his services, an Estate in Devonshire.
This property Sir Henry Cantillon called Cantelon, subsequently corrupted into
Cantelupe. One of his descendants became established in the County of Kerry
in Ireland, towards the year 1169, from him derived
Ifrtytr He Cantillon, Lord of Ballyhigue, co. Kerry, b. in 1533, m. Elizabeth Stuart,
niece of Alexander, Lord of Garlies, ancestor of the Earls of Galloway.
BabtH He (Smttllon, Lord of Ballyhigue, b. in 1579, m. Maria Fits Gerald, of the
family of the Earls of Kildare, ancestors of the Duke of Leinster.
Wtfltp Cantillon, of Bel- Valentine Cantillon, Esq. an Richard Cantillon, of Kerry, Esq.
view, b. in 1611, m. Bar- odicerin the army of Charles who received from Charles I. a*
bara, dau.of Samuel Pigot, I. was wounded at the Bat- reward for services, confirmation
of Disart, Esq. and Mar- tie of Naseby in 1645. He and grant of several lands situ-
garet Perceval, his wife, of m. in Flanders, Marie Mes- atedin the Barony of Cl*nm*ra ;
the noble family of Egmont. scan, and </. there in 1649. the charter dated 7. Sept. 1636.
«f= He w. Mary , of the
I county of Kerry.
PLATE LI.
<£tian0, of C&e ©ill Court
Kin gsm ill Evans, of The Hill Court, co. Hereford, Esq. Justice of the Peace
and Deputy Lieutenant, formerly an Officer in the First Foot Guards, and High
Sheriff of the County of Hereford in 1816, bears the quartered Coat of Evans,
Clarke, and Kyrle.
flnttfl. — Quarterly, First and fourth, per pale, az. and gu. three lions ramp. ar. armed
and langued or, for Evans ; second, or, a fesse erm. betw. three trefoils slipped vert, for
Clarke ; third, vert, a chev. betw. three fleurs-de-lis or, for Kyrle.
CtTft.— Out of an earl's coronet a dexter arm embowed naked, brandishing a dagger,
pommelled and hilted or, blade ar. guttee de sang.
ttUIUr UprU, of The Hill, co. Hereford, Esq. eldest son and heir of Walter Kyrle,
of " the Hulle," Esq. temp. Henry VII.
7
ftltrt ttfftlt , dau. and sole heir, m. fcmp.^CfirffltopJer CUr&e, Esq.
Henry VII. I
Frmm wkam dtrivtdtftk in ductnt,
Richard Clarke, of The Hill, Esq. living,=j=Alice, dau. of John Vele, of Longford, co.
aged 46, in 1683. I Gloucester, Esq.
fllitt CUrftt, in her=pC|oma0 €£battf , of Langattock, co. Monmouth, Esq. living in
1699; son and heir of Herbert Thomas Walter Evans, of the
same place, Esq. by Frances, his wife, dau. of Giles Morgan,
of Pencraig House, near Newport, Esa. and grandson of
Thomas ap Ivon ap Jenkin Herbert, of Langattock, temp.
Elizabeth.
e, heiress of Hill
Court, w. Jan. 1,
1696.
Thomas Evans,=pSybil, dau. of Mary, dau. of William Adams, of=f=HlttMmill 4pfe81t*, of
of Langattock,
eldest son and
heir, living in
1729.
Penry Wil-
liams, of
Penpont, co.
Brecon, Esq.
the Anchor Hill, Esq. and sister
of William Adams Williams, of
Langibby Castle, Esq.
Thomas Evans,
of Langattock,
d.unm.tnl808,
aged 78.
Mary, m. to Her-
bert Phillipps,
Esq. and had
one son, Thomas
Phillipps, Esq.
King* mill Gbon*, of Lvdi-*
ert House, Esq. colonel in
the 1st foot guards, d. of
wounds received at Lincelles
in France in 1793.
Lydiert House, co. Mon-
mouth, Esq. Barrister-
at-law, second son.
:Catherine, dau. of Wil-
liam Durham, of Mau-
gusbury, co. Gloucester,
Esq. by Catherine, his
wife, dau. of John
Blewitt, of Llantarnam
Abbey, Esq.
IttltfftUtll €?banfi, Esq.=Anne-Ro*alia - Eliza- Joseph Blew-
justice of the peace and de- beth, eldest dau. of ett, capt. 1st
puty lieutenant, 6. 1 July, Thomas Thoroton, of foot guards,
J784; inherited in 1806, on Flintham House, cq. d, unm. in
the death of his cousin Jane, Notts, Esq. M.P. m. France in
last surviving child of the 19 Sept. 1810. 1816.
late Joseph Clarke, Esq. the
estate of The Hill Court.
Anne, m. in
1819tolieut.-
gen. Sir Man-
ley Power,
K.C.B. UeuL
Sovernor of
lalta.
the-
cal
rine.
Mary
PLATE LI.
Eleanor Tuite, his wife, is entitled to the same Quartering*, with the exception
of HoDsoN and Strickland.
3nM- — Quarterly, fint, bam- of eight or and sa. for Selby ; second, ar. acroas flory
gu. for Percehay ; third, ar.fretty ar.forLocNDE ; fourth, ar. a lion ramp* as. depressed
by a bend or, for Faccoxberg ;" fifth, ar. an inescutcheon sa. within an orle if eight
cioqaefuils gu. for DA icy ; sixth, quarterly ar. and gu. a crescent sa. for difference for
TriTE : seventh, enn. two bars en. for Ncgemt; eighth, ar. a saltire within a bordure
gu. for Fitzgerald ; ninth, per chev. embattled or and ax. three martlets counterchanged,
for Hodson ; tenth, sa. three escallops ar. for Strickland.
CtrSt.— A Saracen's head ppr. wreathed abont the temples or and sa.
jBotti — 3emper sapit snprema.
Ipolep, ofTBortcn l£all, co, Suffolk.
George Weller Poley, of Boxted Hall, Esq. Representative of the ancient
Knightly family of Poley, which removed from Poley, Herts, to Boxted and
Bradley, co. Suffolk, temp. Edward III. (see Burke's Landed Gentry,) is
grandson of George Weller, Esq. who, as heir to his maternal ancestors,
assumed the Surname and Arms of Poley.
«rtW- Quarterly.—
I. Or, a lion ramp. sa. for Poley.
II. Sa. two chevronels betw. three roses ar. for Poley,
III. Ar. on a bend sa. three crosses pattee of the first, ancient Arms borne by Sir II u m-
piirey de Polby temp. Henry I.
IV. Sa. a chev. engr. or, betw. three mullets ar. for Badwell.
V. Az. a saltire or, betw. four billets ar. for Leyes.
VI. Barry of six sa. and or, for Knighton.
VII. Erm. on a cross gu. five escallops ar. for Weyland.
VIII. Gu. three fusils in fesse enn. betw. three martlets ar. for Rock ell.
IX. Enn. on a bend gu. three pheons ar. for Blyant.
X. Ar. a chev. betw. three lozenges ermines, for Sraa.
4Trrst. — A lion ramp. sa. collared and chain reflexed over the back or.
IBottO. — Fortior qui se.
*m!
Kwi.&mu- evans. 154-
TNt nut, CQQ1T* * "" MtPtFrmo
J££&*1
MAJOR GEK WALTER RALEIGH GNJiEKl
L I t MftVICIt
BAJSON jjj BU.LV HI Gii*
WALTER SELUY. ESQ.
BIDDLISKJN- CO KORTHl'MBERLA.SD
GEORGE WELLtR FOLEY. ESQ.
BOX TED BALI. CO- SUFFOLK-
s
■iU . ,:.-.r- . *t.
\
PLATE LIT.
flUiteon, of ©totolangtoft, co. Suffolk
Henry Wilsox, of Stowlangtoft Hall, Esq. late M.P. for West Suffolk, only
son of Joseph Wilson, of Highbury Hill, co. Middlesex, and Stowlangtoft, co.
Suffolk, Esq. who was second son* of Thomas Wilson, of Highbury Place, Esq.
impales, with his own Arms, the Ensigns of Fitzroy, in right of his wife,
Caroline, only daughter of the late Lord Henry Fitzroy, and niece of the Duke
of Grafton.
flrm».— Sa. a wolf salient or, on a chief of the last a pale of the first, charged with a
fleur-de-lis ar. betw. two pellets : impaling, for Fitzroy, quarterly, first and fourth,
France and England, quarterly, second, Scotland ; third, Ireland: over all, a sinister
baton com pony, ar. and az.
Crwt — A demi wolf or, the sinister paw resting on a pellet charged with a fleur-de-
lis gold.
Ittotto.— mil 0<me toil.
