Thrale history
Coat of arms
Thrale family of the City of St Albans
The blazon comprises a shield per fess azure and paly of ten or and gules, in chief a saltire couped between two pheons points upwards or, and the crest, between two tuns an oak tree proper, fructed or.
Monument to John Thrale in St Albans Cathedral 1704
Thrale coat of arms on John Thrale’s 1704 monument in St Albans Cathedral..
This comprises a paly of ten or and gules, with the crest, out of a ducal coronet an oak tree vert.
These arms were been adopted by other members of the family and can be seen in Streatham Church on the mourning tablet for Henry Thrale.
John was an ambitious and ruthless merchant, who as a young man started as a manager of a plantation in the West Indies that exploited enslaved Africans.
John was also the owner of Fairfolds Farm which he left to his daughters, whose descendants sold the farm to Thrale relatives. The Marshalswick branch is descended from John Thrale.
John Threele of Arundel died 1465
A similar coat of arms, for which no image is known to this website was used byJohn Threele
of Arundel; who died in 1465 and was Marshall of the Household to William, 9th Earl of Arundel, and in this case, the coat of arms was described as a Paly of ten, or and gules.