
The Hedges of Stafford/Prince William Counties
Virginia 1660-
1980 - Crests ©
Names and Heraldry, Crests, and symbols.
A Crest is the wooden or cloth symbol (icon) which a soldier wore
on his helmet to
be identified easily on the field of battle. It was much higher
than his head,
and gave others an easy visual location of him. He wanted it to
be unique so
his allies would not mistake him for a foe since his face was
covered by the helmet.
The the "coat of Arms" originated as a painted shield in the time
of Richard I when the christian Knights on the Crusades painted a
herald or ensign on their shield for quick identification. The
painted shield was often complete with a decoration which may
match the crest to a degree, which
also was intended to identify the bearer.
The Herald was the individual who knew the rules of jousting and
combat, and
who was welcomed in the home of the land-owner as a teacher and
umpire to the (often bloody) sport.
Heraldry was/is the study, the science, and the law of who was authorized to wear and display these publicized symbols and
crests.
The Court of Heraldry last convened in 1962 to determine
ownership of a
"coat of arms".
Several family names from the following list have included
members who have
been awarded a crest and a coat of arms to identify their
specific family. The
symbols which were chosen then may be useful to others who carry
the same
surname, even if not a lineal descendant of the owner. Crests and
the rights
to display and wear them are inherited estates. All sons of
armingers
could wear the crests, though minor changes were dictated by the
rules
of Heraldry to indicate which son.
Here are several symbols which were awarded to the specific
named
families. As the following very incomplete list indicates, there
may be a
pattern among those of the same name, but there may also be
entirely separate
families of the same name with completely different symbols. The
similarities between a horse,
a sea-horse, and a unicorn in one family indicates "differencing"
among
descendants, each descendant of whom was proud of his own
individual exploits.
Misrepresentation today in the United States by claiming and
copying an old published "Coat of Arms" would only be committing
the "crime" of bad taste
.
A researcher may feel compelled to trace one or more families
listed in this
volume to England someday, and the complexity of the task is
indicated below.
- Applegate - a demi-heraldric tiger gu.
- Abrahall of Herefordshire - a hedgehog ppr (purple)
- Bettison of Kent - a lion's head erased sa collared arg
- Carty- Carte -
- COLEMAN
- Coleman - a horse's head erased ppr.
- Coleman of London - a nag's head erased sa, mained bridled
arg, tassled
or.
- Coleman of Bexley Lodge, Norwich -a cross patonced gu,
surmounted by a
unicorn's head erased arg, charged w/ three roses in chevrons of
the first.
- Coleman of Wiltshire - a caltrap or between two winged arg.
- Coleman of Merrot, Somersetshire - a bull's head erased gu,
cherged w/ a
crescent arg.
- Coleman - a demi-grey hounds sa, collared arg.
- Coleman - out of a ducal coronet, a grey hound's head erased
gu.
- COTTON
- Cotton of Cambridge - a griffin's head erased arg.
- Cotton of Suffolk - a griffin's head erased arg.
- Cotton - a griffin's head holding a gauntlet ppr.
- Cotton - a hawk's head erased
- Cotton of Staffordshire & Worchester - a hawk ppr beaked &
legged or.
- Cotton - a hawk ppr beaked & bellied or.
- Cotton of Shropshire & Hants.- a falcon w/ wings expanded
holding dexter a
belt and sinister a buckle.
- Cotton of Durham - a falcon ppr w/ wings expanded holding
dexter a
belt and sinister a buckle.
- Cotton of Glouchester - five snakes tied head to head, ppr in
chief.
- Cotton of Surrey - lion's head gorged w/ hank of cotton
fessway arg.
- Cotton of Staffordshire & Leics.- an eagle displayed arg.
- Cotton of Hants.- out of a ducal coronet or, a demi-eagle
displayed or.
- Cotton - a cornish clough, a cotton hank all ppr in beak.
- CROOME
- Epps of Kent - a chaplet vert, flowered, or a falcon rising.
- Gimber (Gimbert) - a bear's head muzzled, erased (no body).
- HEDGES
- Hedges of London, Knt - three white swans heads, ripped off,
and one natural swan head as a crest.
- Hedges of Alderton, Wiltshire, Knt - three white swans heads,
ripped off, and one natural swan head as a crest.