&tppi0lep, of Lamborne Iplace, co, 1Betfe»,
Henry Hippisley, of Lamborne Place, Esq. High Sheriff of Berks in 1840,
second son of the late Rev. Henry Hippisley, M. A. of Lamborne Place, by
Anne, his wife, daughter and coheir of Lock Rollinson, of Chadlington, co.
Oxford, Esq. and sixth in direct descent from the marriage of John Hippisley,
of Stone Easton, Esq. (son of John Hippisley, Esq. of the same place, by Elixa,
his wife, daughter and heir of John Organ, of Lamborne, Esq.) with Marga-
ret, daughter and heiress of John Preston, of Crickett, co. Somerset, Esq.
bears a Quartered Shield, Hippisley, Organ, Preston, and Rollinson, and
an Escutcheon of Pretence, quarterly Nelson and Heydon, in right of his wife,
Elizabeth Agnes, daughter and heir of the Rev. John Nelson, Prebendary of
Heytesbury, by Catherine his wife, daughter and coheir of Richard Heydon, of
Bodicote Grange, co. Oxford, Esq.
Arms.— Quarterly, first, sa. three mullets, pierced in bend, betw. two beodlets or, for
Hippisley. Second, per saltire or and era. over all a cross cooped gu. for Organ.
Third, az. ten bezants, four, three, two, and one, on a chief ar. two lions passant counter-
passant sa. for Preston. Fourth, ar. a cioquefoil as. on a chief gu, a lion passant guard,
or for Rollinson.
flit £f CUtrijf Oft Of IJretmCf . — Quarterly, 6rst and fourth, per pale ar. and sa. a chev.
betw. three fleuis-de-lis counterchanged, for Nelson. Second and third, quarterly, ar.
and az. a cross engr. counterchanged, for Heydon.
Cmt. — A hind's head erased or, gorged with a collar sa. charged with three mullets
of the first.
• The eldest son is Thomas Wilson, of Highbury Place, Esq. and the only daughter, Mary,
wife of Samuel Mills, of Hussell Square, Fsq.
PLATE LII.
Romeo?, of Pennant ano JFiimatts, co. apt.
Hrw Fergcssdse Ressedt. of Bennane, Esq. Representative in the male line
of the Chie& of the name, derives in direct descent from Roland de Carriole,
a. o. 1C5.\
MXWL <J»i*wrry. ant asi ioavtb. ar. a cWr. go. bt-tv. three crossm crosslet fitchee
sa. far Ke.»se»t. "Second aad third* ax. throe lemTft-de-fis or (the lUyml Arms of
Frzmu\
CmL— A iecr-dF~5s or, isaanag oat of two oak leaves ppr.
.— Dexte\ a fcsaale is the tmtnnu of tkc sixteenth century ; sinister, a
doit&a, of Little Effort), co. faction.
Gkorgb Wiuliax Soltaf, of little Efibrd, Esq. son and heir of the late George
Sohau, of Little Eflbrd, Esq. by EKzabeth- Maria, his wife, daughter of William
Symons, of Chaddlewood, Esq. (see Beau's Lamded Gentry) bears, on his
Paternal Shield, an Escutcheon of Pretence, quarterly, first and fourth, Culme ;
second and third, Goddard, in right of his wife, Frances Goddard, daughter and
coheir of the Rer. Thomas Culme, of Tothill, son of John Culme, of Tothill, Esq.
by his wife, the daughter and heir of the Rer. William Goddard, of Berkshire.
Per bead snurtrr ax- aad ar. oa the dealer aide three ears of wheat oo one
i the «axs^&fe,thmsV«ivde-aaot^ first.
three
Mm f?tcmtr%rs« of PntoatX— Qoarterrj, first aad fanrth, ax. a cbev. betw. three
aefieaas vmlsaas; thtssmliiii or, far CrLHC Second aad third, go. a cher. ▼aire' betw.
three uuca nt a ar. Car Gonaaan.
CiTSt. — A desai boa arg . within two branches of r
I. — Mweris wnaii e n disco.
SMOgest, of l£cm$tel>, co. Rent.
Thomas Law Hodges, of Hemsted, Esq. lata M. P. for Kent, eldest son of the
late Thomas Hallett Hodges, Esq. High Sheriff of that county in 1786, by
Dorothy, his wife, youngest daughter of John Cartwright, of Marnham, co.
Notts, Esq. and grandson of Thomas Hodges, Esq. Governor of Bombay, (see
Burke's Dictionary of the Landed Gentry,) bears, on his hereditary Coat, an
Escutcheon of Pretence, in right of his wife, Rebecca, only child of Sir Roger
Twisden, of Bradboorn Park. Bart.
fcrsnv— -Or. three crescents sa. on a canton of the second a ducal crown of ike first.
3a t?SCltf|t*a sf fcrrtrat*.— Gyroonv of four ar. and g«. a saltire betw. soar cross
crosslets all coanlerchaiged, a crescent for deference, for Twisdex.
CrtSt— Ont of a dncal coronet or. an heraldic antelope's head ar. horned and tufted
rold.
JatsttS. — Mala p-aMrisa pereunt.
HENKY WILSON. ESQ.
sroWI. VSGTOhf. CO sU"F»*OLK
HENKY HIPPISLEY. ESQ.
I.AMBORKL I'LACL. CO. BEIKS
CAPT HEW FERGLSSOKE KENNEDY.
BI.N'KANh AND KISS ARTS. CO- AT*.
GEOKGE WILLIAM SOLTAU. ESQ.
LITTLt t.FFOttli. CO- OtVOK ■
THOMAS LAW HODGES. ESQ.
HI.MSTED. CO- hLXT
PLATE LIII.
Cuckec, of Cotton Park, co. Detain.
William Tucker, of Coryton Park, Esq. a Magistrate for the Counties of
Devon, Somerset, and Dorset, son of the late William Tucker, of Coryton
Park, Esq. and great-grandson of William Tucker, of Coryton, Esq. by Mary,
his wife, only dau. of Thomas Marwood, of Widworthy, Esq. bears a quartered
coat and two crests.
Arms. — Quarterly, first and fourth, barry wavy of six ar. and az. a chev. embattled or,
guttee sa. betw. three sea-horses of the third ; second and third, az. on a chev. embattled
betw. three sea-horses ar. as many hearts gu.
Crf«t«. — A lion's gamb, erased and erect gu. charged with three billets in pale or,
holding in the font a battle-axe ar. handle of the second. A demt sea-horse re guard, ar.
holding in his paws a heart gu.
/(lotto. — Auspice Teucro.
Iprougers, of IBromfielU-
The Rev. Edwin Prodgers, B.D. Rector of Ayot St. Peter, Welwyn, co.
Herts, and a magistrate for Surrey, descends from the ancient family of Proger,
or Progers, of Gwarindee, co. Monmouth, which derived from Jenkin ap
Guillim, eldest son of William ap Jenkin, alias Herbert, Lord of Gwarindee,
temp. Edward III. and brother of Howell ap Guillam, ancestor of the Herberts.
(See Burke's Landed Gentry.) The Rev. Gentleman bears, on an Escutcheon
of Pretence, the Arms of Blades, in right of his wife, Caroline, daughter and
coheir of the late John Blades, of Brockwell Hall, co. Surrey, Esq.
flmtfl. — Per pale gu. and ar. three lions ramp, two and one ar. betw. three crosses
patted fitchel in the foot, one and two, erminois.
flit <?*f Utcfjeoil Of pretence. — Az. two swords in saltire ar. pomels and hilts or, sur-
mounted of the Roman fasces, palewavs of the last, axe-headed of the second, interlaced
with a double chain collar gold, on a chief erm. a bee volant, betw. two star pagodas ppr.
Qtrt%\. — In front of a cross Calvary, or, a wivern with wings endorsed vert, io the
mouth a sinister hand couped at the wrist gu. gorged with a collar and reflexed over the
back gold, the dexter claw resting on a cross pattce of the last.
iHottO. — Devouement sans borne*.
^traefmn, of Cfjornton.
Tins family is of great antiquity, and we find Walterus de Strachane, or
Srathethyne, " cum consensu Rudolphi de Strachane heredibus sui," con-
veying lands to the Canons of St. Andrews, circ. 1160, in the reign of
King Malcolm the Fourth; and John, the son of Rudolphus " filius ejus"
makes over to the Abbot and Convent of Dunfermline, the lands of Belheldies,
" pro salute sua," and the deed is confirmed by Alexander the Third in 1278.
