LOCAL HERALDRY. 
349 
of the second, for Cross. Mr. Richard Cross gave £10 to the 
hospital, as did also Mr. Samuel Cross. This coat was granted by 
the heralds in April, 1602. 
40. Sa. a /esse betw. three cinque/oils or, Davis. Mr. William 
Davis gave £20 to this charity. St. Andrew Par. Reg. Mr. 
Willaim Davies, buried 30th January, 1717; Mrs. Elizabeth 
Davies, buried 30th October, 1718. 
41. Gu. a chev. betw. six crosses pattee or. This is a coat of 
Berkeley ; but it does not appear in what way it obtained a place 
here. 
42. Az. a lion pass. gard. betw. three estoils arg., for Burrard ; 
but the lion should be " pass.," not "pass, gard," and a mullet 
ought to be added for difference. George Burrard, Esq., of 
Lymington, gave £100 to this charity. This George Burrard was 
the third son of Paul Burrard, Esq., of Walhampton, Hants, and 
of Old Palace Yard, Westminster. He was born in 1718; married 
in 1750, Mary, daughter of John Darell, Esq., of the island of 
Jersey; and died in 1817, leaving Harry, created a baronet; 
Philip, who left no issue ; and a daughter Anne, married to 
Charles Bowles, Esq,, of Enfield, co. Middlesex. This coat is 
followed by two well known coats impaled in a lozenge ; namely, 
Sa. on a cross arg. quarter pierced of the field four eagles of the 
first, imp. quarterly arg. and azure, in the first and fourth a lion 
ramp, gu., Buller imp. Pollexfen. One of the above mentioned 
tablets records that "Madam Mary Buller gave £5." This lady 
was Mary, daughter of Sir Henry Pollexfen, Knight, Chief Justice 
of the Court of Common Pleas, and wife of John Buller, of 
Morval, Esq.; her will was proved 4th December, 1722. 
44. Arg. a bend wavy betw. six mullets sa., unidentified. 
On the upper part of one of the commemorative tablets (which 
by Act of Parliament in the reign of Queen Anne are always to be 
kept up) are the arms of Madock ; viz., Or, in base two bars wavy 
sa., upon the upper one a swan naient of the second. Crest, a lion 
pass, or, accompanied by helmet and mantling. The inscription, 
which occupied the entire panel, records that it is " in grateful 
memory of the generous charity of Mr. James Madock, merchant, 
who died at Oporto, in Portugal, anno 1727," and bequeathed to 
this his native town £1,500, which, with the joint consent of 
Nicholas Docton, of Whitleigh, Esq., and Mr. John Hellier (his 
trustees in England), and the Guardians of the Poor of Plymouth, 
VOL. VIII. z 
