Recent Posts

Friday, June 19, 2020

Heraldry (Alive again) at Sewanee: The University of the South

Flying heraldry at Sewanee.  The banners of the University of the South on full display inside All Saints' Chapel during a lecture.  Source: The University of the South.

In the summer of 2007, I moved onto the "domain" of the University of the South to begin coursework as a seminarian towards a Master of Divinity degree.  More often referred to as simply, "Sewanee," it's a small iconic university high atop the Cumberland plateau in middle Tennessee.  The Domain encompasses nearly 13,000 acres of beauty.  Described once to me as an "Episcopal theme park," the domain is filled with academic buildings designed in gothic architecture, with several modeled on Magdalene College, Oxford.  The professors wear gowns to class, and the whole place is a haven of the best of the Episcopal Church.  Legally owned by 28 dioceses of The Episcopal Church (a peculiar only in America), Sewanee is wholly an Episcopal university comprised of the College of Arts & Sciences (the undergraduate college), the School of Theology (the seminary), and the newcomer on the block, the School of Letters.  My three years at Sewanee were among the best in my life so far.  I'm proud to have earned my M.Div. from this university.

So much has developed, heraldically speaking, in the past four years at my alma mater that I felt like a post was in order.

While I was a student, there was not much by way of celebrating the unique heraldry of the university.  This was always odd to me, as the place is the perfect setting for coat armour:  the academic and religious processions, the majesty of All Saints' Chapel, and so on.  Thankfully, so much has since changed in the intervening years.     

For a quick recap on the heraldry of Sewanee's heraldry, please click here to read about the heraldry of the University of the South.  

Several years ago when I began writing about heraldry and exploring the armorial bearings of Sewanee, I rendered the arms as banners because I had hopes that one day students and alumni would see the brilliance of Dr. James Waring McCrady's designs for theses arms flying during university rituals.  Click here to read about my designs for the banners of Sewanee.  

The heraldic banner of the University of the South, rendered by Dr. Krouse, Sept. 19, 2014.

Little did I know, then, that one reader would quickly take action!  The Rev. Rob Donahue T'16, was then a seminarian and contacted me through this blog.  He later penned an article, "Sewanee's Treasured Tressure." By March 22, 2016, Donahue had taken my design concept and managed to convince the leadership at the university to move forward with flying heraldry for the celebration of the Second Founding of the University.  Rob was kind enough to give me a shout-out in the the student newspaper, The Sewanee Purple.  Click here to read the article from The Sewanee Purple.

Faculty lining up for an academic procession at Sewanee with the heraldic banners in background.  Source: The University of the South.

Furthermore, Donahue was generous to send me a flag of the School of Theology's arms.  I want to again thank Fr. Rob for his generosity and tenacity for making heraldry come alive at Sewanee!  By the Spring of 2018, the seminary received as a gift from the senior class, a new heraldic banner of the arms of the School of Theology.   

Seminarians surrounding the newly commissioned banner of arms, a gift to the Seminary by the Class of 2018. Source: The University of the South. 

Another exciting development in flying heraldry occured on the Domain by the fall 2018.  Dr. McCrady, the original designer of the Sewanee coats in the early 1980s, re-emerged to design heraldic banners for all the residential houses on campus.  Click here to read the article on the new residence hall banners in The Sewanee Purple.

Inside McClurg Dining Hall: the new 19 banners of the residential halls of the university designed by Dr. J. Waring McCrady, Fall 2018.  Source: The Sewanee Purple.  
 

The heraldic banner of St. Luke's Hall, the University of the South.  St. Luke's was the original residence of the School of Theology.  Source: The University of the South.

The heraldic banner of Hoffman Hall, The University of the South.  Source: The University of the South.

The heraldic banner of Phillips Hall, The University of the South.  Source: The University of the South.

I'm so thrilled to see my alma mater basking in the glory of heraldry, and even more honored to have played a small part.  Sewanee continues to occupy a special place in American higher education, and the university's armorial bearings further that unique role.  Perhaps it's now time to publish an attractive hardbound armorial detailing all of these arms!

Wednesday, June 10, 2020

The Arms of Pierre de Chaignon La Rose & International Heraldry Day 2020

The arms of Pierre de Chaignon la Rose, line drawing by Dr. Krouse.

June 10th is International Heraldry Day, a day to celebrate the art and science of coat armour throughout the world.  This day comes at a time in which we find ourselves going into battle on a number of fronts, bearing symbols and mottoes those ancient knights and kings of old would not likely recognize.  This day is a day, I hope, for those heraldry enthusiasts to ask themselves, "how is heraldry relevant in 2020?"  I fear that if all we do is worship the charges and lines of partition of old to spite the battles before us, we risk debasing heraldry's ability to invite us into a deeper and more meaningful conversation about identity, inheritance, and legacy.  I believe this treasured art and science can still be relevant in 2020.    

Case in point: my humble attempt in devising an attributed coat of arms for the Black Lives Matter movement.  Click here to read about my design for the attributed arms of the Black Lives Matter movement.  The idea came to me when I started to ask, how can I help and how can I affect change within my locus of control?  And then it clicked.  I believe heraldry can and does occupy a relevant place in the world, beyond its historical aspects.  Others are free to disagree.       

