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The seal and coat of arms of The Johns Hopkins University Rendered by Chad Krouse, 2025 |
With the Great 50 days of Easter now in full swing, I'd like to return to some new heraldic discoveries among our academies. Today, I want to feature a fairly well known coat of arms, albeit one with a plot twist. To read other articles in this series focusing on corporate heraldry shaping the American tradition, click the tag at the end of this post.
For a quick recap: several months ago I challenged myself to seek and find good corporate heraldry in the Episcopal Church, civic/social organizations, and my other favorite category of scholastic coats of arms. I wanted to build a dataset of those corporate bodies bearing coats of arms that shape the American heraldic tradition, as well as to prove this ancient art is alive and thriving in the US today.
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Coat of arms of Johns Hopkins University Rendered by Chad Krouse, 2025 |
The coat of arms of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore is another example of arms that I did not pay much attention to over the years. Why? Given the only emblazonments seen of the university's arms are entangled within its vesica seal likely kept me from digging any further. As a result of taking on the task of rendering those arms discovered online, I know that how these arms were presented created my issue.
When I began to render the seal and actually look at the design, the disparate elements began to make sense to me. What I once saw as fussy now has layers of meaning. I recall reading in Col. Harry D. Temple's (1911-2004) Heraldry and the Diocese of Virginia, in which he noted the use of oak leaves in scholastic coats of arms as a way to denote strength. I never considered this image of acorns and leaves in Johns Hopkins' ensigns to be anything more than mere doodles. I was wrong.
These arms continue to grow on me, even with the Calvert-Crossland quarterings that seemingly overpower everything. I sense there must be another way to illustrate geographical location for the university rather than blithely use the arms of Maryland. Ah, too late.
Adopted by its board of trustees on 7 December 1885, the seal and coat of arms of this private research university were collaboratively designed by Clayton C. Hall, a prominent Baltimore historian and Stephen Tucker, then Somerset Herald at the College of Arms in London (Johns Hopkins University, n.d.). Plot twist...heralds at work on an American design in the 19th century.
Having evidence of the College of Arms creating a scholastic coat prior to the 20th century is assuredly an outlier in my data--the College of William & Mary notwithstanding. I have evidence of the herald's college involved with designing arms for Bryn Mawr College (1903-1904) and the University of Chicago (1911-1912), but those would come later. Furthermore, it is altogether possible that Johns Hopkins' commission to the College of Arms may have created a precedent that the University of Chicago (also a private research university) would later follow with their restudy. Perhaps a missing piece of the puzzle now coming into focus. Thus, this London-based plot twist was an exciting revelation.
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L-R: Coats of arms of Bryn Mawr College and the University of Chicago Rendered by Chad Krouse, 2025 |
One observation: it appears that the go-to differencing mark used by the heralds at that time in corporate arms is the chief, Johns Hopkins and University of Chicago illustrate this point. Click here to learn about the coat of arms of the University of Chicago.
The date of armorial adoption places the university in the top 5 US academic institutions bearing coats of arms. As this is a ongoing project there will be some seat swapping as new data emerges. For now, these are the current top five oldest academic institutions in the US with coats of arms along with their adoption date:
1. Harvard University - 1643
2. College of William & Mary - 1694
3. Yale University - 1740
4. Brown University - 1833
5. Johns Hopkins University - 1885
The university's arms look sharp as an armorial flag. The quartered crosses bottony are supposed to be stretched as illustrated, unfortunately.
Blazon for the arms of Johns Hopkins University: Quarterly 1st and 4th, paly of six Or and Sable a bend counterchanged (Calvert); 2nd and 3rd, quarterly Argent and Gules, a cross bottony counterchanged (Crossland); on a chief Azure a terrestrial globe between two open books bound and edged Or.
Works Cited
Johns Hopkins University (n.d.). Academic seal. Johns Hopkins University, https://brand.jhu.edu/visual-identity/university-marks/#academic-seal
Temple, Harry D. (1971). Heraldry and the Diocese of Virginia. Privately printed.
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