Thursday, May 15, 2025

Another Reason I Like to Travel


I've been lucky enough (or as my wife used to say, we've been willing enough to go into debt) to travel a lot of different places over the years.

And every place I go, I look for wearable heraldic souvenirs of our travels. What this means in practice is tee shirts and baseball caps with coats of arms on them.

Now, not every place offers such items (I'm looking at you, Dublin, Ireland and Glasgow, Scotland! No tee shirts, no baseball caps, not even a keychain with the city arms on them. And I looked! I even asked! The closest I came in Dublin was a fuzzy "viking" horned hat with the city's coat of arms on it. I bought it, but it's not something I feel quite brave enough to wear in public. Especially with the little bells hanging from the ends of the horns, not to mention the blue braids on each side. See photograph immediately below).


And, of course, not every place I've gone offers "real" heraldry on their wearable souvenirs.

Once example of this is my recent trip to Victoria, British Columbia, to attend the Annual General Meeting of the Royal Heraldry Society of Canada, of which I have been a member for more years than I care to remember.

Having some free time before meetings, I wandered down to the central city to see what I could find. And I found an armorial tee shirt and matching (sort of) baseball cap.


As you can see, they both bear the same fictitious coat of arms, though only the shirt bears the legend: Canada: Fast and Furious.

The "arms" consist of the logo of the Porsche automobile company (with the legend "Canada" across the top of the shield instead of "Porsche"), and the inescutcheon bears a black rampant moose (instead of the black rearing horse) and the word "Original" in chief instead of "Stuttgart", the city where Porsche is located.

Here's Porsche to compare:


And the "arms" on the shirt:


So, while it may not be the arms of the city of Victoria, or even the arms of British Columbia, it's a fun little take-off with a specifically Canadian twist of the logo of Porsche, and I expect to have some fun wearing each of these items in the future.


And if you can't have some fun with heraldry, what's the point? As J.P. Brooke-Little said in his Introduction to his book An Heraldic Alphabet: "[H]erein lies the fun and if heraldry ever ceases to be fun - chuck it."

Monday, May 12, 2025

Why I Like to Travel


Well, maybe saying that I "like" to travel is a bit of an overstatement.

Because, honestly, while I like being in new and different places, or revisiting places I have been to before, the getting there -- whether by plane, train, or automobile -- isn't all that pleasant to me, especially at my increasing age.

Nonetheless, I can't do one without the other (at least until they invent the Star Trek transporter system), so I at least tolerate the going to enjoy the being.

A recent trip to the Pacific Northwest allowed me to indulge myself in at least one way; I was able for the first time since I commissioned it (from artist and craftsman Steve Cowan) to use my heraldic table banner to mark my place at the table at the gala banquet at the Annual General Meeting of the Royal Heraldry Society of Canada.

Here are two photographs of its first public "unveiling", as it were. The first picture is of the obverse side with my coat of arms:


And the second is the reverse, with my crest:


Note that on the crest, one of the apples has fallen from the tree and has landed on the torse.

Steve asked me before drawing it up if I would have any objection to him drawing it that way, and I told him that I thought it would add a nice little touch of whimsy, so he did.

And it warms my heart and makes me laugh a little every time I see it.

And, really, if you can't have a little fun with heraldry, what's the point of it?

As J.P. Brooke-Little said so well in his introduction to his book, An Heraldic Alphabet: "[H]erein lies the fun and if heraldry ever ceases to be fun - chuck it."

Thursday, May 8, 2025

Armorial Memorial to a Man, His Wife, and Their Son


Once again, because of the dearth of information found on-line or in the usual suspects (Papworth, Burke's, etc.), with the exception of an entry in the Dictionary of National Biography for Sir William Morton, some of the information for these entries was found in the Register of Burials at the Temple Church, 1628-1853, by H. G. Woods, D.D., Master of the Temple, Henry Sotheran and Co., London, 1905


Heic subtus jacet corpus Willielmi Morton, Militis, unius Justiciariorum ad Placita coram ipso Rege tenenda, &c. Collonellus equorum atque pedum Caroli beatæ memoriæ primi, &c. 1672 (Here under lies the body of William Morton, Soldier, one of the Justiciary to hold Pleas before the King himself, &c. Colonel of the Horse and Foot of Charles the First of blessed memory, &c. 1672).

