Background
Gwynn-Jones was born in 1940, the son of Major Jack Gwynn-Jones, of Cape Town.
Gwynn-Jones was born in 1940, the son of Major Jack Gwynn-Jones, of Cape Town.
He was educated at Wellington College, and Trinity College, Cambridge, where he obtained an Master of Arts. In 1970 he joined the College of Arms and became assistant to Sir Anthony Richard Wagner, who was the Garter Principal King of Arms.
He was Garter Principal King of Arms, the senior English officer of arms, from 1995 to 2010. In 1973 Gwynn-Jones was appointed Bluemantle Pursuivant of Arms in Ordinary. In 1982 he was promoted to herald, and served until 1995 as Lancaster Herald of Arms in Ordinary and became House Comptroller of the College of Arms.
In 1995 he was appointed Garter Principal King of Arms.
He retired in 2010. He died on 21 August 2010. Gwynn-Jones was Secretary of the Harleian Society from 1981 until 1994, Inspector of Regimental Colours from 2 October 1995, and Inspector of Royal Air Force Badges from 1996.
He was non-executive Vice-President of The Heraldry Society from 1996. Gwynn-Jones"s coat of arms was granted on 8 May 1971.
The blazon for the shield is Argent goutté Gules a Fret engrailed and molined at the mascle point Sable.
At the same time he was granted the crest A Coati sejant Sable collared and lined Or. This coat of arms represents the first effort at heraldic design by Gwynn-Jones. "Gwynn" is Welsh for "white" and his ancestors bettered themselves through careers in the army.
Thus, the red drops on a white field are an allusion to both his name and his ancestry.
The crest is derived from the fact that his paternal ancestors came from Coity, Glamorganshire. This allusion is apt because Gwynn-Jones also had a particular liking for the animal.
Gwynn-Jones"s autobiography,: The Story of a Herald, was published by The Memoir Club in 2010, coinciding with his retirement as Garter The title is a reference to the coati (a type of American raccoon) that featured on Gwynn-Jones"s own coat of arms and served as a punning allusion to Coity, Glamorganshire.