Timothy Oliphant is also the great-great-great grandson of Cornelius Vanderbilt. I recently started watching “Justified” and looked him up. I was surprised to see the Vanderbilt connection.
My maiden name was here pre-revolutionary war. My maiden name was Basham. My mom’s Maiden name was Tallman and her mother’s maiden name was Sammons. My moms side was here pre-revolutionary war as well.
Funny, I just started watching Justified last week, already into the earlier episodes of season 2. Thanks for all you do to help us out and I hop you're feeling better.
Hi Janice, I'm stable. I have a blood condition called Polycythemia. They are trying to see if it is a form of cancer. On top of that, I am scheduled to get a new hip on the 13th of October. There is light at the end of the tunnel. Barry
My mother's maiden name was Light, but it was the Anglicized version of Leicht. Her dad's paternal line came from Germany via England, and the Isle of Man, to America in 1710. They first arrived in New York and grew from there. Germans changed their names to an English version to better fit in. The family grew and eventually my 3rd great-grandfather moved to Virginia. After my 2nd great-grandfather died, his two sons were sent to the newly formed state of West Virginia to be brought up by their uncle. That's where my parents met and I was born.
Always a pleasure to learn from you, Barry! YOU are so awesome! Plus, this is very fun waiting to see and hear the names that come up! We had two today, Fitch and Clark! So fun!!!
@@BarryVann skinner is who take the skin down from a dead body or kills you alive skinner= szűcs, saka kinde of szőke/blond folks ( sons of Chaak maya kukorica/corn god, children of corn) kiss/ szűcs / zács / succ-er, zahár..... de skin = peel down, pale family of baal/alba=white
@@BarryVann úr= lord in power=erő rém= my ré ( make me rí=cry), rém= monster, rém-y= of the rém family, monsters ( wild man in heraldics) uram= my lord, my ancestor, sasquach
Hi Barry! I was just catching up on the last few videos. The info on the Melungeon Mystery was very interesting. Have you ever heard of a group of blue skinned people living in eastern Kentucky? I saw something recently about that and was wondering if that is true. Thank you for all your videos. I find each and every one so interesting.
@@BarryVann I wondered if that was true. My mom worked with a man whose name was Gabe Fugate. He was from eastern Kentucky but his skin was normal color. That’s why I wondered if it was true.
Very interesting, as usual, Dr. Barry! I particularly enjoyed your explanation of the Viking-rich north of England. My Ancestry DNA test came back 17%. Norway, but none in my family can find any Norwegian surnames in our family tree. We have traced a few of our ancestors to Yorkshire and Merseyside. This is so fascinating!
Three things come to mind. Some parts of the United Kingdom were heavily colonized by Norwegians; my grandmother came from a half Viking clan, Maxwell. It is seemingly from that side of the family that some of us have the Swedish variant of a certain blood condition. The people of the Orkney Islands are of Viking descent, and are considered distinct from other Scottish ethnic groups. Another is that many Scandinavian names were easy to alter to an English counterpart. This is why Johnson is much more common in this country than in Great Britain. It's also easy to see how "-fjord" could change to "-ford". The third is that family surnames are a historically recent innovation in Norway. In Iceland, your surname is still a patronymic; showing that you are the son or daughter of your father's given name.
I have binged watched all the surname videos. I enjoyed each of them. Can I add Fisher and Branch to your list. Thank you so much for the information you share with us.
Hi Dorothy! Both names are already on the list, but they are not together; there are quite a few names in front of them. I appreciate your patience as I make my way through them. Kind regards, Barry
One of my best friends lives a few doors down from Timothy Olyphant in Brentwood. His wife and my wife used to walk up by his house to see if they could get a glimpse. No luck but my friend’s wife did see him taking out the trash one morning. Oh, and we are from near Lexington Kentucky so we were dedicated to watching Justified.
Thanks Barry and hope all is well in the sunny state of Powell Valley. Sunny here too and leaves are turning and starting to fall. Got to go mopw but the crickets are hollering right loud so frost won't be long. Been raised with a batch of Ramey's so all is well but still no comments received. As Toots sais, they can still sit on it. Be BLESSED, Brother!
Clark/ clarke can also be found in early days of the Virginia colony around jamestown and surrounding counties of king William and New Kent,va. In 1600's through mid 1700's. My jones intermartied with clarks.
Today's surnames were really interesting because there were a number of them I've never seen before. And I'm a senior citizen who has moved frequently.
A boarder in my part of the world is someone who rented a room in a private home ,and got provided with meals and laundry .In England they were called lodgers. A 'star boarder' was someone who outstayed their welcome and couldn't or wouldn't pay the rent.
I loved Justified, what a series! I remember starting out you just HATE Boyd and then you start feeling for him and the exchange between Boyd and Raylan was always priceless. I still use some of those quotes. Ava and her shotgun pointed at Boyd eating fried chicken 🐓 was just great 👍 Boyd: Cause we dug coal together.
@@BarryVann what is funny in Remy is the real origin, dweller who living in woods, and feared monster is pure blood ROMA of europe. bushman of europe who were forced out of forests in 1920's central europe so REMY is a roma family , sure swarty appalachian melanated /melungeon ones
Just emailed for the list of names covered, but in the meantime... Here are my family names in case you haven't covered some of them yet: Ray, Wofford, Saylors, Wright, Williams, Chapman, Hurst, Reese, Lillie, Culver, Barger, Stringfield, Ingle, Robbins, Pye, Crump. Some seem to be unique. Hope you can cover them soon. Love the series!!!