The Roll-call of Temple Worthies buried within the precincts includes a large number of Masters of the Bench of the two Honourable Societies [Inner Temple and Middle Temple in London]. The following were Judges: … Sir William Morton, who fought on the royalist side (1672), ….

So here we have the armorial memorial to the Hon. Judge Sir William Morton, Kt. (died 1672), his wife, Lady Anne Morton, née Smith (died 1668), wife of Sir William Morton, and their son, John Morton (died 1668).

The Register of Burials gives us the following for these last two individuals:

Mistress Anne Morton, wife of the Hon. Judge Morton of the Inner Temple, was buried in the south aisle upon the 7th of January, 1668-9.

John Morton of the Inner Temple, esq., was buried in the south isle the 26th day of November, 1668.

John Morton, Esq; eldest Son of Sir William Morton Kt. and Anne his Wife, of the Inner Temple. And Captain of a Regiment of Foot in Ireland, and Governor of Kilkenny, 1668.


The arms are blazoned: Quarterly gules and ermine, in the first and fourth quarters a goat's head erased argent armed or. The crest is A goat's head as in the arms.

We have seen this coat of arms before in connection with another individual. The Archbishop of Canterbury John Morton (d. 1500) also bore these arms, and we have seen them at Canterbury Cathedral and at the Church of St. Mary at Lambeth in London.

Monday, May 5, 2025

Two Armorial Memorials in Temple Church


It is sometimes difficult to find good information about an individual, or the coat of arms, on a memorial in a church. Either I cannot find much, if any, biographical information on-line, and/or the usual armorial sources (e.g., Burke's General Armory, Papworth's Ordinary of British Armorials, etc.) aren't specific to the individual memorialized.

Still, I try to do what I can. Some of the information for the entries today, as sparce as it was, was found in the Register of Burials at the Temple Church, 1628-1853, by H. G. Woods, D.D., Master of the Temple, Henry Sotheran and Co., London, 1905

Today we see the memorial to Sir John Williams, of Minster, in the County of Kent, Kt. 1668.


The Register of Burials informs us that Sir John Williams of Minster Court in the Isle of Tenett, a member of the Inner Temple, was buried in the church under near the saints bell the 26 of March, 1669.


Burke’s General Armory only cites Williams (Minster, in the Isle of Thanet, co. Kent). Vert three eagles displayed in fess or. Crest: An eagle displayed or.

Here, of course, the Williams arms are quartering Gules three lions passant in pale argent, which are probably the arms of Giffard or Gifford.

However, I have been unable to find a Sir John Williams whose wife was a Giffard or Gifford, so I have no other information about this individual.

Next we have the memorial to George Wilde:


Here again, the Register of Burials informs us that George Wilde of the Inner Temple, Esq., was buried in the round on Friday the first of August, 1679.


The arms would be blazoned Quarterly: 1 and 4, Argent on a chief sable three martlets argent (Wild/Wylde); 2, Argent on a cross sable a crescent or [too many possibilities to positively identify]; 3, Or a chevron checky azure and gules between three cinquefoils azure [Cooke]; overall a crescent gules for difference. Crest: A lion passant gules resting its dexter forepaw on an escutcheon argent, the lion charged on the shoulder with a crescent or.

Here, too, I have been unable to find additional information about Mr. Wilde, not even in the Dictionary of National Biography.

Still, though, these are some very nicely done coats of arms.


Thursday, May 1, 2025

"They're Everywhere! They're Everywhere!"


"Who?", you may ask?

Well, first, "they're everywhere" pretty much because we're looking at yet another stained glass window in yet another English church, and the people who made those stained glass windows had to be pretty much everywhere.

So, yeah, "they're everywhere!"

I refer, of course, to the Worshipful Company of Glaziers, whose arms we have seen before not that long ago in Ely Cathedral and in York Minster.

And today, we see that coat of arms once again, this time in Temple Church, London.

First, here's the (very impressive) window in which the arms of the Glaziers is placed, in the center light near the bottom:


And here's the detail:


I swear, if it hadn't been me or my late wife Jo Ann taking the photographs of the arms of the Company of Glaziers in all these different places, I might start to get a little paranoid and think that they were following me around.

