America Heraldica : a Compilation of Coats of Arms, Crests and Mottoes Of
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rF t T. Jo Goolidge AMERICA HERALDICA A COMPILATION OF flits fl} |rnis, |ttsts aifl Jfltoea OF PROMINENT AMERICAN FAMILIES SETTLED IN THIS COUNTRY BEFORE 1800 EDITED BY E. DE V' VERMONT ILLUSTRATED BY AUGUSTE,LEROY- IRew JDorft THE AMERICA HERALDICA PUBLISHING ASSOCIATION 744 BROADWAY Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year i88g, by E. DB V. VERMONT, in the office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington. Ait rights reserved. Plates Engraved and Printed by Liebler & Maass, Letter-press by Haighl & Dudley, New York. Poughkeepsie. N. Y. ^r.,/,... AMERICA HERALDICA. PLATE I. gJUlVIRQSTOE VAK (o:\ 0]RTLftI2DT RCHEJ^ oy=ij=(is TTEftTHCOTE IJLIPSE VftB/teBSSELAElP^ CHVYLE]F^ OODHVLL %Aiy^AX .JilVJuKLEY JP^RKLIB OUTG^OmE'RY f^EUL> ^Bffi!^J\Y)^J^, PI NX. E. de V. VEJ^Orrr, Editor /^/^'^ ' / /}^-L. f-f"^-- / ^mi^^w- WI^Mmw'- AMERICA HERALDICA A COMPILATION OF Bits fit Irtus, psta aiil %'&iim OF PROMINENT AMERICAN FAMILIES SETTLED IN THIS COUNTRY BEFORE 1800 EDITED BY E. DE V. VERMONT ILLUSTRATED BY HENRY RYKERS BRENTANO BROTHERS lintcrcd, accuiiliili! in Act of Congress, in tll= year i8S6. by E. 1)K V. VKKMONT. in [he office of the Librarian of Congress, al Washington. W// / t^/ifs reserved. Letter-press by Haight Dudley, Kates Engraved and Printed hv The Hateh Lithographic Co., & Ponghkeepsie, N. Y. NewYorlj. AJJERICA HERAIiDICA Iniex of Colored Coats of Arms PI. Tlo. PI. No. Abereroinbie 19 1 Carpenter 16 14 Alexander 3 2 Carroll 9 2 " 17 2 Carter 20 9 Amory 4 1 Cary 9 12 " 17 1 Caverly 9 3 Anderson 5 1 Ghaloner 6 8 7 Andrews • • 6 1 Chandler 16 Appleton ••• 1 10 Chase 4 6 7 Archer • 1 3 Chauncey 6 Arnold 4 3 Chute 6 16 Bacon 9 1 Clarkson 14 8 Balche 13 10 Claytorne 9 4 Barclay 3 4 Clinton 3 7 Bard 15 6 Coddington 14 6 Barlcer 15 1 Coffin 4 4 Bartlett 15. 11 G ogge shall 14 11 Barton 5 3 Colden 7 4 Bayard 11 2 Coolidge 8 2 Beelcman 3 5 Corwin 6 5 " 17 10 Cotton 10 10 Belcher 4 8 Coatant • 5 8 Bell 6 2 Craddoclc 8 3 Bethune 4 2 Cranstoon ..13 15 Bellingham 6 3 Crouwell 11 1 Betts 16 8 Croger 5 4 Bissell 18 6 Curtis 8 6 Blake 15 10 Gushing 5 14 Bland 19 4 Cuyler 5 6 Bleeclcer 3 13 Davenport 6 15 Bolton 5 2 Deane 8 7 Bowen 18 5 De Lauicey 3 1 Bradford 13 9 Delano 7 3 Bradstreet 14 1 Denison 8 8 Brattle 14 2 De Normandie 15 7 Breese 14 3 De Peyster 3 3 ..13 7 Brewster • 4 5 Dickenson Bright 6 11 Digges 15 12 Brinley 6 4 Dinwiddle 19 2 Brown of Rye 5 5 Disbron 5 7 Browne of V/atertown. 8 1 Dodge 4 10 '" " " .17 4 Drake 4 7 13 12 Bruen 20 7 Du Bois Balicley 1 13 -Dudley 8 5 4 9 Burnet 6 9 Dumaresq. Bamharn 14 4 Dummer 8 4 B'ltler 12 16 Eliot 2 9 Calvert 13 16 " 17 7 -2- Pl. Ko. Pi. No. Emerson 2 11 Jeffries 4 13 Endicott 14 12 Johnes 13 3 Eyre 15 8 Johnstone ...13 4 Fairfax 1 12 Jones ..18 7 " 17 6 Jouet 16 11 Pairweatlier 10 4 Kearny... 19 7 Field 12 4 Kip 1 11 Fislce 10 7 Ladd 21 2 Pitch 8 9 Lathrop 2 13 Forsytli 16 15 Lawrence 4 11 Foster ..16 10 Lee 17 3 Fowke ^ 15 3 " 9 14 Fountain 11 3 Leggett 7 8 Foxeroft 13 11 Leverett 4 15 Franklin 1 16 Lewis.... ....20 6 Gallatin .13 5 Lindsay... 14 5 Gallup 21 4 Lippincott 20 5 Gardiner 3 12 Lispenard .20 3 Geer 15 13 Livingston 1 1 Giles 8 13 " 17 5 Gilman 4 12 Lloyd 16 9 Gilpin 13 1 Lord 2 12 Goodsell 12 13 Loring 8 14 Gookin 9 8 Lowell 2 7 Graves or Greaves. .. .10 2 Lowndes 9 6 Greene 8 12 Ludlow 3 9 Greenwood ...13 14 Ludwell 9 9 Gregory 16 3 Luq.uer 3 14 Griswold 3 11 Lyman 8 15 Hale or Hales 12 3 Lynch 13 8 Haramersley 15 15 MoVickar 16 2 Hancock........ 2 5 Magill ,...18 3 Hatch 12 8 Mascarene 4 14 Hawkes 18 2 Meredith 19 5 Hay 5 16 iierrill 16 1 Hayden 8 10 Middleton 9 13 Heathcote 1 5 Miner 4 16 Herbert 20 8 Montague 10 12 Herrick 14 10 Montgomery 1 14 Hicks 16 5 Morris 1 4 Hitchcock 20 4 Mountfort 14 7 Hoar 2 10 Munroe 5 9 ^opkins 14 15 M'lnsell 5 10 Howard 9 15 Uicholson. 