Originally conceived in 2013, the idea of International Heraldry Day commemorates the approximation of the first date of known coat armour.  The story continues from the registration of arms found over at the Armorial International:
The celebration was started in 2013 within the International Association of Amateur Heralds (IAAH). Tomasz Steifer (Poland), a Fellow of the IAAH described the effort: we propose that this international day of heraldry at 10 June. On that day, in the year 1128, in Rouen was knighted, by his future father in law, Henry I Beauclerc, Godfrey Plantagenet. Suspended during the ceremony on the neck of a young knight shield blue decorated six golden lions, is recognized by most of the heralds, for the first time in history, fully formed coat of arms.
Today, I want to commemorate America's best kept secret, Pierre de Chaignon la Rose (1872-1941).  A man who single handedly shaped American heraldry in the early Twentieth Century and whose work can still be seen today.  So many know the images, but few know the heraldic genius behind those arms.  From the Schools of Harvard, University of Chicago, Notre Dame, Catholic University, Boston College, Rice University, to lesser know schools such as College of the Holy Cross, St. Ambrose University, and Trinity Washington University, all these institutions still bear the arms expertly designed by la Rose.  Scholastic heraldry aside, he devised arms for 24 dioceses of the Episcopal Church (including the arms of the Episcopal Church itself), and countless arms for Roman Catholic sees, abbeys, and religious communities.  In a sense, la Rose was the brand creator for so many iconic American institutions long before this concept took hold in business literature.   

More recently, several of these institutions have had to address their racial past in connection with their arms and dug into their archives to understand the meaning behind the herald's work--the former Calhoun College at Yale and Harvard's Law School for example.  Click here to learn about the new arms of Grace Hopper College at Yale, and please click here if you would like to learn more about the new arms for Harvard Law. 

La Rose first captured my interest in 2014 when I began my process for assuming arms.  I'm interested in what I call "fringe figures," and la Rose fits that bill nicely.  What do I mean by "fringe figures?"  He lived alone (undoubtedly gay based on my research), positioned himself as the foremost expert in America on heraldry (an arcane subject), and otherwise marched to the beat of his own drum while living on the fringe of Harvard yard.       

La Rose's yearbook photograph from Harvard, Class of 1895.

I've posted before about la Rose's work at St. Edward's Seminary in Washington and Brookline Public Library in Massachusetts.  Click here to learn more about the arms la Rose designed for St. Edward's Seminary, and please click here to learn more about the arms of the Brookline Public Library.  These two represent a drop in the bucket in terms of the scope of la Rose's heraldic work.  Piecing together his life and work continues to be a fun challenge; I've worked with numerous archives and even found a treasure trove of some of his best work.  In sum, I've identified 192 coats of arms that he devised for institutions around the world.  Sadly, most of these institutions don't readily know who devised their arms, much less the rationale behind them.  Even worse, marketing departments have managed to obscure the regal emblazonment in favor of a more modern appearance.   


La Rose's bookplate from the Houghton Library, Harvard, 1895.

A late edition to the post, the second known bookplate of Pierre de Chaignon la Rose created by the famous bookplate engraver George W. Eve, dated 1914, courtesy of Joseph McMillan of the American Heraldry Society.  Note the absence of the rose charge and the addition of a crest, coronet, and supporters.

I wanted to render his own arms, as I've yet to encounter any digitized versions on the web.  I discovered an emblazonment of his arms on a bookplate at the Houghton Library, Harvard, dated 1895.  The 1895 bookplate rendering is simple and very much keeping in his style and ethos.  

Based on the hatching, I've worked out the following blazon.  The arms of Pierre de Chaignon la Rose are blazoned: Azure, a lion rampant Or langued Gules and charged on the shoulder with a rose of the third barbed and seeded proper, holding in dexter arm a sword proper.  Motto:  Fortiter et Suaviter (Firmly and gently).  The only other known image is chiseled onto his tombstone at Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge.  Thus, I'm pleased to finally have La Rose's arms rendered on the web, albeit a line drawing!

Click here to view my post containing a new digital emblazonment of la Rose's arms based on his 1895 bookplate.  

Note the absence of the rose and the addition of the coronet.  Source: Findagrave.com

It took several tries to get the line drawing proportioned just right.  I played with numerous shield shapes, only to end up using one of his own found in the arms of St. Joseph's Academy (for girls).  The school operated from 1851-1971 in Saint Paul, Minnesota as a Roman Catholic school founded by the Sisters of Saint Joseph.  You won’t find these arms anywhere on the web until now!  La Rose devised these arms as: Azure, a semme of Madonna lilies Argent, in pale a sword Or with hilt in base thereupon an open book edged Or and inscribed Suboles Doctrinae Pietas (“Reverence, Scion of Scholarship”).

The arms of St. Joseph's Academy, devised by La Rose in 1926.
 