But I know that isn't the case, and really, it's nice to find the same coat of arms done by different glaziers and stained glass painters in wildly different places, if only to see how the individual artists have treated the same shield, helm, crest, mantling, and supporters.

So for your edification, and so you don't have to scroll through previous posts to find them, here are the other depictions that we found in:

the Stained Glass Museum in Ely Cathedral:


and in York Minster:


Enjoy comparing them!

Monday, April 28, 2025

An English Coat of Arms With an American Connection


Not having taken any trips recently to photograph and identify coats of arms and post them here, I have been reduced to going through pictures from previous trips to find and identify heraldry that I haven't posted here before.

Fortunately for me, and I hope for you, I've been able to do some of that.

And beginning today, we're going to look at some heraldry that I photographed, but did not research or post on this blog, found in Temple Church, London.

Today's is especially fun, as I discovered when researching it, that there is an American connection.

But first, here's the memorial to Thomas Lake (1656-1711), Utter Barrister of the Honourable Society of the Middle Temple.


Now, you'd think that with an impressive memorial like this, and his position in the world of the time, that there would be a lot of biographical information easily available about him.

You would be incorrect.

Still, using multiple sources, I have been able to gather the following information about Thomas Lake, Jr.

Thomas Lake was a Boston (Massachusetts Bay Colony)-born English-educated lawyer, who was a barrister of the Middle Temple, London.

He was the son of Captain Thomas Lake, a wealthy Bostonian who was the younger half-brother of Sir Edward Lake, 1st Baronet. Captain Lake bought Arrowsic, Maine, in 1660, and was killed aged 61 in a fight with Native Americans at his trading post, now the Clarke and Lake Company Archeological Site, on August 14, 1676. He is buried in Copp's Hill Burying Ground, Boston, and I found a photograph of his gravestone there.*


Sir Edward Lake died without issue aged 77 on April 18, 1674, and his estate subsequently devolved to Thomas Lake, the son of Captain Lake.


The arms at the top of the monument may be blazoned: Quarterly: 1, for a coat of augmentation granted to Edward Lake by King Charles I, for services at Edge Hill, to be borne in the first quarter, Gules an arm embowed in armor issuing from the sinister side of the shield holding in the hand a sword erect all proper thereto affixed a banner argent charged with a cross between sixteen escutcheons gules, on the cross a lion passant guardant or; 2, Sable on a bend between six crosses crosslet argent a mullet [gules] for difference; 3, Argent a chevron between three boar’s heads couped sable; 4, Quarterly argent and sable on a bend sable three fleurs-de-lis argent; impaling Per fess indented argent and sable three ravens counterchanged (Story/Storey)

Thomas Lake, Jr.'s wife was Elizabeth Storey; they married November 30, 1676 in Kniveton, Derbyshire.

At the base of the monument, we find a repetition of the coat of augmentation granted by King Charles I.


So, a wonderful armorial memorial to a man with a very interesting family history! Even if it was a little hard to track down.



* In an interesting (at least to me!) coincidence, my 10th great grandmother, Judith (or Goodeth) Copp, née Itchenor, and the wife of the man for whom Copp's Hill is named, is also buried in Copp's Hill Burying Ground. Her gravestone is not very far from that of Capt. Thomas Lake.

Thursday, April 24, 2025

What Can I Do With My Coat of Arms? Part 36 - I Thought We Were Done With These!


So, just when we thought the "What Can I Do With My Coat of Arms?" series was all done, finishing up in my post of February 20, 2025 (the series began way back on October 21, 2024), wouldn't you know it? I found some more examples!

So here are some additional ideas for ways to use your coat of arms in your daily life:

A full achievement of arms on an entryway rug. (The dog would, of course, be extra.)


A Scottish clan badge as a pocket watch fob:


Another example of identifying your car with your coat of arms, crest, helm, and mantling, in a nice, somewhat understated way:


Going back to the kitchen, here's a seal-like butter mold that impresses an achievement of arms into a bit of butter:


And finally (yeah, I know I said that before when I ended the series. I can't help it if people keep finding more ways to use their heraldry, can I?), here's a couple of computer mouse pads with different heraldic treatments:



I continue to be impressed, and sometimes surprised, by the inventive ways in which people find to use their coat of arms, even on what might otherwise be somewhat everyday items.

What new ways have you seen people use heraldry?

