Wellingborough RDC

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WELLINGBOROUGH (Rural District Council)

Incorporated into : 1974 Wellingborough

Coat of arms (crest) of Wellingborough RDC

These colours are not the true colours, any proper coloured image is welcome !

Official blazon

Arms : Gules a Chevron Vair between in chief two Garbs and in base a Bull's Head caboshed Or three Roses Gules barbed and seeded proper.
Crest : Out of a Saxon Crown Or a Mount Vert thereon a representation of the Saxon Tower of the Church at Earls Barton proper.
Motto: 'TAM CRAS QUAM HODIE' - As much for tomor­row as for today.


Origin/meaning

The arms were officially granted on August 4, 1954.

The wheat sheaves indicate the general agricul­tural background, as well as to the ancillary industries of flour milling and food production. The bull's head refers to one of Northamptonshire's principal activities - the leather industry, represented in this district by tanning and boot and shoe making. The red background of the shield is common to the arms of some of the principal manorial families, the Ishams (Isham), Isteds (Ecton), and Wilmers (Sywell). The blue and white vair chevron is also taken from the Isted and Wilmer arms and on it lie the three golden roses which also appear on a chevron in the arms of the Vaux of Harrowden.

The red and white of the mantling are the livery colours of the County and of several of the district's families, Isteds, Wilmers, Yelvertons, Fitzwilliams and Spencers. The Saxon crown is a reference to many local connections with that period, including the Saxon dictionary of Owen Manning of Orlingbury. The most famous Saxon monument of all, one of the principal land­marks in the county and one of the principal examples of Saxon Architecture in England, the tower of the Church at Earls Barton, completes the crest.

The motto is derived from the Vaux family's motto "Hodie non cras" - Today, not tomorrow.


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Literature: Image and information provided by Laurence Jones; old image and info from http://www.civicheraldry.co.uk