St Thomas's Fund For the Homeless
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Arms : Per pale Gules and Argent a Cross throughout counterchanged upon a chief also Gules a Lion passant between two lozenges Gold. |
Origin/meaning
The arms were officially granted in 1996.
The charity takes its name from a little known patron of the homeless, St Thomas of Canterbury. He was generous in almsgiving and each day after compline would escort thirteen poor persons into his palace at Canterbury where a table was set and food prepared. He would discard his robes of office and meekly wash the feet of the poor people there assembled, then he would bid them eat while he waited upon them, serving them both meat and drink, after which he would present each with a shining new penny.
The Crest is a medieval house with an open door and is taken from that used by the knights hospitaller of St Thomas of Acre as granted by Pope Gregory IX. These hospitallers ran a hospital on Cheapside on the site of the now Mercer's Hall (also the site of St Thomas's birth when his father was a city merchant), they took in the poor and indigent from the city until the hospital was surrendered to the crown with all other religious houses in the dissolution. The seal of the order shows a Latin cross party per pale argent and gules, this has been used for the shield of the St Thomas Fund with the field counterchanged.
The chief displays elements from the arms of the founder whose collateral ancestor Robert de Turnham, founded the Hospital of St Nicholas, Doncaster (Hospitallers of St Thomas) and whose direct ancestor Stephen de Turnham married the daughter of Ranulph de Broc who put up the four knights to murder Becket.
Literature : Heraldry Gazette 63(1997)7.
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