La Rose was a fan of placing charge upon a charge, especially with animals.  Below are two examples of his expert hand.  Remember, these are hand painted, no digital software for drawing was available in those days.  The first example is la Rose's proposed coat of arms for the new Episcopal Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City.  He rendered two designs, and the one below is the first.  The Cathedral, sadly, ended up adopting Ralph Adams Cram's design which you can see in use today.  La Rose's design pays tribute to St. John by way of the eagle with the halo and honors the "New Amsterdam" Dutch heritage of New York City by way of the windmill blades. 

The second example comes from the arms of Mundelein College which has since merged with Loyola University Chicago.  La Rose used the "phoenix rising from the ashes" charge in several designs.  The arms of the University of Chicago (adopted in 1909), the arms of the Episcopal Diocese of Atlanta (adopted in 1920), and the arms of the Archdiocese of Chicago (approx. 1939) all bear the phoenix as their central charge.  Incidentally, both cities survived disastrous fires, the phoenix becomes an appropriate symbol of resurrection.  And of course, la Rose employs the open book, one of his favorite charges for schools and universities.

The proposed arms of the Cathedral of St. John the Divine #1 by la Rose in 1927, courtesy of the Cathedral's archives.

The blazon for the proposed arms of the Cathedral of St. John the Divine #1 is: Argent, an eagle displayed azure, aureoled or, charged with a full sail of a windmill in saltire of the third.


The gonfanon of Mundelein College by la Rose, courtesy of the Women and Leadership Archives, Loyola University Chicago.


The armorial banner of Mundelein College by la Rose, courtesy of the Women and Leadership Archives, Loyola University Chicago.

The arms of Mundelein College by la Rose, courtesy of the Women and Leadership Archives, Loyola University Chicago.

The arms of Mundelein College are blazoned: Argent, a pheonix displayed rising from the flames gules charged with an open book edged or and inscribed VIA VERITAS VITA, on dexter wing a roundel azure edged of the field charged with a star of the first, on sinister wing a roundel of the fourth edged of the field charged with the monogram BVM of the first. 

Never one to shy away from critique, la Rose often lived his motto with his wicked sharp pen.  He frequently had words with the appalling state of heraldry in America at that time.  I'll close this appreciation with two of my favorite la Rose quotations--both relevant today--which bear our admonition: 
 “The heraldic traps for the unwary are far more numerous than the average amateur suspects.”  Ecclesiastical Review, Feb. 1922, Vol. LXVI, p. 179
“A Prelate would shrink from issuing over his own name an illiterate document, and yet he will tranquilly bear an illiterate coat-of-arms!  But we are gaining rapidly.”  Ecclesiastical Review, Feb. 1922, Vol. LXVI, p. 179-180




Monday, June 8, 2020

Update: The Attributed Arms of the Black Lives Matter Movement


A graffitied image of the attributed arms. Source: Reddit

I want to post an update to a previous one concerning my proposed arms of the Black Lives Matter movement.  Click here to read the original post on my design for the attributed arms of the Black Lives Matter movement.  I've been simply blown away by the several emblazonments of the attributed arms of the Black Lives Matter movement sent in by readers.  I honestly wondered if anyone actually read my blog, well I have an answer now!  I wanted to share some stylistic interpretations of my blazon.  


Attributed arms of the Black Lives Matter Movement emblazoned by Brian Jeffs.

Attributed arms of the Black Lives Matter Movement emblazoned by Mike Owens.

I like how each one took time to put their mark on the arms.  Brian's dove looks peaceful yet fierce.  Mike's shield composition is on point.  Again, thank you to both of these fine gentlemen for taking time to help this design come alive.

I especially love the graffiti work!  This proves that you can affect change within your locus of control, especially if you get creative with how you can help work towards social justice.  I'm truly humbled.

Earlier this morning I contacted a colleague through Facebook who lives in Canada with a commission to render these arms.  I'll share those as soon as they come in.     


The banner of Black Lives Matter arms, sent in by an anonymous reader.

The banner of Black Lives Matter arms, sent in by an anonymous reader.

I've doodled some more as I was never quite happy with the dove's face.  Here's my revision as of June 10th.  The revised blazon is: Argent a fist couped Sable flaunches Gules masoned of the field, on a chief Vert a demi dove displayed of the first with a halo Or.  I hope this helps the overall color scheme and helps depict the dove of peace more fittingly.  For the dove, I used La Rose's arrangement of heraldic birds.  I mean, he's the best!

The revised arms of the Black Lives Matter Movement by Chad M. Krouse, June 10, 2020.
The attributed arms of the Black Lives Matter Movement, designed by Chad M. Krouse and digitally emblazoned by Dimitri Prica of Canada, 2020.

Ich Mache Rechte: Notes on an Imperfect Motto


A recent emblazonment by the talented Sivane Saray of Brussels, Belgium.

Years ago when I was developing my coat of arms, I knew I wanted the motto to be rendered in German.  As a fifth generation German-American, I felt it was important to blend my German ancestry into the arms which otherwise are very English in nature.  The "crie de guerre" is the war cry carried into battle by soldiers under the knight's banner, at least that's the origin of the motto in association with coat armour.  I believe it to be the least important element of the armorial achievement.

