WATTS in Canada - Heraldry
K. Nikischin Copyright @ 2000 - 2005. All rights reserved.
The following are Family Coat of Arms that I have found on the internet. I have not done any research to verify which, if any, of these family crests might belong to my particular lines but I have included them here because I found them to be pleasing to the eye.
I have added some bits of family info to show how the crest might relate to my family line.
I have no intention to insult or usurp any family who has claims to these coat of arms, so if you take offense that I have included your particular crest on this page, by all means contact me and I will remove it.
AMY
My great-grandfather Thomas James AMY married Elizabeth DODDS. My AMY family hails from Devon, Cornwall, England.
Another AMY line was found in the Jersey Islands, England but was unrelated to the Devon family.
DODDS
  My great-great-grandmother Mary RUTHERFORD married William DODDS. Her second husband was Philip LANG.
Mary was the daughter of William RUTHERFORD and Elizabeth (Betty) CONQUERGOOD.
RUTHERFORD
   William RUTHERFORD and Mary GRAY from Kelso, Roxboroughshire, Scotland were my 4x great-grandparents. Their son, William, married Elizabeth CONQUERGOOD who immigrated to Canada sometime after 1830.
WATTS
    Bruce Crothers WATTS married Edna Rutherford AMY. They were my paternal grandparents. Parents of Bruce were William Charles WATTS and Emma Winnifred MULLETT. William Charles parents were William WATTS and Amelia Louise GAYDOR (GAYDON, GADA).
I found two Coat of Arms crests for the WATTS family. They are both very interesting.
MULLETT
    My great-grandmother Emma Winnifred MULLETT married William Charles WATTS. Emma was born in Kingston, Ontario. At the time she met William, she resided at Hotel Dieu in Kingston. William was a painter and was painting the facade of the building.  Family lore has her father as Daniel MULLETT of unknown origin who, in his will, left her a tannery that his family had owned.
Who were the border reivers? Villains of ill-repute?... or desperate men trying to protect their families, homes and livestock? Click on the silhouette to read about the Border Reivers from the Borders of Scotland.
Hosted by www.Geocities.ws

1