. America heraldica : a compilation of coats of arms, crests and mottoes of prominent American families settled in this country before 1800 . Motto : Fatti maschi, parole males, words are females.] [Deeds Heraldic Journal, IV., 21. Rev. Ed. D. Neill; The Fotinders of Maryland, Bernard Burke: Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, andExtinct Peerages of the British Empire, 1866. Mortbington These arms—those of the Worthingtons ofWorthington, county Lancaster, England, and ofvarious other branches of the same family—areborne in New England by the descendants ofNicolas Worthington, firs


. America heraldica : a compilation of coats of arms, crests and mottoes of prominent American families settled in this country before 1800 . Motto : Fatti maschi, parole males, words are females.] [Deeds Heraldic Journal, IV., 21. Rev. Ed. D. Neill; The Fotinders of Maryland, Bernard Burke: Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, andExtinct Peerages of the British Empire, 1866. Mortbington These arms—those of the Worthingtons ofWorthington, county Lancaster, England, and ofvarious other branches of the same family—areborne in New England by the descendants ofNicolas Worthington, first of Saybrook (1650),later of Hartford, Ct. He died in Massachusettsin 1683. His descendants possess plate withvery old hallmarks bearing the same devices. The Worthingtons of Maryland claim descentfrom the same Lancashire family, but notthrough the above-named Nicolas. Arms : Argent, three dung-forks, sable. Crest : A goat, passant, ar-gent, holding in his mouth anoak branch, vert, fructed, or. Motto : Virtute dignusavorum. [Worthy of his an-. cestors valor.] Heraldic Journal, IV., 71. Goodwins Genealogical Notes, 264. Sir Bernard Burke : The Ge?ieral Armory of England, etc., Book of Family Crests, II., 509. SSrabstreet The first uf the name in this country, SimonBradstreet, who succeeded Governor Leverett AMERICA HERALDICA 103 in 1679, came over in 1630 from Hoebling,county Lincoln, where his father, Simon Brad-street, was Minister. He used the arms wegive as his seal. Another family of Bradstreets springs fromHtimphrey Bradstreet, who came from Ipswich,England, in 1634. Crest : An arm in armor em-bowed, the hand grasping a scim-itar : all proper. Motto : Virtute et fion vi. [By courage not(brute) strength.] Heraldic Journal, I., 102. S. G. Drake: The History and Antiquities of Boston, 1856. Jacob B. Moore: Memoirs of American Governors, I.,j88. New England Historical and Genealogical Regis-ter, Vn., 312; IX., 113. HammETTS Papers o?i Ipswich, Mass., 32. Sir Bern


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