360 JOURNAL OF THE PLYMOUTH INSTITUTION. 
on a chev. betw. in chief two hammers and in base an anvil arg., 
three horseshoes sa., Smith. Mr. C. C. Whiteford is descended 
from an old Scotch family, and the first shield is the arms of 
his father and mother, the latter coat his own, he having married 
a daughter of the late Colonel Hamilton Smith, who took 
high rank in the scientific circles of his day, especially as a 
naturalist. The father of Mr. C. C. Whiteford registered his arms 
and pedigree at the College of Arms, having obtained a grant of 
the arms of the ancient family of Whiteford in Scotland with due 
and proper difference ; his right (and that of his descendants) to 
this coat is beyond dispute. The other two coats in this window 
are sa. a /esse wavy betw. tivo estoils arg., the arms of Sir Francis 
Drake, Knight, and arg. a saltire vert betw. four castles sa., Ply- 
mouth. The "Armada" window, so named from depicting the 
announcement to the English Admiral and his captains of the 
approach of the great fleet of Spain, is the gift of William Foster 
Moore, Esq., J. p., and other members of his family. The shields in 
it are the royal arms of Queen Elizabeth, quarterly 1 and 4 Drake 
of Ashe, 2 and 3 Drake of Buckland Monachorum), the erroneous- 
ness of which shield has already been pointed out), the cross of 
St. Andrew, and the four castles of Plymouth, and last, arg. three 
greyhounds courant in pale sa., being the arms 'of the donor's 
family. After this we come to the window presented by C. F. 
Tanner, Esq., j.p., which displays the arms of King James L, and 
the arms of Tanner of Brannell, &c. ; but no evidence is produced 
of descent from that family, or other proof of right to their un- 
differenced coat ; viz., arg. on a chief sa. three moors 1 heads couped 
at the neck or, wreathed about the temples. This window is fol- 
lowed by that erected by the Eev. Urquhart Cookworthy in memory 
of his ancestor, William Cookworthy, the chemist, and first maker 
in England of true porcelain ; of Joseph Cookworthy, who died in 
1832; and of Dr. Cookworthy, mayor of Plymouth in 1839-41, 
and who died in 1869. The arms in this window are those of 
King George II., and arg. a chev. betw. three cocks gu. This 
appears to be intended as the coat of Cookworthy, but it is really 
the undifferenced arms of Cockington of Cockington, an ancient 
Devonshire family. When or by what means the arms of Cockington 
have been assumed by Cookworthy has not transpired. The last 
window on the south side is that placed by F. W. Gibbs, Esq., and 
commemorates the opening of the Guildhall in August, 1874. It 
