Our next heraldic memorial in King's Chapel in Boston, Massachusetts, is that of John Lowell, Jr.
This one differs from the one in our previous post in that, while the inscription thereon is still fully in Latin, most notably it contains a complete bust of the man as opposed to a bas-relief.
John Lowell, Jr. (1749-1840) was an American political pamphleteer, born at Newburyport, Massachusetts. He graduated at Harvard in 1786; was admitted to the bar in 1789; took up his residence in Boston, became eminent as a lawyer, and was an active, honored, and public-spirited citizen, but never took an office. He was a notable member of the Federalist Party in the early days of the United States.
He is sufficiently important enough to have his own entry in Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Lowell_Jr._(lawyer)
But, as usual, it is the coat of arms at the top of the monument which caught our eye.
The arms do not appear in Burke’s General Armory, nor the crest or motto in Fairbairn’s Crests.
Nor do the arms appear in the American Heraldry Society's "A Roll of Early American Arms," which can be found on-line at https://www.americanheraldry.org/heraldry-in-the-united-states/roll-of-early-american-arms/ (This on-line roll is stated to be of arms "borne in the present day United States before 1825, which one would think ought to include the Lowell arms here, but it any event it is otherwise generally very helpful in researching arms as used in what is now the United States in the 17th and 18th centuries.)
Bolton’s American Armory cites: Lowell: Sable a hand couped at the wrist grasping three darts points down, one in pale and two in saltire argent. Crest: A stag’s head cabossed or between the antlers a pheon (azure?). (Bolton's source: "Wall tablet to John Lowell, 1769-1840. King’s Chapel, Boston." South Aisle. In other words, the memorial we are looking at today!)
Crozier’s General Armory gives us: Lowell. Massachusetts. Percival Lowle, Newbury, 1639. Sable a hand couped at the wrist grasping three darts, one in pale and two in saltire argent. Crest: A covered cup or. So, the same arms as seen here, but an entirely different crest.
He is sufficiently important enough to have his own entry in Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Lowell_Jr._(lawyer)
But, as usual, it is the coat of arms at the top of the monument which caught our eye.
The arms do not appear in Burke’s General Armory, nor the crest or motto in Fairbairn’s Crests.
Nor do the arms appear in the American Heraldry Society's "A Roll of Early American Arms," which can be found on-line at https://www.americanheraldry.org/heraldry-in-the-united-states/roll-of-early-american-arms/ (This on-line roll is stated to be of arms "borne in the present day United States before 1825, which one would think ought to include the Lowell arms here, but it any event it is otherwise generally very helpful in researching arms as used in what is now the United States in the 17th and 18th centuries.)
Bolton’s American Armory cites: Lowell: Sable a hand couped at the wrist grasping three darts points down, one in pale and two in saltire argent. Crest: A stag’s head cabossed or between the antlers a pheon (azure?). (Bolton's source: "Wall tablet to John Lowell, 1769-1840. King’s Chapel, Boston." South Aisle. In other words, the memorial we are looking at today!)
Crozier’s General Armory gives us: Lowell. Massachusetts. Percival Lowle, Newbury, 1639. Sable a hand couped at the wrist grasping three darts, one in pale and two in saltire argent. Crest: A covered cup or. So, the same arms as seen here, but an entirely different crest.
Motto: Occasionem cocmosce (Seize the opportunity).
So what we have here, as in several other cases recently, is a coat of arms used in late colonial America for which I have not found a European antecedent. Still, there they are -- arms, crest, and motto -- literally carved in stone. So there you have it.

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