The present Baronet, Sir John Strachan, of Thornton, Cliftdcn, Teign-
mouth, co. Devon, succeeded to the title from the failure and extinction of the
previous heirs male, and is the nearest and lawful heir male in general, and re-
PLATE LIIL
presentative of the family of Strachan of Monboddo, and is also the nearest and
lawful heir male in general to Sir Alexander Strachan, of Thornton, Kincardine-
shire, Baronet, who was created and raised to the dignity of a Baronet by King
Charles I. May 26, 1625, by Royal patent of that date. Sir John Strachan,
m. Elizabeth, dau. of David Hunter, of Blackness, co. Forfar, Esq. and has had
issue; 1. John, m. Mary Anne, daughter of Isaac Elton, of Whitestaunton
House, co. Somerset, Esq. ; 2. James Graham, of the Civil Service Bombay,
deceased; 3. Amelia, m. to the Rev. William Page Richards, LL.D. Rector of
Stoke Abbas, co. Dorset ; 4. Catherine Margaret, m. to John Cave, of Brentry
House, co. Gloucester, Esq.
Stmts. — Quarterly, first and fourth, or, a stag trippant ai. ; second and third, ar. on
the sea a galley, her oars in saltire sa. within a bordure wavy az. Impaltltg. Ar. on a
chev. gu. betw. three hunting-horns vert,' a crescent ar. betw. two cidquefoils or, for
Hunter.
CrCStS.— First, a naked arm embowed ppr, holding a scimitar also ppr. poroel and hilt
or. Second, on a rudder a man's head side faced, all ppr.
jbttpp Otter*.— Two forresters ppr.
HlottoeS. — Abvvt the first Crest, For. D. ward. Above the second, Steer steady.
$QatDe, oflBatfoto, ano Clopton.
Charles Thomas Warde, of Clopton House, and Welcombe House, both in the
co. of Warwick, only son of the Rev. Thomas Warde, Vicar of Weston- under-
Weatherley, by Charlotte, his wife, daughter of John Lloyd, of Snitterfield,
Esq. F.R.S. lineally descends from Serjeant Rowley Warde, an eminent
Lawyer in the time of James I. who was eldest son, by Martha, his wife,
daughter and heiress of Thomas Rowley, of Idlicot, co. Warwick, Esq. of
Thomas Warde, of Barford, co. Warwick, Esq. third son of Henry Warde,
of Pillerton, Esq. (See Visitation of Warwickshire o/1619.) He bears the
Ensigns of Warde and Rowley Quarterly ; and impales, in right of his wife,
Marianne, eldest daughter of John Lawes, of Rochampstea{l House, co. Herts,
Esq. the Arms of Lawes.
Arm*.— Quarterly, first and fourth, az. a cross patonce or, a mullet for difference, for
Warde. Second and third, ar. a fesse betw. three mullets sa. for Rowley ; Jmpaltng,
or, on a chief az. three estoiles of the field, for Lawes.
tiTrcst. — A wolfs head erased or, charged with a mullet for difference.
jFirtb, of l^artfotu LoD&e, co- Chester-
Thomas Firth, of Hartford Lodge, Esq. son of the late Thomas Firth, Esq. by
Elizabeth, his wife, daughter of John Hemmingway, of Halifax, Esq. and great-
grandson of George Firth, of Northowran, co. York, impales, with his own
Ensigns, the Arms of Hand, in right of his wife, Anne, daughter of Thomas
Hand, of Middlewich, co. Chester, Esq.
SlrmS.— Az. a chev. engr. erm. betw. two battle-axes in chief, and a garb in base or.
Impaling, sa. two bars, and in chief three crosses pattee ar. for Hand.
Crest.— On a mount vert, a griffin pass. sa. in front of a hurst of six trees, ppr.
iBotto* — Deus incrementum dedit.
THOMAS FIK1H. ESQ
HAH1FO..U LOi'CL. CO IHLSTLU
WILLIAM TUCKER. ESQ
COKY1UN I'AKK. «:0 ULVUN.
THE HEV" EDWIN PKODGEKS
\Yu- s T J-L71KS WtLWYN. HLITH
CIIUtLES THOMAS WAKDE. ESQ-
f'LOI'TOK UOr». AKI> VELCOMHL (O YAJVlOt.
r- )i* it ' \ i : ;, v. \ •■- .'*v > »»• '.\vA. ' v . v.' oh-
£0ottoee
TRANSLATED, WITH EXPLANATORY ILLUSTRATIONS.
.i.QUAM servare mentem. Horace, ()d. b. ii. 3. (To preserve an equal mind.) Mathew.
" In adverse hours an equal mind maintain,
Nor let your spirit rise too high,
Though fortune kindly change the scene." — fbancis.
Amour avec loyaultc. (Love with loyalty.) Parr, of Lythwood.
A rege et victoria. (From the king and victory.) Barry, of Rocklaveston.
Asgre Ian diogel ei pherchen. (A pure conscience is a safeguard to its possessor.) Jones, of
Liana rth.
Aspera ad virtutem est via. (The road to virtue is rough.) Edwardes, of Gileston Manor.
Aspire, persevere, and indulge not. Adams, of Middleton Hall.
Audaces juvo. (I assist the daring ) Campbell, of Jura.
Audeo. (I dare.) Hose, of Kilravock.
" I dare do all that may become a man."
SHAKhMl'lArU..
Auspice Teucro. (Under the auspice of Teucer.) Tucker, of Cory too Park.
Rear up. Fulford, of Great Fulford.
Be as God will. Bracebridge, of Morville House.
Be mindful to unite. Brodie, of Lethen.
Beneficioruui memor. (Mindful of benefits.) K el ham, of Bleasby.
Benigno numine. (Under an auspicious divinity.) Meigh, of Ash Hall.
Boutex en nvant. (Push forward.) Fowle, of Wiltshire.
This is the motto also of the Karls of B anymore, whence is derived the name of
Buttevont, in the county of Cork, the second noble title of the family, under which they
were the premier viscounts of Ireland.
Calm. M'Adam, of Ballochmorrie.
Caritas fructum habet. (Charity has fruit.) Burnell, of Beauchief Abbey.
** . . . . Lasting Charity's more ample sway,
Nor bound by time, nor subject to decay,
In happy triumph shall for ever live,
And endless good diffuse, and endless praise receive." — piiio*.
Cave lupum. ( Ik-ware of the wolf.) Huband, of lpsley — who bears a wolf for cre»t.
Celeritas et vcritus. (Promptitude and truth.) Rolls, of the Hendre.
Ortamine suinmo. ( In the greatest contest.) Brisbane, bait.
Che sara sara. ( What will be will be.) Hussell.
Clarior e flaxnuiis. ( Brighter from the flames.) Gray— who bears for crest a phuMiix.
Clarior e tenebris. (Brighter from darkness.) Delaval Gray — who also bears a phrcnix for crest.
Claris dextera factis. \ irgil, A.n. vii. v. 474. (A right hand employed in glorious deeds.)
Burt?h Byam, Rector of Kew and Petersham.
Cnock Klachan. Colquhoun of that Bk and Luss, Bart. This motto is the war cry of the Clan
Colquhoun.
Coclum non solum. (Heaven, not earth.) Hayman, of South Abbey.
Cognoies toy meme. (Know thyself.) The old exhortation of Thales. Braddyl, of Comished
Priory.
" Know then thyself, presume not God to lean,
The proj>er study of mankind is man." — pope.
Confido. (I trust.) Boyd, of Middleton Park. Boyd, of Merton Hall.
Conjnnctio firmat. (Union strengthens.) Middleton, of Learn.
Conservabo ad mortem. ( I will preserve to the death.) Jennings, of the Shrubbery.
Constant and true. Hose, of Kilravock.
Cms mihi. (The morrow for me.) Parbury, of Mansfield House, Russell Square.
Crescent. ( They iucrea.siO Tat ton, of Withensha*.
MOTTOES.
Creecit sub ponder© virtus. (Virtue increases under Affliction.) Chapman, of Whitby.
Cresco per crucem. (I rise through the cross.) Rowan.
Cruce dum spixo fido. ( Whilst I breathe, I confide in the cross.) Dyson, of Willow HaiL
Crux mihi grata quies. (The ctoss a grateful rest for me.) M'Adam, of Ballochmorrie.
Dei dono sum quod sum. (By the blessing of God I am what I am.) Lumsden, of Piteapfe. <
De monte alto. (From a high mountain.) Maude, of Moor House. The ancient name of the
Maudes was Montalt, derived from Monte alto.
Deum cole regem serva. (Worship God, preserve the king.) Cole, of Brandrtun*
Deus incrementum dedit. (God has given increase.) Firth, of Hartford Lodge.
Deus pascit corvos. See Psalm cxlvi. 9. (God feeds the ravens.) Corbet, bart.
