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- Newsgroups: soc.roots
- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!casbs!kathleen
- From: kathleen@casbs.Stanford.EDU (Kathleen Much)
- Subject: Re: "marker" names
- Message-ID: <1992Nov24.032216.17054@casbs.Stanford.EDU>
- Sender: news@casbs.Stanford.EDU (CASBS News Service)
- Organization: Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences
- References: <1992Nov21.164711.8776@usl.edu>
- Date: Tue, 24 Nov 1992 03:22:16 GMT
- Lines: 51
-
- In article <1992Nov21.164711.8776@usl.edu> aet@ucs.usl.edu (Towster Alicia E.) writes:
- >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.)
-
- Alicia, this is a great method, but sometimes it gets you into trouble
- because families were so indiscriminate in their use of the odd names.
- For instance, my family has lots of Sampson and Simpson BOBOs, all
- derived from the mid-18th-century immigrant ancestor Samson BOBO.
- Trying to sort out the uncles from the cousins is hard enough, and for
- a long time I thought Simpson was an alternate spelling of Sampson.
- Then, lo and behold, I found a BOBO married to a SIMPSON, whence all
- the Simpson BOBOs.
- The name Brittain or Britton (Britt) BAILEY appears over and
- over in another line. I strongly suspect that it derives from Sallie
- Bailey (wife of Capt. Thomas BAILEY), whose maiden name I can't find
- yet.
- In the MURFIN line, traced back to 1650, almost all the boys
- are named William, Robert, John, or George, and the girls Mary or
- Ann--not much help. In your terminology, these couldn't count as
- marker names, though they do arouse the presumption of relationship.
- In English-speaking countries, the custom of using a woman's
- family name as a given name for her children is fairly recent (no more
- than 300 years), and the practice of giving a middle name is even
- younger. But the "marker" phenomenon goes back as far as we have
- records, even in Rome.
- On the subject of out-of-fashion names, does anyone know the
- origin of Zilpha (Zilphia) and Keziah (Kezziah, Kissiah) as girls'
- names? They show up over and over in the South in the late 18th and
- early 19th century, and then disappear almost entirely.
-
- -------
- Seeking ACTON, BAILEY, BALL, BEALE, BEAUMAN (BEAUMIER), BOBO, BRAKE,
- BRITTAIN (BRITTON), CALVERT, COLSTON, CORGAN (CORRIGAN), EVERENDEN
- (EVERDEN, EVENDEN, EVERNDON), FERREE (FERIE, FIERRE, FIRE, FIERE),
- HARM, HARWAR, HEWITT, KENNERLY, LEATHERWOOD, LEE, LEFEVRE, McCARTY,
- McQUEAD, MUCH, MURFIN, MUSGROVE, PILGRIM (PILGRAM), POPE, SAUERWEIN,
- SONTAG, TARRANT, TAVERNER, TERRY, UNDERWOOD, WAREMBOUR (de WARENBUR),
- WEGMAN, WOODRUFF (WOODROUGH), YERBY.
-
-
-
- --
- --------------------------------------------------------------------
- Kathleen Much, Editor |E-mail: kathleen@casbs.stanford.EDU
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