Hall Coat of Arms & Family Crest - Symbols, Bearers, History

Hall “Family Crest” or Coat of Arms - Hall Family History & Surname For ancestry, genealogy research & heraldic merchandise, please visit: https://www.coadb.com Email: [email protected] Phone: 785-324-2529 11AM - 9PM (ET) Blazon: Argent semee of crosses crosslet and three talbots’ heads erased sable. This coat of arms was found in Warnham, co. Sussex and in London. The family descended from John Hall, a draper in London, who married Anna Browne. He was the father of 23 children. He was the son of Thomas George Hall and Margaret Pawthorne. Blazon: Per pale argent and or, on a chevron between three talbots heads erased, their necks encircled with mural crows, three hawks’ lured proper. Crest – A griffin’s head or, with a hawks’ lures proper in the mouth and a palm branch vert behind. This coat of arms was granted to Benjamin Hall when he was created the 1st Baron Llanover in the peerage of the United Kingdom on June 25th, 1859. He was the son of Benjamin Hall, MP, and his wife, Charlotte Crawshay. Benjamin was a Member of Paliament for Monmouth and Martleybone, President of the Board of Health, and Privy Councillor. Benjamin married Augusta Waddington and had three children with her. Blazon: Azure a chevron argent between three storks’ heads erased at the neck or. Crest – A stork standing on a mount in a watching posture proper. Motto – Dat cura quietem. The Hall Baronetcy, of Dunglass in the County of Haddington, was created in the Baronetage of Nova Scotia on 8 October 1687 for John Hall. Sir John Hall (1650-1695) was a Scottish merchant who twice served as Lord Provost of Edinburgh. He was the son of James Hall and his wife, Janet Higgins. He was succeeded in the baronetcy by his only son, Sir James Hall, 2nd baronet. Blazon: Argent, a chevron between three talbots’ heads erased sable. Crest – A talbot’s head, as in the arms. This coat of arms was granted to Rev. George William Hall who was born in London in 1770. He was the Master of Pembroke College and the Vice-Chancellor of Oxford University. Blazon: Or, on a pale between two battle axes erect sable three talbots’ heads couped of the field. Crest – On a wreath the battlements of a tower, thereon a cock entwined by a snake all proper. Motto – Perseverantia et cura quies. This coat of arms was granted to Sir John Hall (1795-1866), a British military surgeon who was the Inspector-General of Hospitals during the Crimean War. He also became a Knight of the Order of Bath. He was the son of John Hall and his wife, Isabel Fothergill. He married Lucy Campbell Hackshaw and had two daughters with her: Lucia and Alice. Blazon: Argent an eagle displayed gules. This coat of arms was confirmed to Anthony Hall of Banbury, co. Oxford in1634, the great grandson of Richard Hall of Swarford. Anthony married Deborah, daughter of William Knight, Justice of the Peace, and together they had a daughter named Elizabeth. Blazon: Sable three talbots’ heads erased between nine cross crosslets argent. This coat of arms was granted to John Hall (1633-1710), an English clergymen and academic who was Bishop of Bristol in the late 1600s. He was the son of John Hall, vicar of Bromsgrove in Worcestershire, by his wife Anne.