Thanks to German speaking viewers on Facebook, most scratch their heads when they see my arms with the motto, "Ich Mache Rechte."  They rightfully ask, "I make rights?  What on earth?"  It's a fair question.  One that I'm getting used to answering more and more.  

It all started with Google translator in 2014.  Yes, all those years of taking French classes in high school and college was of no use to me on this particular project.  And I'm not ashamed to admit that I turned to Google for help.  In hindsight, I would have asked on Facebook for assistance with the translation and would have undoubtedly received it.  But, since I've invested a lot in registrations and emblazonments, the motto is now etched in stone.  

I make right, is my interpretation of Ich Mache Rechte.  The sentiment is deeply personal and meaningful to me.  As I look back on my young life to date, I strive to make right the things in my life that have gone wrong; poor decisions, damaged relationships, and all the normal human choices we face each and every day.  By nature, I'm a very reflective person.  I seek guidance for the future from my past.  Perhaps this is why biography is one of my favorite genres in books.   

I hope these brief notes help explain my imperfect motto, it's like me, imperfect.  I'm going to keep it.

Sunday, June 7, 2020

The Attributed Arms of the Black Lives Matter Movement


The attributed arms of the Black Lives Matter Movement, designed by Dr. Krouse.

During the Selma marches in 1965, Dr. Marin Luther King, Jr. famously paraphrased a quotation attributed to Theodore Parker.  When King was asked how long will it take until social justice has been achieved, King responded, "Not long because the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice."  NPR ran a story on this famous quotation back in 2010, click here to listen to it.  I've been reflecting a lot lately on what that arc looks like.

I've watched in horror the events unfolding over the past two weeks.  I've been processing the images from the news, the protests, and the thousands of Americans (and many across the globe) marching for justice.  As a white man living in America, I do not pretend for a second to know the pain and fear that Black men face everyday walking down streets, shopping in malls, or otherwise living their lives.  I'm angry.  I've been reminded recently that this phenomenon is not new in 2020, for it's been going on in this country since the days of settlement.  

I want to do something.  I wanted to create a noble coat of arms reflecting both Dr. King's arc as well as the barriers my Black sisters and brothers face everyday.  This led to the line drawing above and I wanted to share it.  Apologies for the photograph as I do not have access to a scanner at the moment.  I say "attributed" arms because I'm attributing them to the movement.  Throughout the history of heraldry, it's not uncommon to see attributed arms, think those of Jesus or the Blessed Virgin Mary.  They did not bear arms as we know it, so history has granted arms to them.

The blazon for the attributed arms of the Black Lives Matter movement is as follows:  Argent a fist couped Sable flaunches gules masoned of the field, on a chief of the second a demi dove displayed of the first.    

My design rationale for these arms follows.  I knew I had to use the fist as the main charge, so I chose to render it sable (black).  I wanted to incorporate the flaunch to show the arcs as a reference to Dr. King's famous quotation, but show these as "masoned" so that they appear as brick walls.  This image of brick walls clearly illustrates the barriers that Black women and men have fought (and continue to fight) to break down.  Moreover, rendering the masoned walls in gules (red) reflects the blood of the innocent.  Overall, I wanted the white dove of peace in the chief (the top of the shield) to show that the arc of justice will bring peace.  I really wish I knew digital heraldry, as these arms would be gorgeous rendered in full color.

I love this design and the symbolism it carries.  I wanted to design something within the accepted rules of heraldry that was befitting the noble cause of justice for all Black lives, because Black lives matter.  


The attributed banner of the Black Lives Matter movement, by Dr. Krouse.
 

Update:  I've doodled some more as I was never quite happy with the dove's face.  Here's my revision as of June 10th.  The revised blazon is: Argent a fist couped Sable flaunches Gules masoned of the field, on a chief Vert a demi dove displayed of the first with a halo Or.  I hope this helps the overall color scheme and helps depict the dove of peace more fittingly.  For the dove, I used La Rose's arrangement for heraldic birds.  I mean, he's the best!  Click here to read an updated post on the attributed arms of the Black Lives Matter movement.

The revised arms of the Black Lives Matter Movement by Dr. Krouse, June 10, 2010.


Thursday, June 4, 2020

The Arms of the National Shrine and Basilica of Our Lady of Walsingham

Arms of the National Shrine and Basilica of Our Lady of Walsingham.
Rendered by Chad Krouse, 2024.

Walsingham is truly an ecumenical place.  You feel this as soon as you enter the village; Orthodox, Anglican, and Roman Catholics all venerate the Blessed Virgin Mary under the title of Our Lady of Walsingham.  I've long felt that Walsingham is the key to fruitful ecumenical relations for the Body of Christ.
Coat of arms, the College of Guardians of the Holy House of Our Lady of Walsingham.
Rendered by Chad Krouse, 2024.

I've posted previously on the arms of the Guardians of the Holy House of Walsingham, the Anglican Shine, and now it's time to examine our brothers over at the Roman Catholic National Shrine and Basilica.