- Hedges of Romney, Hamptontshire, Knt - SA on a chief or three
mascules (diamonds outlines).
- Hedges-White - Earl of Bantry - one swan's head (for Hedges)
and a storke
for White and booted leg for Eyre family.
- the swan pair lived in the holy spring of URD and dwelt
beneath the woeld tree called YGGDRASIL, and their wings were as
the Valkyre. The swan is white, with a red beak, and some black
above the nostrils. The black swan is the emblem of the de
Bohuns. A male swan is a cob, a female is a pen, and hatchlings
are cygnets.
- Hedges - a pomigranite stacked w/ branches of leaves.
- ISHAM
- Isham of Lamport, Northhamptonshire - a
demi-swan - On things
transitory resteth
no glory.!
- Isham of Bramston, Northhamptonshire - a demi-swan
- MEAD
- Mead - a reindeer tripant vert (standing ready
to move)
- Mead of Dublin - a pelican in her piety ( pellican hovering
over nest of
young)
- Mead - a ducal cornet w/ eagle displayed
- Meade of Clanwilliam - Eagles
- Onesby- O (son of) + Nesbitt (Bridle)
- OSBORN
- Osborn - a tiger passant (resting)
- Osborn of Ireland - a mural cornet with a lion's head
- Osborn of Peppermilne, Edinburgh, Scotland - a sword in pail
ppr
- Osborne, Dule of Leeds -
- Osborn of Kirky Bydon, Norfolk and Cleby, Essex - a tiger's
head armed &
crined
- Osborn of Yorkshire - a tiger passant
- Osborn of London, Ashford, Kent, and Keyton, Notts.- a tiger
passant
- Osborn of Kelmarsh, Northamptonshire - a tiger passant
- Osborn of Tipperary - a sea-lion sejant, a demi-lion holding
a torch
- Osborn of Osborne House, Spondon, Derbyshire - a demi-lion
rampant
- Osborn of Hartlip Place, Kent - a demi-ounce rampant
- Osborn of Derbyshire - a pelican in her piety (on her nest)
- Osborn of of Debenham, Suffolk - a unicorn passant
- Osborn of Bedfordshire - a leopard's head, ducally crowned
- Osborn of Bedfordshire - a lion's head erased arg.
- Osborn-Gibbs - a arm and a steel gauntlet grasping a
battle-axe
- Osbourne of Scotland - a sword erect ppr.
- Osbourne - a unicorn passant.
- Osbourne - on a rock a castle in flames.
- Pharris -
- READER
- Reader - a dexter hand brandishing a sabre -
(a right hand holding a short sword.)
- Reader - Ireland - a leopard head erased and affront az
collared or - (a
cat's head facing forward with a collar and no body.)
- SKEEL - Danish.
- STONE
- Stone - out of a ducal coronet, a griffin's head between two
wings erm.
- Stone of Essex - a demi-grifin erm,
- Stone of Blackmoor, Essex - out of a ducal coronet or, a
griffin's head
between two wings.
- Stone of Brightwell, Oxon - a leopard's head holding a laurel
branch.
- Stone of Wavesdon, Suffolk - a demi-lion
- Stone of Cornwall & Trevigo - on a rock a paly-wavy six, a
salmon holding
a rose.
- Stone of Framfield, Sussex - a demi-cockatrice rising arg,
winged &
crested or.
- Stone of Cliff, Sussex & London - a ducal cornet, a
demi-peacock w/
wings expanded or.
- Stone - a swan's head and neck couped arg, beaked sa.
- Stone of Badbury, Wiltshire - a horse saddled, bridled,
crined & unguled.
- Stone of London - a unicorn's head between two wings.
- Stone of London - a sea-horse or, crined gu.
- Stone of Wedmore, Somersetshire and Kent - a spaniel passant
arg.
- Stone of Dorset - a spaniel courant gu.
- Thurman -
- WELLS
- Wells of Hereford - a well with water bucket
- Wells - a demi-lion rampant
- Wells - a horse's head bridled w/ three stars
- Wells - a demi-talbot (half-bodied dog)
- Wells - a fire-beacon
- Wise - a demi-lion rampant (half bodied lion poised to
strike)
______Stafford/Prince William Cos, VA history .
The de Lacy Hedges and the de Lacy family. Wouldn't it be nice to find the haplotype of these early "worthies"??
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Last modified: May 2008