" He that doth the ravens feed,
Yea, providentially caters for the sparrow.
Be comfort to my age." — shaeespeare.
Devouement sans bornes. (Devotion without bounds.) Prodgers.
•' Yield to the Lord with simple heart,
All that thou hast, and all thou art." — cowper.
Diligentia et honore. (With diligence and honor.) Garnett, of Bleasdale.
Domine dirige nos. Ecclesiast. xxxvi. 19. (O Lord direct us.) Brome, of Mailing House*
Donee rursus impleat orbem. (Until it again fill its orb.) Scott, bart
Dum memor ipse mei. Virgil, /En. b. iv. 336. (While I am mindful of myself.) Irvine,
bart.
Dum spiro spero. (While I breathe, 1 hope.)
Durum patientia frango. (I break what is hard with the aid of patience.) Crawfuird, of Grange.
Duw a digon. (God and enough.) Prytherch. of Abergole.
En Dieu ma foy. (In God my faith.) Maun ton, of Longbridge.
Erectusnon elatus. (Exalted, not elated.) Clarke, of Wei ton Place.
Esse quam videri. (To be, rather than to appear.) Croft, bart. Words used by SaUust in
praise of Cato, when comparing that patriot with Caesar, after their respective speeches in
the History of the Catalinarian Conspiracy, Chap. 54.
Est concordia fratrum. (It is a concord of brothers.) Brown, of Beilby Grange*
Est pii Deum et patriam diligere. (It is the part of a pious man to love God and his country.)
Atkinson, of Renins.
Et suivez moi. (And follow me.) Hawley, of West Green House.
Fato prudentia major. Virgil, Georg. i. 416. (Prudence greater than fate.) Lamax. of
Clayton Hall.
" with heavenly souls
inspired, as man, who destiny controls/* — dryden.
" Wisdom and fortune combating together,
If that the former dare but what it can,
No chance may shake it." — suakespeare.
Fax mentis honesta? gloria. (Glory is the incitement of a noble mind.) Nova Scotia Baronets.
Fear God. Brisbane, bart.
Ferar unus et idem. ( I will be esteemed one and the same.) Michell, of Forcet Hall.
Ferendo et feriendo. (By bearing and striking.) Harrison, of Copford Hall.
" King Richard. Norfolk, we must have knocks ; ha ! must we not?
Norfolk. We must both give and take, my loving lord."— suakespeare.
Feros ferio. (I strike the brutal.) The Chisholm.
Fide et fortitudine. ( With faith and fortitude.) Farquh arson, of Invercauld.
Fidelis usque ad mortem. ( Faithful until death.) Sutton, of Elton.
Fidelitas vincit. ( Fidelity conquers.) Dunscombe, of Mount Deaart.
Fidelite est de Dieu. (Fidelity is from God.) Mellor.
Fidus ad extremum. ( Faithful to the end.) Forbes-Leith, of Whitehaugh.
" Master, go on, and 1 will follow thee
To the last gasp with truth and loyalty." — suakespeare.
Fight. Ashe, of Ashfield.
Finem respice. (Regard the end.) Hall, of Grappenhall.
Fixus ad versa sperno ( Firm I despise adversity.) Hainerton, of JleUifield Peel.
Flecti non frangi. (To bend, not to be broken.) Phillipps, of Longworth.
Floreo in ungue leonis. (1 flourish in the claw of the lion.) King, of Staunton Park, whose
crest is a lion rampant, bearing in its fore paw a rose, thus forming together the emblem of
strength and beauty — the loveliest of flowers under the protection of the king of the forest,
the noblest of animals.
Flourish. Rose Cleland, of Rath Gael House.
Follow me. Gurwood.
For d ward. Strachan, bart.
Fortis in bello. (Brave in war.) Can ti lion, de Ballvhigue.
Fortiter. (Boldlv.) Molester, of Loup.
MOTTOES.
Fortiter et fideliter. (Boldly and faithfully.) Norton, of Dublin, representing Norton, of
Kings Norton. Wilson, of Knowle Hall.
Fortiter gerit crucem. ( He boldly sustains the cross.) Allan, of Black well Grange and Black-
well.
Fortitudine. (With fortitude.) Moubray, of Cockairny House.
Frangas non flectes. (Thou mayst break, but canst not bend) Duke of Sutherland.
Fuimus. (We have been.) Kennedy, of Bennane and Finnarts.
Garde ta bien aimee. (Protect thy well-beloved.) Maze, a name which in the old patois of
southern France meant my beloved (mazaimte, abridged). An I or i is thus often interposed
between two vowels there, as in Somersetshire. At the present day, mite (pronounced
miie) means mist rets in the dialect of Provence.
" One sacred right of woman is protection.
The tender flower that lifts its head elate,
Helpless must fall before the blasts of fate,
Sunk on the earth, defaced its lovely form,
Unless your shelter ward th' impending storm.*'— burns.
Gaudet luce. (It rejoices in the light.) Galton, of Duddeston, Warley Hall, and Hadsor
House.
Go and do thou likewise. St. Luke, x. 37. Colston, of Roundway Park. This motto, borrowed
from the parable of the good Samaritan, is borne by the Colston family in commemoration of
the eminent philanthropist, Edward Colston, of Bristol.
God be my bede. Deed ham.
Bede-house, now antiquated, signified a house of refuge or alms-house, meaning, therefore,
God be my refuge.
God shield the right. Crawfurd, of Newfield.
Ha?c aspera terrent. (These asperities terrify.) Moubray, of Cocknirny House.
Heb dduw heb ddira dduw a aigon. (Without God there is nothing, with God, enough.)
Da vies, of Eton House. Lloyd, of Plymogg.
Heb nerol nerth nid sier saeth. (Without help from above the arrow flies in vain.) Jones, of
Hartsheath.
Homo proponit Deus disponit. f Man proposes, God disposes.) Starkey, of Wakefield.
Honi floit qui mal y pense. (Evil be to him who evil thinks ; literally, Unlucky be he who thinks
evil thereof.) Order of the Garter.
Honore et amore. (With honour and love.) Grantham, of Ketton Lodge.
Honore et virtute. (With honour and virtue.) Gillbanks, of Whitefield House.
I bide my time. Crawfurd, of Newfield.
Ich dien. (I serve.) Prince of Wales.
" The King of Bohemia, who fell at the battle of Crecy, had three ostrich feathers for crest.
and this lch dien for motto. The ensign and legend were adopted by the Black Prince of
Wales, the words probably on account of their apt allusion to the good service he did the
day of that victory to his royal father and his country ; and they have been continued by hit
successors as a lasting memorial of his triumph." — burkk's Peerage,
I grow and wither both together. Bigg- Wither, of Manydown.
Illumino. (I enlighten.) Farquharson, of Haughton.
Immotus. (Unmoved) Alston, of Neyland.
In ardua virtus. (Virtue for difficulties.) Leathes, of Herringfleet.
In candore dec us. (Beauty in candour.) Chadwick, of Swinton Hall.
In cruce spero. CI hope in the cross.) Allardice. of Ury.
In cruce triumphans. (Glorying in the cross.) Raffles.
In Domino confido. Psalm x. 2. (1 put my trust in the Lord.) Walker, of Norton Villa.
•■ Vet then from all my griefs, O Lord,
Thv mercy set me free ;
Whilst in the confidence of prayer
My soul took hold of thee." — addison.
Industrie et virtute. (With industry and virtue.) Beaver, of Glyngarth.
In omnia prompt us. ( Ready for all things.) Reay, of Gill House.
In sanguine vita. (Life in blood.) Alluding to the creit — the bead and neck of a pelican— which
is shedding its own blood to feed its young. Cobbe, of Newbridge.
J 'ay bonne cause. ( I have good cause.) Botfield, of Norton Hall.
Je cr.iins Dieu. (1 fear God.) Whitehurst, of the Mount.
Je dis la verite. (1 tell the truth.) Pedder, of Ash ton Lodge.
" I am as true as truth's simplicity,
And simpler than the infancy of truth.*' — shakespeare.
Je pen.se a qui pense plus. (I think of him who is the most thoughtful of me.) Rose-Cleland,
of Rath Gael.
Justum perficito nihil timeto. (Do what is just, fear nothing.) Rogers, of Varlington.
" Re just, and fear not." — siuihi'*ahr.
Ky aimer yn Edeirnion. Hughes, of Gwerclas, Barons of Kymmer-vn-Edi-iruion.
MOTTOES.
Libertaa. (liberty.) Bailey, of Glannsk Park.
Let the deed Bhow. Moubray , of Cookairny House.
IrtHtof a* tflOto fpttlrt. Tempest, of Tong Hall.
