Gwynn-Jones's autobiography, The Coati Sable: The Story of a Herald, was published by The Memoir Club in 2010, coinciding with his retirement as Garter[9] 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.[10]
Arms
Coat of arms of Peter Gwynn-Jones
Notes
This coat of arms represents the first effort at heraldic design by Gwynn-Jones.
Argent gutty gules, a fret engrailed and molined at the mascle points sable[11]
Motto
Dyfalbarhau ("Persevere")
Orders
the circlet of the Royal Victorian Order as KCVO.
Symbolism
"Gwynn" is Welsh for white. While the Red drops of blood on a white field represent his ancestors who had bettered themselves through careers in the army. The crest is a pun on the animal coati and his paternal forebears who came from Coity, Glamorganshire. The animal is also a favourite of the bearer who has seen it many times on his travels in Latin America.
^Chesshyre, Hubert (2001). Heralds of today: A biographical list of the officers of the College of Arms, London, 1987-2001. London: Illuminata. ISBN0953784517.