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- Newsgroups: soc.roots
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!darwin.sura.net!tulane!rouge!aet
- From: aet@ucs.usl.edu (Towster Alicia E.)
- Subject: "marker" names
- Message-ID: <1992Nov21.164711.8776@usl.edu>
- Sender: anon@usl.edu (Anonymous NNTP Posting)
- Organization: Univ. of Southwestern La., Lafayette
- Date: Sat, 21 Nov 1992 16:47:11 GMT
- Lines: 53
-
- I am interested in your comments on what I call "marker names" --
- since I don't know of any other term for this phenomenon. (Does
- anyone else out there?)
-
- By "marker name" I mean a name which (1) a family favors as an
- appropriate name for several generations of children and which (2)
- is sufficiently unusual that to come across a person of this name
- quickly produces the hypothesis that s/he is a relative. (Some
- marker names are *so* unusual that this hypothesis springs to mind
- regardless of the surname; others may only take on significance in
- combination with particular family names.)
-
- I have found marker names particularly helpful in tracing families
- whose surnames are too common to easily identify relatives. For
- example, my Jones family became possible to trace only after I
- realized that the given name Mosias was a useful clue. More than
- useful, for *every* Mosias, regardless of surname, in any American
- record I have so far located, is descended from a Mosias Jones, the
- earliest I have found, who seems to have died in a shipwreck in late
- 1720 or early 1721. (Have an American Mosias in your tree? I'd like
- to hear from you.)
-
- Whether a name is unusual or not may depend on when and where it
- was used. Mosias may not be a marker name in pre-1700 Wales for
- example. (Does anyone out there know?) Sometimes I come across
- names which look like they might have marker potential, only to find
- they were common at one time and have simply gone out of style. For
- example, Permelia, which I have now found in too many contexts to
- believe it is unusual or significant. Does anyone know of any studies
- of the frequency of given names in past times and places? This could
- be a help in deciding whether you are looking at a clue or a passing
- style.
-
- The greatest hindrance in making good use of marker names is that
- no one seems to realize that it can be useful. Book indexes and
- computer databases are only made to work with surnames. How
- helpful it could be to be able to answer questions like:
-
- - how many females named Sidney are found in Virginia records
- prior to 1800?
- - which families in Kentucky or Missouri 1800-1860 included a male
- named Chatham?
-
- or simply:
- -Display everyone in the database named Mosias.
-
- If there is some way to search the computerized IGI for *first*
- name, matching on *any* last name, please tell me! I will be so
- delighted!
-
- Alicia Towster
- towster@usl.edu
-
-