Long known as the "Slipper Chapel," this structure dates to the mid-14th century and is dedicated to Catherine of Alexandria.  It was the last chapel where pilgrims would stop on their pilgrimage to Walsingham.  The chapel is located about one mile from Walsingham and thus many pilgrims would remove their shoes here and walk the last mile barefooted. 
When this chapel was built, Walsingham was second only to Canterbury in the ranks of English pilgrimage. The replica of the Holy House, where Mary had received news of her pregnancy from the Angel Gabriel, contained the precious statue of Our Lady of Walsingham. Thousands of people made their way here, down the muddy tracks and over the rolling Norfolk fields. At Houghton St Giles, they would enter the orbit of Walsingham, their goal now almost in sight. It may be that they took off their shoes here, and walked the last stretch barefoot. It might also be the case that this is why it is called the Slipper Chapel. And it may be that it is not true, or even likely, for many of the pilgrims here would probably have been barefoot long before they reached Houghton.  Simon Knott, September 2007 
    
The National Shrine and Basilica of Walsingham.
Source: ExploreWestNorfolk.co.uk

The chapel's history waxed and waned through the years and eventually fell into disrepair.  A wealthy lady, Miss Charlotte Pearson Boyd discovered the property and quickly purchased it on June 26, 1896. and gave it to the Roman Catholic Diocese of Northampton for use.  The Bishop charged the nearby Benedictines at Downside Abbey to care for the place.  In time, a statue of Our Lady of Walsingham was commissioned and stayed at the nearby Roman Catholic church in Kings Lynn.  Knott shares that from time to time pilgrimages with the statue would take place from Kings Lynn to Walsingham.

Knott continues his story of the chapel:
And so things might have remained, if it had not been for the emergence on to the Walsingham scene of one Alfred Hope Patten. In 1921, he became Anglican Vicar of Little Walsingham. A devout and energetic Anglo-catholic, Hope Patten found himself to be the right person in the right place at the right time. Everything came together, in this decade when Anglo-catholicism reached the peak of its influence in the Church of England, and the Church itself was the most vivid it would ever be in the national consciousness. He installed an image of Our Lady of Walsingham in the Anglican parish church of St Mary. Throughout the 1920s, visits to the statue grew in popularity, until thousands of Anglo-catholics each year were coming to pray in the church and to process around it. As you may imagine, the Anglican Bishop of Norwich was outraged, and demanded that Hope Patten remove the image from his church. Hope Patten being the kind of man he was, he acceded to this request by building a new replica of the Holy House on the other side of the Priory ruins, and placing the statue inside it. At last, the Shrine of Our Lady had been returned to Walsingham - but, much to the the chagrin of the Catholic Church, it was an Anglican one.  Simon Knott, September 2007
         
Good old Hope Patten!  From here the National Shrine's presence grows.  The shrine is elevated by a canonical coronation decreed by Pope Pius XII in 1954.  And most recently, Pope Francis elevated the National Shrine to a minor basilica in 2015.


Arms prepared by Dr. David Andrew Woolf and painted by Tom Meek (both of the UK) in honor of the National Shrine's elevation to a minor basilica by Pope Francis in 2015.

So now the heraldry bit.  Upon the elevation of the Shrine to a basilica, new external ornaments are required to show the papal umbraculum or "big umbrella" and crossed keys.  Over at the UK's Anglican Ordinate blog, I found the following:
Dr. David [Andrew] Woolf has been a longstanding pilgrim and supporter of the Shrine and remains a member of the Order of Our Lady of Walsingham. He was links with the Rector of the Basilica, Monsignor John Armitage, who has since asked him to ensure that heraldically suitable Arms might be adopted by the Basilica of Our Lady of Walsingham.

A manuscript dating from c. 1510 records the Arms of the Priory of Walsingham as Argent on a cross sable five lilies slipped argent, i.e. a black cross on a white background, with five lilies superimposed on the cross. The Basilica is now the modern day successor of the Priory of Walsingham, and as such it is appropriate that the Basilica has assumed the Arms of the Priory. These Arms have been augmented to include the ombrellino and the Papal crossed keys: one gold, the other silver.  
And here's where I ask the question:  does the basilica have the right to bear the undifferenced arms of the Augustinian Priory of Walsingham?  With all due respect to Dr. Woolf, a fellow member of The Heraldry Society, my answer:  no.  

Proposed revision, coat of arms of the National Shrine and Basilica of Our Lady of Walsingham.
Rendered by Chad Krouse, 2024.

Consider the following:

1. When the College of Guardians of the Holy House of Walsingham applied for a grant of arms from the College in 1945, the grant of arms were differenced with, "a canton Azure, charged with a Holy House Or."   

2. When the Anglican Ordinariate (intentionally named "The Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham") was established under Pope Benedict XVI, the ordinariate assumed arms in 2011 and selected to difference their arms with a cross Azure and Fleurs-de-lis rather than the cross Sable and Madonna lilies.  The arms are blazoned: "per pale, in dexter argent upon a cross azure five fleurs-de-lis proper [of the field]; the sinister half, Or upon a fasce dancette gules between three heart gules."   

