Seal and arms of Our Lady of Cincinnati College, later Edgecliff College, and the only surviving artifact identifying tinctures and metals I could find. |
Hunting down information regarding the coat of arms for Our Lady of Cincinnati College has proven virtually impossible. Thankfully I found a reference in Evans (1959) which names Pierre de Chaignon la Rose (1872-1941) as the designer and with the date 1936. Score for at least the designer. What about a blazon for the arms? Tinctures and metals? What is inscribed on the open book? The image above was all I could find regarding la Rose's design and thankfully included hatch marks.
Our Lady of Cincinnati College was founded in 1935 by the Sisters of Mercy as a women's college. In 1969, the College changed names to Edgecliff College and began admitting male students by 1970. By 1980, Edgecliff College merged with Xavier University.
As the case with many of the now closed schools la Rose designed arms for, their archives have either been lost or scattered indiscriminately. While Xavier University has some artifacts from Edgecliff in its collections, there is scant little from Our Lady of Cincinnati.
Arms of Our Lady of Cincinnati College, later Edgecliff College. Rendered by Chad Krouse, 2024. |
Through the hatching on the seal/arms, I was able to make out the tinctures and metals. The blazon, as best as I can tell, is: Gules, an open book edged with two clasps Or inscribed “Maria Vita et Spes Nostra” and in base a cross of the Sisters of Mercy Argent, on a chief Azure in dexter a crescent and in sinister a plow Argent.
Click to enlarge. |
The chief abstractly reads Our Lady, Cincinnati. I love that even though I find the design somewhat unbalanced. The cross in the base of the arms comes from the insignia used by the Sisters of Mercy as seen below. I also like how the cross is literally the foundation of the arms since the Sisters founded the college.
Insignia of the Sisters of Mercy. |
Arms of the Archdiocese of Cincinnati designed by la Rose. Rendered by Chad Krouse, 2024. |
Recreation of la Rose's design for the College's seal. Rendered by Chad Krouse, 2024. |
Recreating la Rose's gothic quatrefoil was incredibly challenging and my version is not perfect. Remember, a seal is not a coat of arms and vice versa. Seals are used to legally authentic documents and may contain a coat of arms but not required. There is no governance or direction in the US on designing a corporate seal.
Banner of arms, Our Lady of Cincinnati College. Rendered by Chad Krouse, 2024. |