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Source: Dictionary of American Family Names, Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-508137-4
Source: An Etymological Dictionary of Family and Christian Names With an Essay on their Derivation and Import; Arthur, William, M.A.; New York, NY: Sheldon, Blake, Bleeker & CO., 1857.
Source: Robert Ferguson, pg.106, English Surnames: And Their Place in the Teutonic Family (1858); the Thorpe mentioned above is Benjamin Thorpe, 19th Century translator of Beowulf
"[...] coats of arms usage rights descend directly from father to son, but not collaterally, for instance, from uncle to nephew. Hence the mere fact a Sheldon rightfully bore a coat of arms does not mean anyone whose name is Sheldon has a right to appropriate it. This right is limited to the direct descendants of the man who rightfully bore the arms. The eldest son could use the design during his father's lifetime, but was required to add a special mark called a "label", which he would remove at his father's death. Younger sons were required to make some permanent change in design for their identification."
Source: Rose Sheldon Newton, SFA Looks at Sheldon Arms, January 1990, Vol. 5, No. 1, page 137, Sheldon Family Association Quarterly, Sheldon Family Association
Source: Rose Sheldon Newton, SFA Looks at Sheldon Arms, January 1990, Vol. 5, No. 1, page 137, Sheldon Family Association Quarterly, Sheldon Family Association. Examples can be seen along the left-hand side of the above linked page.
"The Sheldrake, often used in the Sheldon Coat of Arms as a heraldic charge, is believed to signify the 'shield' meaning of the Sheldon surname because of the shield-like band across the duck's breast. "It seems that the sheldrake was introduced into heraldry for the express purpose, or for the express pleasure of one Sheldon who was Mayor of London in 1676."
Source: Frances M. Smith (Eleanor Lexington), 'About our Ancestors', (11 June 1922), Enquirer Sunday Magazine
Optimum pati Translation: To suffer is best
Source: John Burke, Bernard Burke, and H. Pirie Gordon, 1835, Burke's Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry, Harvard University