Lux mea Christus. (Christ my light.) Newman, of Thornbury Park.
Mala prsvisa pereunt. (Evils foreseen cease to exist.) Hodges, of Hemsted.
MaHam mori qnam foedan. (I would rather die than be disgraced.) Gilbert, of Devon.
Malo mori quam fcedari. (I had rather die than be disgraced.) Prior, of Rathdowney.
" Here, on my knee, I beg mortality,
Rather than fife preserved with infamy." — shakesfsarb.
Mane prndam vespere spolium. (The stag, bunted in the morning, becomes the spoil of the
evening.) Hurt, of Alderwasley.
Manu forti. See Exodus, xiv. 14. (With the strong hand.) Boyd, of Middleton Park.
Menus h®c inimica tyrannis. (This hand hostile to tyrants.) Hemsworth, of Shropham Hall.
The whole passage which refers to Brutus is thus,
" Menus hsac inimica tyrannis
Ense petit placidam sub libertate quietem."
" This hand, to tyrants hostile ever,
Grasps the sword that makes it free,
And seeks, intent their bonds to sever,
Gentle rest in liberty."
The Latin lines are more generally known as having been written by Algernon Sydney in the
album of the Copenhagen University, where he was delegated in 1660, to negotiate a peace
between Denmark and Sweden. The French ambassador, Terlon, who waa employed on
the same pacific mission, tore the leaf from the book.
Marte et man faventibus. (The war and the sea permitting.) Morris, of York.
Mea doa virtus. (Virtue my dowry.) Meadowa, of Great Beatings.
Mea fides in sapientia. (My faith in wisdom.) Fryer, of the W ergs.
Memor esto maforum. (Let him be mindful of his ancestors.) Farquharson, of Hangnton.
Militia mea multiplex. (My warfare manifold,) words used by Caiua Marius. Tooke.
Miseris succurrere disco. Virg. <£n. 1. (I learn to succour the unfortunate.) &ohau, of Little
Efford.
Moderate durant. (Moderate acquisitions are lasting.) Staunton, of Longbridge.
Mone sale. (Advise with wit.) M on sell, of Tervoe.
Moriens cano. (Dying I sing.) Cobbe, of Newbridge. Allusive to the swan in the Arms.
" He makes a swan-like end,
Fading in music." — bhaiebpeare.
Mort en droit. (Death in the right.) Drax, of Charborough Park.
Mutsre vel timere sperno. (I disdain to change or to fear.) Bythesea, of the Hill.
Natale solum dulce. (My native land is dear.) Taylor, of Todmerden Hall.
Ne tentes aut perfice. (Attempt not or accomplish.) Faunce, of Sharsted.
Nil deaperandum auspice Deo. (Nothing is to be despaired of under the auspice of God.)
Anderson, of Jesmond House.
Niti facere experiri. (To endeavour, to do, to experience.) Caldwell, of Linley Wood.
Noli me tangere. (Touch me not.) Grsme, of Garvook.
Non nobis. (Not to us.) Woodd, of Yorkshire.
Non nobis sed omnibus. (Not to us, but to all.) Aahe, of Aahfield.
Non uibi. (Not for oneself.) Cleland, of Rath Gael House.
Nubem eripiam. (I will remove the cloud.) Shipperdson, of Piddin^hall.
Nullius in verba. (To the words of no man.) Gabb, of Monmouthshire.
Omnia bene. (All's well.) Harvey, of Castle Sample.
Omnia vincit amor. Virgil, Ec. x. 69. (Love subdues all things.) Rodick of Gateacre.
" In hell, and earth, and seas, and heaven above,
Love conquers all ; and we must yield to love." — drydei*.
Patria cara carior fides. (My country dear, my faith dearer.) Sir N. H. Nicolas, G.C.M.G.
Patriam bine sustinet. Virgil, Geor. ii. 514. (Hence be sustains his country.) In allusion
to the crest— a garb, or wheataheaf. Higgins, Rector of Eastnor.
Per ardua stabilis esto. (Be firm through difficulties.)' Dendy of Dorking.
Per crucem ad coronam. (Through the cross to a crown.) Power, of Edermme.
Per mare per terras. (Through sea, through land.) M'AIester, of Loup.
Persevere. Burrard, bart*
" Perseverance, dear my lord,
Keeps honour bright." — Shakespeare.
Pour jamais. (For ever.) Colonel Gurwood.
Prenes haleine tirez fort. (Take breath, pull strong.) Giffard, of ChiTlington.
Pieux quoique preux. (Pious though valiant.) Long, of Preakaw. See annotations to PJate
XXVIIi.
Pro patria. (For my country.) Higgins, of Trafalgar Park.
MOTTOES.
Pro rege. (For the king:.) Porcher, of Clyfle.
Pro rege, lege, groge. (For the king, the law, the people.) Bigg- Wither, of Manydown.
Ponsonby, of Hale Hall.
Quod facio valde facio. (What I do, I do with energy.) Sykes, of Highbury.
*' Caesar, after the triumph of Pharsalia, and in the plenitude of his power, heard, lays Plutarch,
the defence of an African Prince, a follower of Pompey, by Brutus, when struck with the
ardour of the advocate's feelings and language, the dictator remarked : " 1 know not
always what this young man desires, but whatever he wishes he wishes intensely."
11a v dt o fiovXerai <r<poSpa fiovXtrat. (Plutarch, Life of Brutus, cap. vii.)
Quod justum non quod utile. (What is iust, not what is useful.) The maxim of the Stoics.
Recte faciendo neminem timeas. (In doing rightly thou needst fear no one.) Robertson, of
Inches.
Reparabit cornua Phoebe. Ovid's Metamorphoses, lib. i. 1 1 . (The moon will renew her horns.)
Scott, bart.
Sal us per Christum. (Salvation through Christ.) Forbes, of Culloden. Forbes-Leith, of
Whitehaugh.
Sapere aude incipe. (Dare to be wise, begin.) Claxson, of Eastgate.
Semper paratus. (Always ready.) Lee key, of Bally Holland House. Welles, of the Grange.
Semper sapit suprema. (His knowledge is ever of heavenly things.) Selby, of Biddleston.
Semper aid era votum. (The heavens always my wish.) Rattray, of Barfdrd House.
" The pious man
In this bad world, when mists and couchant storms
Hide Heaven's fine circlet, springs aloft in faith.
Above the clouds that threat him, to the fields
Of ether, where the day is never veil'd
W r ith intervening vapour." — eiree white.
Servabo fidem. (I will preserve my faith.) Johnson, of Runcorn.
Shanet a Boo. (Shanet to victory.) Fitzgerald, Knight of Glin.
Si je puis. ( If 1 con.) Colquhoun, bart. For an account of this motto refer to the annotations
of Plate X.
Sinceritate. (With sincerity.) Francklin, of Gonalston.
Soies content. (Be content.) Char nock, of Charnock.
Sola salus servire Deo. (To serve God is the only means of salvation.) Hibbert-Ware, of
Edinburgh.
Sola virtus invicta. (Virtue alone invincible.) Harris.
Spare nought. Brisbane, bart.
Spectemur agendo. ( Let us be examined by our actions.) Duckett, of Duckett's Grove.
Spe poateri temporis. (In hope of the time to come.) Atcherley, of Marton.
Sperabo. (I will hope.) Annand, of Lutton.
" Cease every joy to glimmer on my mind,
But leave, oh ! leave the light of Hope behind." — Campbell.
Spero. (I hope.) Dolling, of Magheralin.
Steer steady. Strachan, Bart.
Stellis aspirate gemellis. (Aspire to the twin stars.) Tynning, of Bryn.
Studendo et contemplando indefessus. (Unwearied in study and contemplation.) Cardale.
Subditus fidelis regis et salus regni. (A faithful subject of the king, and a preserver of the
monarchy.) Hopper, of Belmont.
This motto is borne by the Hoppers in commemoration of the services rendered to King
Charles II. after the battle of Worcester by Colonel William Carlos, one of their ancestors.
Sub libertate quiotem. (Repose under liberty.) Walsham, bart. See above at Manus h«c, &c.
Templa quam dilecta. (How beloved are the temples.) Temple, bart. See the translation of
this motto in Burke's Peerage.
Teneo tenuere majores. (I hold, my ancestors have held.) Twemlow, of Hatherton.
The cross our stay. Parkhouse, of Eastfieki Lodge.
Touch not the cat but a glove. Macpherson, of Cluny. Mackintosh, of that 11k.
Toujours fidele. ( Ever faithful.) Gynne-Holford, of Buckland,
Toujours gai. (Ever gay.) Gay, of Thurning Hall.
Towton. Mathew.
Transfigom. (1 will transfix.) Colt, of Gartsherrie.
