- The Governor General of Canada
The contents of this Register are intended for research purposes only. The heraldic emblems found in the Register may not be reproduced in any form or in any media without the written consent of the Canadian Heraldic Authority and/or the recipient.
George Cuthill Watt
West Vancouver, British Columbia
Registration of Arms
January 25, 1991
Vol. II, p. 72
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Blazon
Arms
Argent an oak tree growing out of a mount in base Vert on a chief Sable an open book proper binding and fore-edges Or between two garbs also Or all within a bordure party per fesse in chief Or and Vert;
Crest
A lymphad Azure garnished and with pennons Or flying a sail Argent charged with a martlet Azure;
Motto
FIRM FAITH AND BRIGHT HOPE;
Symbolism
Arms
These Canadian arms are based on a Scottish grant of 1987 to one of Mr. Watt’s first cousins, David Brand Watt III. They feature an oak tree on a green mount, a symbol long associated in Scottish heraldry with people having the surname Watt. In the chief, the book between the wheat sheaves represents Mr. Watt’s grandfather, David Brand Watt I, a schoolmaster, who was the son and grandson of James and John Watt, bakers in Dunfermline, Fife. The border differences these arms from those of David Brand Watt III.
Crest
The lymphad and the martlet are taken from the arms of West Vancouver, where Mr. Watt grew up.
Motto
This phrase is borrowed from a letter sent in 1911 from Mr. Watt’s grandfather David Brand Watt I to his fourth son, his father, John Turner Watt, when John was taking up the duties as an elder in the Presbyterian Church in North Vancouver.