worshipful company of water conservators A London Livery Company
Coat of arms, Company of Water Conservators







Worshipful Company of Water Conservators






The Company’s Grant of Arms was presented by Rouge Croix Pursuivant of Arms at the Installation Lunch in the Watermen’s Hall on Thursday lst July 1993. The citation that was presented is of considerable length but there are certain interesting points that should be emphasised.

The four bougets as depicted in the centre shield represent the link with the past, as these were the original means of carrying water and it so happens that the Bouget is one of the oldest Heraldic Symbols.

The Tear as depicted on the cross relates to the emblem of the Company and the Cross stands for the City of London. The Crest consists of two elements, the first being a Wolf’s head from the Coat of Arms of Sir Hugh Myddleton who was responsible for the first piped water supply to the City via the New River in the l7th Century. The second element is a circlet of Borage Flowers from Past Master Hugh Berridge’s Crest, Borage is the official name for a “Water Forget Me Not”. The supporters consist of two animals, a Beaver and an Otter each holding a shovel to recognise the part played by the UK Chapter of the American Select Society of Sanitary Sludge Shovellers in the formation of the Guild.