First, and in Norwegian, Mike - gå og ta deg en bolle !
I clearly wrote:
There are plenty of resources that show that this arms should belong to the Wrights of Surrey, Hartswood and London. In The visitations of Surrey 1530, 1572, and 1623 you will find it descriped like this: Arms - gules, a fesse vairy ermine and azure. Crest: a Camels head, haltered or.
So, Mike, when in time do you think that someone in my family
just created it along the way ?
Here in Norway we have seen variations of this arms - the drawing in the picture is done after a blazon (done by someone professional), the avatar I use is the sign (sigal) of the French honorary consul in Langesund - Just S. Wright (1882), and there is also an norwegian description of the crest with 3 ostrich feathers (as mentioned by you, behindthefrogs)...
And, Mike, if there was a John Wright
in Norway his son would
never have taken the last name Johnson. Neither that or Johnsen or Johnsøn ! Patronym (your father`s name and an ending) was common in Norway until 1900, but
only out in the country. In the cities that tradition took an end in 1600/1700. Immigrants to Norway in 1600/1700 (like Wright, Arbo and Høeg) did not take in use the tradition of patronym. Today 70 % of the Norwegians have a name that is from a farm (in Norwegian: gårdsnavn), 24 % have a name with
-sen (patronym) and the rest have a name with a foreign origin...
Temperence patience and perseverance is mentioned as a motto for the Wrights in London and Surrey. So it should be relevant, but I`m not 100 % certain that this is really right...