Historically, a few Hodgson families adopted the coat of arms pictured here. Its technical description is ‘per chevron, embattled or and azure, three martlets counterchanged’.
According to one authority (J. Hodgson 1925), the above coat of arms was displayed by a Hodgson family at the Battle of Towton in Yorkshire on 29th March 1461, during the Wars of the Roses. This was one of the largest and bloodiest battles ever fought on British soil. The first documented family carrying this coat of arms is the Hodgsons of Hebburn in County Durham, in the sixteenth century (Surtees 1820).
This coat of arms is also associated with several other Hodgson families, including the Hodgsons of West Keal in Lincolnshire, the Hodgsons of Bascodyke, near Ainstable in Cumberland, the Hodshons of Amsterdam, the Hodgson-Hindes of Stella and Acton, Northumberland and Thomas Hodgson the eighteenth-century mill-owner of Caton in Lancashire.
But today we live in a more democratic age. There is no other logo or symbol relating to all Hodgsons, and many have adopted the coat of arms above. For this reason it is respectfully and judiciously displayed on this website, and adopted as the logo or symbol - rather than an official coat of arms - of the world-wide Hodgson Clan.