3.  The original arms, as far as we know, were granted to a Priory of Augustinian canons in Walsingham.  The National Shrine is simply not a successor to that group, for they are neither a priory nor Augustinian.  Simply being the same denomination does not grant successor status in my opinion.  

I'm not the sort of chap that complains without proffering a solution.  I propose a revision to the arms currently being used by the National Shrine and Basilica of Walsingham.  

My proposal:  Argent, on a cross sable five Madonna lilies slipped and seeded proper, on a canton Azure a crescent Or.  This revision, in my opinion, is in keeping with the College of Arms' differencing of the Guardians' arms and frankly looks quite slick.  The crescent charge has long been a Marian symbol and rendering it in gold alludes to Pope Pius XII's canonical coronation.  I also like how the crescent charge plays with the cadency mark.  In a sense, the Basilica is the "child" of the Priory (albeit a distance one, like a different cadet branch, and not able to inherit the undifferenced arms!). 

Maybe I've missed something?  Kindly let me know.  I am by no means an expert in heraldic law and inheritance.

Wednesday, June 3, 2020

The Arms of Brookline Public Library

The Arms of Brookline Public Library in Massachusetts 
designed by Pierre de Chaignon la Rose and drawn by the author.

Several years ago, I became obsessed with the heraldry of Pierre de Chaignon La Rose (1872-1941), undeniably America's greatest heraldic designer.  La Rose, perhaps, made his greatest contributions in the fields of ecclesiastical and scholastic heraldry, advancing a design aesthetic unseen on American soil.  Prior to la Rose's explosion onto the scene, American heraldry was all over the place with plenty examples of poorly composed and designed arms.  From among the 200 or so coats that I've identified thus far designed by la Rose, there is one oddity among them that stands out, the Brookline Public Library.  The arms for the Brookline Public Library, known thus far, is the only non-academic or non-religious arms designed by la Rose.  

Brookline, Massachusetts was the first town in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts to establish their own library as a result of new legislation in 1857 allowing localities to adopt taxes for this purpose.  According to Battis, Reed & Clark (2009), the library committee set aside $100 in 1910 for the creation of a seal for use as a bookplate.  Interestingly enough, this is the first and only example that I've been able to find of what la Rose charged for his design services.  According to one website which adjusts for inflation, $100 in 1910 is today the equivalent of $2,780.00.  This is not an insignificant amount!  La Rose would have likely provided a sketch and a painting of the design, since he was not an engraver.  Most likely the seal was engraved by someone else in Boston.  

The Trustees of the Public Library of Brookline (1911) published in their 54th annual report noted,
 "reference should be made to the seal of the library, especially designed for the carved medallion over the east door of the facade, which also may be used on the stationary and bookplates.  We are indebted to Mr. Pierre La Rose for the design, and to Mr. Sturgis, our architect, for the final rendering of it" (p.363).
This pieces together how la Rose most likely got involved in the library project.  

Richard Clipston Sturgis (1860-1951) was a well-known Boston architect and most assuredly knew fellow architect Ralph Adams Cram (1863-1942).  Cram and la Rose ran among similar Brahmin circles in Boston.  Based on my research, it is my belief that Cram was the one who leveraged his book of business in order to launch la Rose's heraldic career.  Early on, Cram and la Rose partnered on a number of heraldic projects within the Episcopal Church.  Before too long, Cram's firm was slammed with work.  I also believe that at some point, Cram bowed to la Rose and acknowledged the latter's expertise on the subject of heraldry.  Thus, if Cram's firm had a project requiring heraldic work, the firm would recommend la Rose to the client.  

Brookline Public Library in Brookline, Massachusetts.
Source: The Brookline Library Webpage

Brookline Public Library arms carved medallion in the pediment.
Source: The Brookline Library Flickr Site

The Bookplate created by Pierre de Chaignon la Rose in 1910.
Source: Battis, Reed & Clark (2009), page 75.

In my rendering above, I made the open book larger since it's the central charge in the arms.  Without access to a scanner, it's a poor quality photograph for now, I'm afraid.  I prefer Lombardic font for armorial bearings and seals, so I tried my hand at the inscription Sapientia Legendo, loosely translated as "reading for wisdom."  La Rose adds small symbols or "doodles" to balance the inscription on an open book.   I've observed a number of these symbols, this one looks like a shamrock.  On religious institutional coats that bear an open book, for example, he uses small maltese crosses.  Thanks to the hatching on the above Flickr photograph, one can just about make out the tinctures and metal used in the arms.  

The armorial bearings of Brookline Public Library is thus blazoned: Gules, an open book edged with three clasps or and inscribed SAPIENTIA LEGENDO, and in base barry wavy argent and sable

Beautiful, elegant, and characteristically simple--la Rose was a brilliant heraldic artist.  And yes, I'm still obsessed with la Rose's work.

Works Cited

Battis, C., Reed, A., & Clark, A. (2009).  Public library of Brookline: A history celebrating 150 years of library service, 1857-2007.  Authors, 69.