Monday, April 21, 2025

A New Resource for Heraldry Enthusiasts


If you haven't seen it yet, our good friends over at Heraldry of the World (You do know about the Heraldry of the World ("HotW") website, don't you? And visit it regularly? No? Then stop reading this right now -- it'll still be here when you get back -- and go visit https://www.heraldry-wiki.com/wiki/Heraldry_of_the_world and see what's available for you there! No, really, go!) have recently created a new resource for people like you and me.

You know, people who read about, study, and involve themselves in heraldry in its many forms. Stuff like that.

Well, HotW has created a new site entitled "Bibliography of heraldry: a free overview of international heraldic literature". It's a list, broken down by topic, of books, periodicals, and even newspaper articles on some aspect or another of heraldry.

It is not links to those items, many of which are not available on the world wide web, but clicking on an item will bring up all of the bibliographic information that will tell you what, by whom, when, in what publication, and so on, which will let you track it down precisely if you are interested in reading (or owning) it.

There are two relevant URLs to the Bibliography of heraldry:

The first contains information about what is contained in and how to use the Bibliography. It also informs you that it is a "never ending project" which will be added to, with the aim of helping heraldists find "heraldic publications, old and modern, common or obscure." This page can be found on the HotW website at: https://www.heraldry-wiki.com/bibliography/

The second is to the Bibliography itself, to let you start searching. You can get to it from a link near the top of the HotW page above, or access it directly here: https://www.zotero.org/groups/5854305/bibliography_of_heraldry/library

As one of my alter egos* says, "Check it out!"



* Da'ud Bob ibn Briggs, Historical Drive-In Movie Critic. Our motto: "We watch 'em so you don't have to." Often only heraldry-adjacent, but if you are interested you can learn more at: http://www.appletonstudios.com/movies1.htm

Thursday, April 17, 2025

The Worshipful Company of Glaziers


It's always fun to be looking through a set of photographs and find a coat of arms that one recognizes from somewhere else, an "old friend" as it were.

I was going through the last of the pictures that my late wife Jo took of heraldry for me, and ran across this window in York Minster.


It is, of course, as you can easily determine both from the heraldry (Argent, two grozing irons in saltire between four closing nails sable on a chief gules a lion passant guardant or, with the crest A lion's head couped or between a pair of wings azure,  and motto: Lucem tuam da nobis Deus (God, give us Your light) as well as from the legend at the bottom noting that the window was replaced following World War II, that what we have here is the achievement of arms of the Worshipful Company of Glaziers.

But we have also seen these arms, though in a different depiction, in another cathedral, Ely Cathedral, about which I posted on July 3, 2023 (http://blog.appletonstudios.com/2023/07/armorial-stained-glass-in-ely-cathedral.html).

What fun to see this "old friend" appearing in a different cathedral in a different county!

Monday, April 14, 2025

Heraldry (or Is It?) in the Wild


Placing things on, or simply the use of, a shield has long been popular as a symbol of protection. I've seen usage like that for organizations as disparate as police departments, security companies, and even lawyers.

And then, early one morning, driving to the gym, I saw this one with a similar theme of protection, but new to me. (Thank goodness Jo was with me to take the picture; trying to drive down the freeway, maintain my speed and lane, trying to pull out my phone, open the camera app, aim it, frame it, and focus it, all at the same time would probably not have worked out well for me!)

Anyway, what we saw was a truck owned by StormShield Restoration, Residential and Commercial Roofing Contractors, emblazoned with their logo, a shield emblematic of protection against rain and snow.


My attempt at a blazon (likely a fruitless effort, I realize, given that it's probably just a copyrighted design and not heraldry, per se, but you know heralds, we will attempt to blazon just about anything), would be: Per bend sinister [yeah, it’s really closer to “per pale”] vert and azure a lighting flash bendwise sinister [ditto] throughout between three gouttes bendwise sinister [ditto] one and two in chief and a snowflake in base all argent.

So this was a fun bit of quasi-heraldry to spot while driving down the highway early one morning.

But I do find myself somewhat tempted to call them up and offer advice on how to make just a couple of small changes to turn it into a real coat of arms. But then, they're not looking for my advice, are they? And there's that old saw about letting sleeping dogs lie, so I'll just sit here in front of my computer and keep my thoughts about this shield to myself.