9 7 Howell 12 1 " 17 14 Howlajid 16 13 Niooll 7 16 Huger 9 16 Horris 18 9 Hurry 15 4 Norton 15 5 Hutchinson 2 3 Ogden 16 12 " 17 8 Page 9 11 Inglis 11 13 Peahody ........18 8 Irvin or Irving 10 1 Peck 14 9 Jay 3 6 Pelham 2 1 -3- Pl. No. Pi. no. :Pell 1 15 Stryclcer 19 3 Pendleton 18 1 Sturgis 12 2 iPenn. • 5 15 Stujrvesant 3 8 Pennington 12 14 Sumner 10 5 Peyton 9 5 Temple 6 13 Phelps 11 5 Thomas .14 14 Thompson 7 10 I Philips 20 2 iPhilipse 1 6 Thorndyke 2 6 ,'pierrepont 5 13 Throop 7 6 Ipolhemua 11 11 To\^m3end 6 10 Tracy 18 4 iPophaan , 11 12 ipreseott 14 15 Tremaine 21 8 ,Prev03t 5 11 Turberville 19 9 Pynehon 12 11 Tuttle 10 8 Qainoy 2 16 Tylden 16 6 Randolph 9 10 Tyler 2 15 Rapaljie 7 1 Tyng 2 4 Underhill 10 13 . Has ay ».16 4 Raws on 12 15 Van Alst 11 10 2 Reade 7 14 Van Cortlandt 1 " " 17 9 Rijlcer 7 13 Roberdean 11 4 Van Uort 11 7 1 7 Roome 12 9 Van Rensslaer " " 17 Roosevelt 11 5 13 Russell 2 2 Van Sittart 11 9 Ratherford 3 16 Van Vorhees 5 14 Salisbury 2 14 Van Wyck 5 12 " " *Salton3tall 6 5 17 11 " 17 12 Vassall 12 10 iSands 7 5 Wainwright 14 13 Savage 12 6 Walworth 13 2 Sehencit 7 9 Ward 12 12 Schieffelin 13 6 Vferren 3 10 •Schuyler 1 8 Watts 15 9 Scott 11 8 Wendell 7 15 Scott of Ancrum....l5 2 Wentworth 10 15 " " " ....21 9 Wetmore 12 5 Seabury 16 15 ^^Vftiite 21 1 Seton 11 16 " Wniting 10 11 " 21 6 V/hitney 7 11 Shippen 11 15 Willcinson 10 16 Shirley 10 9 . Williams 8 16 'Sims 19 8 Willoughby 12 7 Sinclair 3 15 Vaison 10 14 Slcipv/orth 15 16 Winans 21 7 Smith 20 1 _^Jlnslovr 6 12 8 Smith of Scarsdale. .7 7 Winthrop 2 Standish 15 14 " 17 15 Stetson 10 3 WolGott 7 2 Stoolcton 13 13 Woodhull 1 9 Stoddart 8 11 Woolsey 11 14 Storrs 10 6 " 17 16 Strangs 7 12 — — PREFACE HE reader does not expect the author, or, rather, eompiler of this work to expatiate, in solemn periods, upon the anti-democratic features of heraldic devices, such a dis- cussion having become, indeed, too commonplace to deserve the least notice from intelligent and thoughtful people, No, it is not in any way true that the preservation in the archives of a few American families, and the outward use they may desire to make of the coats of arms belonging to them legitimately, could, at any time, become a peril to our republican institutions. Nor is it truer that the popular form of our national and state constitutions necessitates the suppression of such heirlooms ; nor could our lawgivers, by thus acting, succeed in installing on a forced footing of social equality the descendant of ten generations of personages distinguished for their courage, their learning, their high moral and intellectual standing, and the self-made and newly-enriched citizen, born, as it were, of yesterday, to all the refinements of life and of thought, and boasting of his being " his own proud ancestor." Before the civil law, in the midst of the duties as well as of the privileges of public life, absolute and undoubted equality. But in History, in the Past, nearly always in social intercourse, imperious, logical, needed classification, which no protest can either evade or destroy.* Far be from us the thought of enunciating here any personal opinion—of developing a theory. We simply wish to state a fact,—a clear, self-evident fact, —however unpalatable it may seem to many of our fellow-citizens. But such a fact made itself apparent, in all its possible consequences, from the earliest days of our young republic, and still we find that the Washingtons, the Adamses, the Franklins, the Jays, the Livingstons, and many others among the founders of our liberties, used daily their own armorial bearings, and did not conceal their satisfaction in thus connecting the Present with an honored Past. Why should we then—we, their descendants, enjoying now the work of their well-spent lives assume the right of interpreting differently the result of their thoughtful deliberations? They did not erase the Past, but linked it by firm ties to the Future. Gentle blood they did not proscribe, as did the French Convention, but they placed it, as it were, at the pinnacle, well in view—not as a * " Free to every one to have esteem or contempt for gentle blood. Euripides preferred to it riches ; Me- nander, virtue; Plato, glory; Aristotle, talent; Socrates, wisdom; St.