LOCAL HERALDRY. 
353 
colours on the seal ; these are supplied from the Collins-Trelawny 
monuments in Pennycross Church. This Robert Trelawny was 
the second son of Robert Trelawny, of Tidiford, and was mayor 
of Plymouth in 1608 and 1627, dying in the latter year. He was 
buried in St. Andrew's Church on the 19th December. The same 
seal was used, in 1629, by Robert Trelawny, son and heir of the 
above. (See pi. fig. 9.) He was baptized at St. Andrew's, 1st April, 
1598, mayor of Plymouth in 1633, and died in prison, in London. 
Attached to a deed, executed in 1629, we find a seal with the arms 
of Bagge, of Plymouth, and afterwards of Saltram; viz., paly 
bendy of six (counterchanged arg. and gu. ), on a chief (or) three 
cinque/oil (az.) These arms were granted to this family in 1607, 
but they do not appear on any monument ; for none belonging to 
that family survive. There are a number of entries relating to 
this family in the registers of St. Andrew, and in those of Plympton 
St. Mary. 
The seal of Thomas Fownes is, per fesse in chief two eagles 
displ., and in base a mullet. This coat is on the monument of 
Humphry Fownes, who died 3rd August, 1589 ; but the line ought 
no doubt to have been omitted. The arms, az. in chief two eagles 
displ. arg., in base a mullet arg., were entered at the Heralds' 
Visitation of Devon in 1620, but respited for further proof. In 
the Heralds' Visitation of London, 1633-4, this coat is given as 
entered in the Visitation of Devonshire; also three eagles displ., 
taken from a seal of Warwick Fownes, of London, merchant, son 
of Humphry Fownes, mayor of Plymouth, 1588-9 and 1596-7. 
This Warwick Fownes was baptized at St. Andrew's, 3rd November, 
1598. Thomas Fownes was mayor in 1610-11 and 1619-20. 
Among his other children registered at St. Andrew's was Thomas, 
baptized 27th December, 1619. 
Christian Brendon, widow, in 1641, sealed with a shield — 
quarterly, on a bend three lions passant gardants ; but these are 
the arms of Perry, or Pery, of Devonshire; viz., quarterly, gu. and 
or, on a bend arg. three lions pass. az. Johanna Brendon, in 1646, 
sealed a deed with a shield charged with a bend eng., and for crest 
a fleur-de-lis ; but the same coat, minus the crest, appears again in 
1720, with the signature of Wm. Freeman, of London, and of Jane 
Searle. Arg. a bend eng. sa., is the well-known coat of Ratcliffe, 
earls of Derwentwater. A coat accompanying the signatures of 
Richard Brendon, of Plymouth, and Thomas Cooper, of Dublin, 