Trustees of Brookline Public Library (1911).  The fifty-fourth annual report of the trustees of the public library of Brookline for the year ending December 31, 1910.  Grimes Press, 363.

Sunday, May 17, 2020

New Registrations of Arms

Because the U.S. lacks any heraldic authority to grant and regulate the use of coat armour, many Americans find themselves scrambling to protect their arms.  In the U.S., armingers for the most part assume their arms, meaning they design and then assign those arms as their own rightful property.  There are many Americans who look abroad for legitimacy, claiming grants of arms from Lord Lyon in Scotland, the Heralds' College in London, or even the Bureau in South Africa.  Each authority has strict regulations and requirements for eligibility, usually being able to document a direct lineage and descent.

In the U.S., the pre-eminent authority on arms is, perhaps, the Committee on Heraldry working under the auspices of the New England Historic Genealogical Society (NEHGS) in Boston.  The Committee is the oldest non-governmental organization to research and register arms in the U.S.  Click here to see my previous post on the NEHGS.   During this lockdown, I went through my inbox from 2014 to find some official confirmation that the Committee had in fact registered my arms on September 2, 2014.  After a few email exchanges, I was excited to receive the following confirmation letter.

Official letter of registration from the Committee on Heraldry, May 3, 2020.

Well, that letter ignited a fire in me to get my arms out there and registered in a few other places. 

Certificate of registration from the Society of American Armingers, May 7, 2020.

Certificate of registration from The Armorial Register, May 9, 2020.

Thus, below is the listing of registrations completed.  


Thursday, May 7, 2020

A new emblazonment


The banner, badge, and arms of Dr. Chad M. Krouse,
digitally rendered by Quentin Peacock, Copyright 2020.

I am thrilled to share my latest emblazonment of arms, rendered by Quentin Peacock.  I've added a link to Quentin's website on the blog as he does exceptional work.  I love his rendering of my crest which makes the cardinal look beastly!  For a previous posting on the development of my personal arms, click here.  I've wanted to see my arms in a banner for some time, and that made me think about what would an appropriate badge might look like.  For starters, I was always drawn to the idea of the vidame's coronet, which is prominently featured in the crest of the arms of the University of the South.  I believe it's a powerful heraldic image for the laity and I was drawn to this for my badge.  Secondly, and I'll admit this, I've been a big fan of the Prince of Wales' badge which is blazoned, "a plume of three ostrich feathers argent enfiled by a royal coronet of alternate crosses and fleur-de-lys or."  The badge further incorporates the the motto "Ich Dien" on a blue ribbon.  

The badge of the Prince of Wales
 
So, my first draft of the badge was blazoned, "three Madonna lilies (lilium candidium) seeded proper enfiled by a vidame's coronet or."  It was ballsy, to the say the least.  When I posted the first emblazonment of the badge in a Facebook forum dedicated to heraldry, I immediately received some feedback suggesting that I not use the vidame's coronet.  The more I thought about it, I did not want to portray myself as someone that I am not.  In the capable hands of Quentin Peacock, he convinced me to simply change the coronet by using the flowers from the achievement, dogwood flowers and lilies.  Actually, when you turn the dogwood flower around, it makes a perfect cross!  
The badge of Dr. Chad M. Krouse 
digitally rendered by Quentin Peacock, Copyright 2020.

Thus, the final version of the badge came into being, blazoned: "three Madonna lilies (lilium candidium) seeded proper enfiled by a coronet of dogwood flowers and fleurs-de-lis or."




Saturday, May 2, 2020

Arms of the College of Guardians of the Holy House of Walsingham


Today is May Day (at least when I started writing this post) and May has traditionally been Mary's month.  What a better way to combine two subjects I love, Walsingham and heraldry.  As such, I was able to finish up a project I started in 2014, painting the arms of the College of Guardians of the Holy House of Walsingham.  I hung the plaque above an icon of Our Lady of Walsingham that I had commissioned back in seminary.  I told you I was revisiting old hobbies.

I first encountered these arms when I was in Walsingham for the National Pilgrimage in 2009.  I wish I would have paid more attention to Walsingham's heraldry, for it was everywhere!  The Shrine's Facebook page has been generally more active of late, and I've spotted a few images they've shared that I'd like to re-share here.


If you look closely on the flag of St. George, you'll spot an escutcheon of the arms.


The arms of the College of Guardians ensigned by a gallero on the tombstone of The Rev. Alfred Hope Patten, the restorer of the Shrine.  Interesting that his own arms were not used.  See my previous post on the matter.  

So, it begs the deeper question, what is the provenance of these arms?  According to one source I found online, the arms of the Priory of Walsingham were recorded around 1510, blazoned, "argent a cross sable five lilies slipped [of the field]."  These seem simple and most attractive.  Simple enough.  What, then, of the Holy House which we see on the shield today?  

