(Bluerton, co. Stafford, Richard Colclough, Esq., of Bluerton, was living 40 Edward III., 1367. Visit. Stafford, and Visit. London). Ar. five eaglets displ. in cross sa.
(Ingston, Yngston, or Erdington, and Bluerton, co. Stafford. Visit. Stafford, 1583). Same Arms, quartering, ar. a fess betw. three martlets sa., for Lockwood. Crest—A demi eagle displ. sa. ducally gorged or.
(Ireland, Sir Anthony Colclough, Knt., of Bluerton and Woolstanton, co. Stafford, settled in Ireland 34 Henry VIII., 1542, as Captain of the Pensioners, got a grant of the house, abbey, and lands of the dissolved monastery of Tintern, co. Wexford, 18 Queen Elizabeth, 1576, and was ancestor of the Irish family of Colclough of Tintern Abbey and Duffry Hall, and the branches formerly living in Carlow, Queen’s County, &c., &c. Sir Adam Colclough, grandson of the grantee of 1576 was created a bart. of Ireland 1628, which title became extinct on the death of his grandson, Sir Caesar Colclough, 3rd bart., s. p. 1687. Caesar Colclough, Esq., of Tintern Abbey, eighth in descent from Sir Anthony, d.s.p. 1842, when the Abbey and estates devolved on his cousin and heiress-at-law, Mrs. Rosbobough-Colclough, now of Tintern Abbey. The representative and heir male of the family is Lieut.- Col. Beauchamp Henry Dudley Colclough, Wexford Militia; Visit. Stafford 1583; Visit. Wexford 1618; Fun. Ent. Ulster’s Office). Ar. five eaglets in cross sa. Crest— A demi eagle displ. sa., ducally gorged or. Motto—His calcabo gentes.
(Rosborough-Colclough, Tintern Abbey, co. Wexford, exemplified to John Thomas Rosborough, Esq., of Tintern Abbey, co. Wexford; and Mary Grey Wentworth, his wife, only dau. of Caesar Colclough, Esq., of Duffrey Hall, in same co., Chief Justice of Prince Edward’s Island, and sole heiress of her kinsman, Caesar Colclough, Esq., of Tintern Abbey aforesaid, on their assuming, by royal licence, 1853, the additional surname and arms of Colclough). Quarterly, 1st and 4th, ar. five eaglets displ. in cross sa., for Colclough; 2nd and 3rd, az. on a chev. or, three roses gu. seeded or, barbed vert, for Rosborough. Crests—1st: A demi eagle displ. sa. gorged with a ducal coronet, or, for Colclough; 2nd: On a dexter hand in fess a dove close with a branch of olive in his beak all ppr., for Rosborough. Mottos (over the second crest)—God is my shield; (under the arms)—His calcabo gentes.
(London, founded by Mathew Colclough, second son of Richard Colclough, Esq., of Bluerton, and brother of Sir Anthony Colclough, Knt., of Tintern. Visit. London, 1568). Arms, Crest, and Motto—Same as Sir Anthony Colclough, with a crescent for diff.
(Delph House and Cheadle, co. Stafford, descended from Thomas Colclough, second son of John Colclough, Esq., of Bluerton, and uncle of Sir Anthony Colclough, Knt., of Tintern Abbey, which Thomas had Delph House by gift from his father, 1522; Visit. Stafford and Derby 1662-4). Same Arms as Sir Anthony Colclough, with the proper mark of cadency.
(Burslem, descended from a younger brother of Sir Anthony Colclough, Knt., of Tintern Abbey. Dugdale’a Visit., 1664). Same Arms as Sir Anthony Colclough, with a canton gu. for diff.
Staffordshire, Irlande – (Baronet, 1628. M. ét. vers 1702) – D’argent à cinq aigles de sable rangées en croix Cimier une aigle issante de sable colletée d’une couronne d’or Devise HIS CALCABO GENTES