Tria juncta in uno. (Three joined into one.) The motto of the Order of the Bath.
On the accession of James I. to the English throne, and union, in his person, of the three
kingdoms (regna) these expressive words implied the event ; they have also been used
to represent the concentration of the cardinal virtues, faith, hope, and charity, all three in
the one and last, according to Scripture, (St. Paul, Corinth, i. 13.)
Treu und feat. (Tru<? and faithful.) H. R. H. Purees Albeit.
Turns fortis mihi Deus. (God is to me a tower of strength.) Kelly, of Newtown House.
MOTTOES.
Turns prndentia custos. (Prudence is the safeguard of the tower.) Dick Lauder, bart.
Turns tutissima virtus. {Valour the safest tower.) Carlyon, of Tregreban.
Un Dieu, un roy. (One God, one king.) D'Arcy, of Hyde Park.
Utcunque placuerit Deo. (Whenever it shall have pleased God.) Darby, of Colebrooke Dale.
Utile dulci. (The useful with the agreeable.) Hor. Art of Poetry, 343. Spedding of Sum-
inergrove.
Ut migraturus habits. (Dwell here as one about to depart.) Dick Lauder, bart.
Valor e lealdad. (Valour and loyalty.) Croft, bart.
Verus amor patriae. (The true love of country.) Hughes, of Ely House.
Vi aut virtute. (By force or virtue.) The Chisholm.
Vi et armis. (By force and arms.) Armstrong, of Ballycumber.
Vi rictus non coactus. (Overcome by force, not compelled.) Waiter, of Cruck Meole.
Vigilanter. (Watchfully.) Gregory.
Vigilo et spero. (I watch and hope.) Galbraith, of Machrihanisb.
Vim vi repellere licet. (It is lawful to repel force by force.) Gynne Holfbrd, of Buckland.
Viresco vulnere. (I gain strength with the wound.) Oldfield, of Oldfield.
Virtus omnia vincit. (Virtue conquers all things.) White, of Charlton Marshall.
Virtus probata florescit (Tried virtue flourishes.) Cologan, of Teneriffe.
Virtus vulnere virescit. (Its virtue increases with the wound.) Leith, of Whitehaugh.
Virtute et honore. (With virtue and honor. J Wells, Rector of Portsmouth.
Virtute et valore. (With virtue and valour.) S tamer, of Bath.
Virtute et veritate. (With virtue and truth.) Blathwayt, of Dyrham Park.
Virtute non verbis. (With virtue not with words.) Coulthart, of Collyn.
Virtuti. (To virtue.) Lauder, bart.
Virtutibus praemium honor. (Honor the reward for virtues.) Ffeilden, of Witton.
Virtuti mania cedant. (Let walls yield to valour.) Wilder, of Purley Hall.
Virtutis gloria merces. (Glory the recompense of valour.) Gyll, of Widdial Hall and
Wyrardisbury.
Virtutis laus actio. (Action the delight of virtue.) Corbet, bart.
Vizi liber et moriar. (1 have lived a freeman, and 1 will die one.) Gray.
Watch weel. Scott, bart.
Wil sone wil. Wilson, of Stowlangtoft.
Y fegynno dwy y fydd. (What God willeth shall be.) Mathew.
I •
INDEX.
The Capital Letters indicate the Respective Family Shields: those in Roman Litters, the Quarter-
ing* and Impalements : the Figures refer to the Number of the Piute.
II. It. II. PRINCE ALBERT, OF SAXE COBURG.
Adams, of Middi.eton Hall, 20
Adams, 25
Allan, of Blackwell Grange
and Blackwell, 2
Allardice-Barclay, of Ury
and Allardice, 28
Allen, 7
Allgood, 24
Allingham, 44
Alston, of Neyland, 43
Anderson, of J Esmond House,
19
Annand, of Sltton, 13
Archdeacon, 45
Arkwright, of\Villerslky,27
Armstrong, of Ball ycumber,1
Armstrong, of G alien, 24
Arundel de W ardour, 46
Ashe, of Ashfield, 26
Ashe, 18
Ashfordby, 48
Atcherley, of Marton, 16
Atkinson, of Rehins, 31
Atkinson, 14
Aungier, 41
Badwell, 51
Bailey, of Glanusk Park, 36
Bailey. 26
Baker, of Bayfordbury, 9
Ballard, 38
Barclay-Ai.lardice, of Ury
and Allardice, 28
Barclay, 27
Barneby, 41
Barnett", 48
Barry, ok Rocklaveston Ma-
nor, 39
Bathunst, 19
Batty, 16
Beaufoy, 46
Beaver, of Glyn Garth, 37
Beedham, of Ashfield, Kim-
bo lton, 4
Bekering, 26
Belston, 35
Bennet, 7
Bennet, 13
Bernard, Newmarch, 25
Bertram, 43
Best, of Wierton, 2
BlCG-WlTHKR, OF MANYDOW N,
and Tangier Park, 26
Blades, 53
Blake, 16
Blathwayt, of Dyrham Park,
33
Blethin Broadspeare, Lord of
| Llanllowell, 25
Blundell, 26
l Blyant, 51
BOTFIELD, OF NORTON HALL, 31
Boyd, of Middi.eton Park, 14
Boyd, of Merton Hall, 19
Boyle, 46
Bozom, 35
Bracebridge, of Morville
House, 8
Braddyll-Gale, of Conisiiead
Priory, 34
Branas and Crogen, (Baroness of)
Margaret, 40
Brandon (Uuke of Suffolk), 6
Brayn, 33
Brcieton, 8
Brett, 2
Brewster, 29
Brisbane, of Brisbane, Bart.
5
Brock, 20
Brodie, of Lethen, 39
Brome, of Malling House, 34
Bromley, 20
Brown of Beilby Grange, 17
Bruen, 33
Bulkcley, 41
Bund, of Wick House, 32
Burgoyne of London, 33
Burlcy, of Maleburst, 18
Burley, 45
Bu r nell-Pegge,of Beaiichieff
Abbey, 10
Burrard, Sir George, Bart. 22
Bury, 30
Busfeild, 14
Busvargus, 16
Byam, of Antigua, 22
Bythesea, of the Hill, Fresh-
ford, 20
Cadwgan ap Elystao, 18
Cadwgan, Lord of Nannau, 18
Cadwgan, ton of Klyttan Glod-
rydd, Prince of Fferlys, 23
Cadwgan, Prince of Fferlys, 40
Caldwell, of Linley Wood, 10
Call, 16
Campbell, of Jura, 16
Campbell, 37
Canon, 13
Caotelupe, 35
Cantillon, of Ballyhigue, 51
Caradoc Vraich-Vras, 22
Cardale, of London, 8
Carlos, 1
Carlyon, of Tregrehan, 18
Carnegie, 28
Carver, 13
Carstairs, 44
C a warden, 42
Chadwick.ofSwinton Hall, 4
Chalbons, 35
Chapman, of Whitby, 27
Charnock, of Charnock, 28
ClIAl'CER, 11
Cheke, 44
Chester, Richard, Earl Palatine of,
40
Child, 25
Chisholm, 1
Chissenhall, 15
Chittleton, 20
Chivers, 20
Cilin ap y Blaidd Rhudd, Lord of
Gest, 23
Clare, 29
Clarke, Welton Place, 25
Clarke, 51
Clarke Plomer, 25
Claxson, of Eastgate Houie,38
Clayton, 39
Cleland, of Rath Gael House,
7
Cleland, 7
Clifford (Earl of Cumberland), 6
Clifton 20
Clopton, 18
Clotherham, 15
Clynton, 32
Cobbe, of Newbridge, 3
Cole, of Brandkum, 7
Collwyn ap Tangno, 18
Cologan, of Teneriffe, 37
Colquhoun, that Ilk, Bart. 10
Colston, of Rolndway Park,
45
Colt, of Garthshf.rie, 20
Corbet, of Moreton Corbet,
Bart. 45
Corbet, 25
Coulthart, of Collyn, 2
Coyshe, 48
Coytmore, 35
Cracroft, of Hackthorn, 13
Craufuird, of Grange. 42
Crawfurd, of Newfield, 9
Croft, Sir John, Bart. 24
Crogen and Branas, (Baroness of)
Margaret, 40
INDEX.