The next clue comes in 1945.  The Shrine's restoration and expansion began in the 1930s, and it makes sense that as the enterprise grew, the corporate governing body (the Guardians) would want some device or brand for the Shrine.  At that time, the Rev. Henry Joy Fynes-Clinton was actively involved with the work of the Shrine and approached the College of Arms in London for a grant of arms.  He generously paid the heralds' fees for the grant on behalf of the Shrine.  Fynes-Clinton wrote an article for "Our Lady's Mirror" in the Spring of 1945 entitled "Armorial Bearings of Our Lady," in which he describes the new grant.  Click here to read Fynes-Clinton's article.  

Fynes-Clinton rightfully points out that the arms of the Priory of Walsingham, found in the local parish window, were already in existence. As such, the College of Guardians could not rightfully lay claim to those arms.  Thus, the arms had to be differenced in order to be granted.  In this case, the use of a canton is a brilliant way to difference these particular arms.  Moreover, the Holy House would suffice for that differenced canton.


The Rev. Alfred Hope Patten had used the front of the seal to help create the statue of Our Lady.  It's only fitting, then, that the obverse should be used to create the arms.  The detail of the Holy House can be found on the Priory's seal.


And voila!  The arms of the College of Guardians of the Holy House of Our of Walsingham have armorial bearings blazoned, "argent upon a cross sable, five lilies of the first slipped and seeded proper; a canton azure, charged with a Holy House or."   The crest is blazoned, "upon a helm mantling of the colours, issuing from a celestial crown of 12 points and stars, or, three lilies argent seeded or."   The motto is Domus Dei: porta caeli, which Fynes-Clinton translates as, "the House of God: the Gate of Heaven."


The letters patent.  Photo is from the Walsingham Shrine's website.


A fine rendering of the mantling, arms, crest, and motto.  Photo is from the Walsingham Shrine's Archives.


An ex libris (bookplate) from the College of St. Augustine, Walsingham.  Here's where we see the use of the priest's galero as an external ornament.


If you look closely (click image to enlarge) at Mary's cloak or cope, you can spot both the arms of the Guardians (viewer's left) and the arms of the Shrine's restorer, Hope Patten (viewer's right).  I had never noticed these arms here before!


And finally my rendering of the arms, acrylic on pine.  Getting the detail of the Holy House just right was quite the challenge.

All told, it was fascinating to dive into the history of these arms and their association with the Shrine.  I just can't believe it took a pandemic for me to finish these beautiful arms.  


Thursday, April 30, 2020

Scholastic Heraldry

Row 1 (L-R): Chicago, Harvard, Oxford, Cambridge, Yale, and UPenn
Row 2 (L-R): Wesleyan, Notre Dame, Hampden-Sydney, Kenyon, St Joseph
Row 3 (L-R): St. Albans, Roxbury Latin, Mount St. Scholastica, Rice, St. Pauls, Groton, Eton 

If I had to choose, I mean really choose, a certain branch of heraldry that I'm drawn to, it's first and foremost scholastic or academic heraldry.  A close second would be ecclesiastical heraldry.  I suppose it has something to do with how I first encountered coat armour.

In the fall of 1998, I matriculated to the pastoral campus of Hampden-Sydney College located just outside of Farmville, Virginia.  The school was founded on November 15, 1775, a day shared with the founding of the U.S. Marine Corps.  I covered the school's coat of arms in a previous post.  I distinctly recall blowing a large sum of my graduation money on items in the college's bookstore that bore those beautiful arms.  I will even admit to purchasing my class ring my freshman year, solely so that I could wear the arms of the school!  Thank goodness I graduated.  And yes, I received quite the jabbing from my friends and classmates for such a bold move.  

Ever since my undergraduate days, I've been truly enamored by heraldry, and I remain especially curious about organizations that bear arms.  What is does it mean for an academic institution to bear arms?  What messages are intrinsic to those schools' coat armour?  Aside from those larger questions, I'm interested to know the what and the why behind the design and rationale. 

So, during these past seven weeks of home confinement, I started a group on Facebook to share and discuss scholastic heraldry.  I put together the grouping of shields above for the social media site to help advertise.


Tuesday, April 28, 2020

Arise, Shine!


The coat of arms of Dr. Chad M. Krouse, 
emblazoned by Hector Rojas

Yes, it's been several years since I last posted on this blog.  In short, lots of things, good things (great, in fact) have happened in the intervening years since.  Today, the world is no longer the same; the COVID-19 pandemic has forced the world to shut down, to pause, and reset.  Being home the last seven weeks has given me time to also pause and reset, just like I had to do with finding the password to this site.

I hope to share more in the coming days and weeks.  So many old hobbies and interests have been rekindled during this time.  Wait for it...yes!  Heraldry.  It's funny in a way.  Back in 2014, I was all over the subject, loving every minute.  I couldn't get enough of it, in fact.  When I began my doctoral program in 2015, my focus inevitably shifted, free time was a luxury I could no longer afford.

About a year ago, I commissioned Hector Rojas to emblazon my full achievement, another luxury I could not have afforded back in the day.  While I didn't do anything exciting with the rendering, I was pleased to have them.

During this shutdown, I'm keeping the digital heralds busy.  I'll share a few new things over the coming days.  Until then, it's great to be back.  Be safe.