These were granted by Ward, Clarenceux, to the elder Anstis and his posterity on the motion of the younger Anstis and without the elder's knowledge. Neither father nor son used personal arms on their official seals as Garter. He was also granted quarterings for Smith and Cudlip, and in the Grant Book the coronet in the crest of Anstis is charged with 3 blue roundels.
Adopted
10 March 1744
Crest
5 ostrich feathers argent in a king of arms' coronet or.
Escutcheon
Argent, a cross raguly gules between 4 doves azure, beaks and legs gules.[1]
Motto
Arma Nobilitant Genus ("Arms make a family noble" or "Weapons make a family famous")
John Anstis. The Register of the Most Noble Order of the Garter. (London, 1724).
Edward Cruickshanks. Anstis, John. Parliament Records (London, 1715–54).
Walter H Godfrey and Sir Anthony Wagner, The College of Arms, Queen Victoria Street: being the sixteenth and final monograph of the London Survey Committee. (London, 1963).
Mark Noble, A History of the College of Arms. (London, 1805).
Anthony Wagner and Albert Rowse. John Anstis: Garter King of Arms (London, 1992).
Nicolas, Nicholas H. History of the Orders of Knighthood of the British Empire, Vol III. (London, 1842).
Gandell, H.L. (January 1970). "Blanc Coursier's Tabard". The Coat of Arms XI (81): 11.
Sir Anthony Wagner. A Catalogue of English Mediaeval Rolls of Arms. Harleian Society (London, 1950).
Sir Anthony Wagner. Heralds of England: a History of the Office and College of Arms. (London, 1967).