k
Crogen, the Lady of, 23
Crossley, of Scaitcliffe, 4
Cuffe, 41
Culme, 52
Cumin, 17
Cuming, 5
Cumming, 37
Currie, op Bush Hill, 9
Dale, of Glanvilles Woot-
ton, 33
Dale, 14
Dalton, 12
Darby, of Colebrookdale, 30
D'Arcy, of Hyde Park, 40
D'Arcy, 5, 51
David, Prince of Scotland, 28
David Goch, Lordof Penraach no,
35
Davidson, 38
Davies, of Eton House, 18
Davies, of Gwysaney, 18
Davies, of Denbigh, 40
Dampier, 38
Davison, 16
Dawson, 19
De Arches, 15
De Arches, 40
De Birkin, Baron, 15
De Burgh, Sir John, 18
De Cauz, Baron, 15
De Clare, Earl of Pembroke, 25
De Ferrers, sixth Earl of Derby, 40
De Knoll, 15
De Knoll, 40
Delaborne, 26
De La Rivierre, 49
Delaval Gray, 14
Dendy, of Dorking, 28
Denny, 34
De Pentheny, 46
Derehust, 26
De Tour, of Shrewsbury, 1 8
De Vivonia, William, 25
Dick, 17
Dickinson, of Farley Hill, 44
Digby, 38
Dodsworth, 2
Dolling, of Magiieralin, 50
Draz, 5
Dockett.of Dockett's Grove,
19
DONSCOMBB, OF MOUNT DeSART,
3
Durham, 53
Dymoke, 44, 48
Dyson, of Willow Hall, 8
Earner, 38
Ednyfed Vychan, 18
Edwakdes.ofGilbston Manor,
16
Edwards, 8, 45
Egerton, Duke of Bridgewater, 6
Ellis, 46
Elvarch, Lordof Penrose and Bry-
thJyu, 22
Elystan Glodrydd, 18, 22, 23
ElysUn Glodrydd, Prince of Ffer-
lvt, 40
Engayne, 48
England, 6
Enya, 18
Erdington, 45
Erle-Drax, of Charbobough
Park, 5
Brit, 6
EiAjfe, of Ash Hill, 3
Evans, of the Hill Court, 51
Everton, 27
Falkingham, 15
Fallon, 37
I'AP.QL'H ARSON, OF INVERCAULD,
30
Farquharson.of Hahghton,37
Kjri|uKaraoD f 3
Fuucuuberg, 51
Faunce, of Sharsted, 32
Fawne, 12
Ffeilden, of Witton, 31
F errand, St. Ives, 14
Ferrers's, Ha rls of Derby, (original)
40
Ferrers of Bashall, 40
Ferrers, of Egginton, 40
Ferrers, 25
Firth, of Hartford Lodge, 53
Fiske-Harrison, of Copford
Hall, 24
Fitzgerald, Knight of Gun,
50
Fitzgerald, 7, 51
Fitz-Parnell, fourth Earl of Lei-
cester, 40
Fitzroy, 52
Fitzurse, 35
Filzwith, 48
Flbeming-Fryer,oftheWergs,
5
Fleeming, 5
Foley, 53
Folliott, of Chester, 34
Forbes, of Cdlloden, 8
Forbes-Leith, of Whitehaugh,
33
Fornyson, 26
Forster, 44
Fortescue, 30
Fowle, of Wiltshire, 28
Fox-Lane, of Bramham, 38
France, Royal Arms of, 6, 52
Francklin, of Gon ALSTON, 44
Fryer, 5
FULFORD,OFGREATFULFOflD,35
Gabb, of Shire Newton, 18
Galbraith, of Machrihanish,
43
Gale-Braddyll, of Conishead
Priory, 34
Galliers, 48
Gaiton, of Hadzor House, 20
Gant, 37
Garnett, of Bleasdale, and
QUERNMORB PARK, 49
Garth, 46
Gaskin, 27
Gay, of Thurning Hall, 46
Geale, 26
Gerard, 33
Gernoos Handle, Earl Palatine of
Chester, 40
GlFFARD, OF CHILLINGTON, 44
GirTard, Earl of Buckingham, 25
Gilbert, of Devon, 51
Gillbanks, of Whitepield
House, 30
Goch, (David), Lord of Penraach-
no, 35
Goddard, 52
Gower, 6
Gowinay, 27
GR£ME, of Garvock, 37
Graham, 28
Grant, 30
Grantham,ofKettonLodge,31
Granville, Earl of Bath, 6
Gray- Delaval, 14
Greg, of Noroliffe Hall, 50
Gregory, 44
Gregson.of Murton and Bir-
don, 24
Grierson, 43
Griffith ap Cynan, King of North
Wales, 23, 40
Grirashaw, 39
Grosvenor, 5
Grosvenor, 39
Guerin, of Norton Fitzwar-
ren, 9
Gurney, of Keswick, 27
Guros, 45
Gurwood, Colonel, 35
Gwarinddy, Lord of Llandilo, 25
Gwavas, 18
Gwynedd, (Owen), 35
G WYNNE NuLFORti, OP Bt'CK-
LAND, &C 32
G wynne, 32
Gyll, op Wvdhal Hall, 13
Haccombe, 45
Halberke, 26
Haliberton, 11
Hall, op Grappenhall, 49
Halton de Halton, 40
Hamerton, op Hellifield, 15
Hand, 53
Hanson, 27
Harbin, op Newton House, Hi
Harries, 7
Harris, of Cork, 7
Harris, 16
Harris, 26
Harrison-Fiske, of Copford
Hall, 24
Harvey, of Castle Semple, 50
Haselwall, 39
Hastings, 25
Havering, 26
Hawburk, 45
Hawkins, 18
Hawley, of West Green
House, 41
Hawton, 26
Hayman, of South Abbey, 43
Hayman, 45
Haynes, 18
Hebden, 48
Hemsworth, of Shropram
Hall, 23
Herdewyk,2
Hethersett, 23
Heydon 39,52
I! n ibi i [ v, are, of Edinburgh,
10
Higgfns,ofTrapaloarPark,27
Higgins, of Eastnor, 32
Hindmarsh, 2
Hippisley, 48
Hippisley,ofLambornePlace,
52
Hobson, 4
Hodges, 34
Hodges, of Hemsted, 62
Hodson, 51
Holford, of Weston Birt, 30
holpord-gwynne, of buck-
land, &c. 32
Holte, 8
Hooker, 18
Hopper, op Belmont, 1
INDEX.
Hopper, 36
Jlopton, 45
Houlditch, 12
Howel ap Meuric, Lord of Nannau,
23,40
HUBAND, OF IPSLEY, 10
Hugford, 46
Hughes, op Gwerclas, subse-
quently of P en- v-C law dd, 23,
Hughes, of Ely House, 17
Hughes, 35
Hugh Cyfeilioc, Earl Palaliue of
Cheater, 40
Hugh Lupus, Earl Palatine of
Chester, 40
Hunter, 53
Huntley, Lord of Trcowen, 25
Hurt, of Alderwasley, 12
Hwfa ap Kendrig, Lord of Chris-
tionydol, 40
HurleitoD, 42
Ithel Velyn, 18
Irvine, of CastlkIrvine, Dart. 5
Jackson, of Carramore, 41
Jenkin9, 45
Jennings, of the Shrubbery, 13
jodrell, of yeardsley, 35
Johnson, of Runcorn, 46
Johnson, 22
Jones, of Llanartii Court, 25
Jones, of Hartsheath, 44
Jordan, 7
Judge, 5
Keigwin, 16
Keliiam, of Bleasby Hall, 41
Kelly, of Newtown, 42
Kennedy,ofBennaneandFin-
NANT, 52
Kennedy, 42
Ker, 35
Killinghall, 2
Killowe, 18
Kilpec, 48
King, of Loxwood House, 4
Kino, of Staunton Park, 15
Kirshaw, 24
Knight of Glin, 50
Knighton, 51
Knill, 35
Kyme, 48
Kyrle, 51
Lade, 30
Lamb ton, 2
Lane-Fox, of Bramham, 38
Langbergh, 45
Langdale, 41
Langfield, 15
Ladder, of For nt \i nh all, Bart.
17
Lawes, 53
Leahies, of Herring fleet, 25
Leche, of Garden, 42
I,ee, of Lanfoist, 25
Leedes, 15
Lecky. of Castle Lecky, 47
Leftwich, 39
Legge, 28
Le Huntc, 7
Leith-Forbes,ofWhitehaugh,
33
Leveson, 6
Leyboume, 45
Leyes, 51
Lisle, 29
Llewellyn ap Griffith, Prince of
North Walts, 23, 40
Llewelyn Aurdorchog, 18
Lloyd, of Plymog, 40
Lloyd, Sir Griffith, 18
Lloyd, 17
Loker, 26
Lomax, Clayton Hall, 32
Lonc of Prbshaw, 28, 48
Long, 20
Lorm, 37
Lounde, 51
Lovelace, 12
Lowe, of Denby, 12
Lowe, of Alderwasley, 12
Lowe, 39
Lucy, 45
Ludlow, 48
Lumsden, of Pitcaple, 33
Ludlow, 44
Lutley, 41
Mackenzie, 47
Mackintosh, of that Ilk, 34
Macroanus, 35
Mac Morough, King of Leinster,
Macfherson, of Cluny, 38
Madoc ap Gwenwynwyn, Lord of
Mawddwy, 23
Madoc, Lord of Mawddwy, 40
Main waring, 42
Makdougall, 5
Mallet ( William), Lord of Cory
Mallet, 25
Malyn, 44
Mannock, 42
March, 29
Marchudd ap Cynan, 18
Marmion, 44
Marmyon, 48
Marshall, 25
Mason, 26
Massey, 42
Mathew.of Llandaff, &C.&C.
29
Maude, of Moor House, 42
Mawddwy, Lord of (Sir John ap
William), 18
Maze, of Bristol, 2
M'Adam, of Ballochmorrie,
12
m' a lester, of loup and
Kennox, 36
Meadows, of Great Bkalings,
29
Meigh, of Ash Hall, 36
xMellar, 27
Mellor, of Chiswick, 22
Mervyn, 5
Meschines, Handle, Earl-Palatine
of Chester, 40
MlCIIELL, OF FoRCET HaLL, 20
MlDDLETON, OF LF.AM, 13
Milo, Fitz waiter, Earl of Hereford,
25
Milton, 11
Molyneuz, of Sefton, 28
Molyneux, of Crosby, 28
Monck, 7
Monoux, 44
Monsell, or Tervoe, 37
Moretoa, 35
Morgan, of Penllwyon, 35
Morgan, 35
Morrice, 3
Morris, of York, 5
Mortimer, 45
MoUBRAY, OF CoCKAIRNEY
House, knt. 4
Murden, 26
Murdock, 7
Musgrave, 24
Mussenden, 25
Mutton, of Llanerch, 18
Neale, 39
Nelson, 52
Newbald, 26
Newman, of Thornbury Park,
14
Newnham, 26
Newsham, 7, 38
Nicolas, Sir Harris, g. c. m.g.
16
Norbury, of Sherridge, 41
Norton, of Dublin, 49
Nugent, 5, 43, 51
Nutt, 30
Odingsells, 26
O'Kelly, 46
Oldfield, of Oldfield, 39
O'Neill, 35
Organ, 52
Osborne, 26
Ouseley, 27
Owen Gwynedd, Prince of North
Wales, 23, 35, 40
Oxenden, 43
Parbury, of London, 46
Parker, 47
Parkhouse, of Eastfield
Lodge, 26
Parr, of Lythwood Hall, 23
Parsons, 22
Paterson, 47
Pedder, of Ashton Lodge, 38
PEGGE-BLRNaLL,OF Beauciiieff
Abbey, 10
Penbtuge, 45
Pendock, 39
Pemberton, 2
Percehay, 51
Philip ap Ivor, Lord of Iscoed in
Caerdigan, 23, 40
Phillipps, of Grace Dieu
Manor, 29
Phillipps, of Longworth, 41
Pickering, 17
Pigot, 15
Plomber-Clarke, 25
Plurobe, 9
Foley, of Boxted Hall, 51
Pomeroy, 18
PONSONBY, OF HALE HaLL, 22
Pope, 11
PORCHER, OF CLYFFE, 49
Powel, Prince of Caerleon, 22
Power, of Edermine, 47
Preston, 33, 52
Price, 35
Pride of Shrewsbury, 18
Prince, 45
Prior, of Rathdowney, 16
Prodgers, of Bromfield, 53
Prytherch, of Abbrgole, 12
Pugh, 35
QuUter, 34
Quio, 37
Radcliffe, 15,24
Raffles, of Liverpool, 7
Ratcliffe, 50
Rattray, of Barford Huisf,
43
Ravenhill, 41
He ay, or Gill, 47
Redmond, 35, 36
Redhead, 49
Rhys ap Griffith, 40
Richmond, 34
Rishworth, 15
Risley, 26
RiUo, 12
Robertson, of Inches, 47
Robinson, 16, 17, 38
Roche, 45
Rockell, 51
Rodick, OF Gateacre, 45
Rogers, of Yarlington, 17
Rogers, of Bryntangor, 23, 40
Rofiinson, 52
Rolls of The Hbndre, 48
Rose, of Kilravock Castle,
49
Rose, 7
Ross, 51
Rowan, of Mount Davis, 35
Rowan, of Garry and Agog-
hill, 36
Rowley, 52
Russell, Thomas J. Esq. 48 *\
Russell, 49
Rutledge, 41
Rye, 48
Sandford, 34
Saunders, 38, 46
Sawbridge, 5
Say, 45
Scobell, 18
Scott, Sir Walter, Bart. 11
Seagrave, 44
Secretan, 18
Selby, of Biddlbston, 51
Shaa, 51
Shaen, 27
Shakespeare, 11
Shee, 26
Shepperd, 7
Sheppy 27 „
Shipperdson, of Piddinghall,
24
Sibton, 45
Sinclair* 47 <
Sleigh, 19
Smith (of the Leeward Islands),
29
Soltad, of Little Efford, 52
Somerville, 36
Sparrow, 29, 48
Sprdding, of Summergrovb,
15
Stamer, of Bath, 12
Stamford-Caldwell, of Lin-
ley Wood, 10
Standish,ofDuxbury Parr, 1
INDEX.
Stanley, 6
Stanton, 45
Starkey, of Wakefield, 36
Starkey, 39
Staunton, of Longbridge, 31
Stayner, 30
Stewart, 33, 25, 36
St. Loe, 49
Stockton, 27
Strachan, of Thornton, Bart.
53
Strange, of Knockyn, 6
Strange, 45
Strickland, 51
Strongbow, Earl of Pembroke, 25
Strudwick, 8
Stuart, Earls of Airth and Mon-
teith, 28
Sutherland, Duke of, 6
Sutton, of Elton Hall, 19
Sykes, of London, 1
Sykes, 24
Sympsoo, 24
Talbot, 45, 47
Talbot de Bashall, 40
talboys, 48
TATTONiOF WlTHENiHAW, 47
Taylor, of Todmordbn Hall, 4
Taylor, 44
Tempest, Tong Hall, 9
Temple, of Stowe, ban. 3
Temple, 27
Thomas ap Llewellyn, Lord of
South Wales, 23, 40
Tirrell, 18
Tobin, 35
Tooke, of Russell Square, 27
Topping, 16 *
Townley, 47
Tredenhara, 18
Trenchard, 48
Tucker, of Coryton Park, 53
Tuite,43, 51
Tudor Trevor, Lord of Hereford,
18,23
Tudor, Lord of Gwyddelwern, bro-
ther of Owen Glendower, 23
Tudor, Lord of Gwyddelwern, 40
Tunatall, 24
Turchill de Arden, 8
Turrett, 45
Twemlow, of Hathbrton, 3
Tymms, 24
Twisden, 52
TWYNINO, OF BRYN, 14
Umfreville, 48
Vaughan, Sir Hamo, 18
Va^ghan, 41,48
Vivian, 43 .
Vesey,33
Waddell, of Beech House, 17 r
W r ade, 26
Wales, H.R.H. The Prince of,
21
Walker, of Norton Villa, 2
Walker, 14
Walker, 14
Wallis, Lord of Llanarth, 25
Walmesley, of Coldcoates, co.
Lancaster, 40
Walsh, 37
Walsh am, Sir John, bart. 35
Walahe, 44
Walter, 23
Ware - Hibdert, of Edin -
burgh, 10
Warde, of Barford and Clot-
ton, 53
Warren, 27
Warrington, of Lancashire, 8
Wartor, of Crdck Meole, 12
Waterhouse, 46
Waterton, 48
Welch, of Arle House, 42
Weld, of Twickenham, 39
Wells, of East Allincton, 30
Welles, of The Grange,' 48
Weyland, 51
White, of Charlton Mar^
shall, 26
White, of Duffield, 40
Whitehurst, of the Mount,
50
Wickstead, 45
Wilder, of Purley Hall, 46
Williams, 3, 29
Wilmot, 22
Wilson, of £nowle Hall, 7
Wilson, of Stowlangtoft
Hall, 52
WlTHER-BlGG, OF MANYDOWN,
and Tangier Park, 26
Wither, 26
Wood, 12
Wood, 29
Woodd, of Yorkshire, 361,
Worthington, 15
Wright, of Mapperly, 34
Wyborne, of Hawkswell, 25
Wynn, of Pen-y-Clawdd, 23
Wynter, 33
Yooge, 32
Young, 26
Younge, 45
Zouch, 45