David, it looks like you are in luck for some of those names are already on the list. There are hundreds that are on the list to cover. I appreciate the kind words. They mean a lot. Barry
Thank you for getting to my name I will add that Skinner is also possibly from the Scottish Gaelic skene for hide from the same reasoning of the Norwegian terminology it was also a common alias of clan Gregor members escaping persecution and the fact they worked with cattle 😁
@@BarryVann you're right I had must have gotten it mixed around in my head still i know i read that it has possible similar origins to becoming the name Skinner as a tool used in the trade that signifies the trade that turned into the last name as it was anglicized
I have neighbors with the surname Skinner and Board. My line is Scottish ( McDonald, Graham, Cunningham, Wallace,) Irish-- Murphy, Spanish, Welsh--James, Native American through Tecumseh, English, Polish, German, French, Dutch and French Hugenot.
Jonathan Ramey and I were at Cumberland as students together. We both majored in math. Recently found out one of my ancestors was adopted and was originally a Ramey/Rémy. Have you covered the names Tipton, Abney, Bishop, Gabbard or Estes yet?
Hi Kimberly, it's always good to hear from someone who has a connection to Williamsburg, Kentucky! I have not covered those surnames. Kind regards, Barry
How are you doing dr Barry as always iam gathering main information about topics you mentioned briefly here it’s oldest English surname on record was actually from East Anglia . Surname in medieval England had meaning and history attached to them . They started simply as additional name and later were regarded as family names as today . Using of surnames became prominent following Norman - conquest in 1606 , when the population began to grow expanding. The Irish and welsh rulers kept this system and didn’t adopt surname. The first English monarch to use hereditary surname was Edward 1v . Anglo Saxon didn’t have surnames in same way that we do today , they distinguished between two people with same name by adding the place they came from or job they did or their first name , for example woman named Edith who in town of black Bourn would be known as Edith of... .
Hi Lucy, thanks for watching and for writing. There are many Native Americans carrying European surnames, so it's rather easy to conclude that the surname in question is Native American. I have the same issue with my own last name; it's thought of as a Cherokee name. Lightfoot is English and it has been in the Irish records since the Medieval era.
Would you please do video on the meaning of the term black dutch. My great grandmother said we were black dutch. The family was from perry mississippi with roots as far back as Jamestown virginia and spread into the carolinas and Alabama. In my own geneological research , we have many melungeon names, im trying to makes sense of it....thank you for a great and fascinating channel.
Many thanks, Dusty! Thanks for the suggestion on the Black Dutch; there's also the Black Irish. They are not the result of black-white genetic mixing. The Melungeons are a specific community of mixed race people in Hancock County, Tennessee. They have typical Appalachian surnames because they have intermarried so often. You mentioned a connection to colonial Jamestown. I am descended from Jamestown's Proctor family. We might be distant cousins.
I am decendent from Bridges Freeman , he is the first of my Freeman line to come from england, he came in his late teens as an indentured servant, 10 years later had a position with the house of burgeous, he arrived sometime near to the massacre in 1622, i have seen him listed as a survivor . It was my great grandmother Linnie (summuers)Freeman that referred to us as black dutch. I have found where native and african mixed in both the Freeman line and the Summers line. My mother was Freeman on her maternal and Hooker on her paternal. My great 11x grandfather was founding father rev thomas hooker of hartford conn. Through his line i have traced us to the mayflower. LT JOSEPH Rogers. I this was family folk lore until my grandfather dwight hooker did the research to prove it, inspired by that claim , i recently traced the line myself. Thank you again for a wonderful channel.
my family arrived in the colonies in 1640's and settled in surry virginia from knighsbrige england. around 1740 they moved to johnston county N.C where a good portion still live.
We were always told that Fugate was a French name, but DNA doesn’t bear that out . We’ve turned up lots of English ancestry . Any chance you could shed some light on our name ?
@johelenfugate3498 I covered Fugate. Send an email to vanntagepoint22@gmail.com and I'll send you the list of 950 plus names and their episodes. It will be an attached file.
The name Clark is derived from the word cleric. Clerics could makes extra money from the nobility in early by hiring out to them to take care of their record keeping and letter writing because during the dark ages and in to the early renaissance many nobles didn't read or write well.
Speaking of Hee Haw, my grandmother was a cousin of the Samples family, as in Junior Samples, on her mother’s side. I doubt she ever knew it; she lost her mother when she was very young and didn’t get the family stories. It’s a pity she didn’t know because my grandfather loved Junior Samples and would have been pleased as punch.
What about Hardison? I'm having trouble tracking down past my ancestor Jasper Hardison. I see a town of Hardisty Hill in England that maybe we come from but the research is shaky at best.
That explain is also given by House of Names. None of my surname books list that name. It has all the markings of an Anglo-Saxon name, so House of Names might well be correct. Barry
Hi Vala, thanks for watching and for writing. Your request for Rhoten is the first that I have received. I plan to return to making videos in a month, so please stay tuned. Barry
No, I am afraid not. I have Teague on the list to cover; I am a great, great grandson of Jane Teague from Sevier County, Tennessee, so I have had my eyes on this surname for decades. Thanks, Barry
Last part of my research there are British royal surnames such as Baskerville, Darcy , Neville, Percy , capell , Bryan, Clifford. Some of medieval surnames found in England with their meanings such as brown ( brown haired or dark skinned). Nash ( dweller by ash tree ). Foreman ( looks after pigs ) . Cooper ( wooden bucket maker ). Bennett ( blessed). Bigge ( big and strong). Fletcher ( maker of arrows ). Webb( weaver ). Wood ( dweller by wood ) . God Frey ( god -peace ) . Gregory ( watchful). If you please there are British channel named fact feast have series of Victorian and Edwardian era and major difference between low and high class . We need special episodes about USA history and president’s profiles and their achievements. Ihope you like my research stay safe blessed good luck to you your family friends.
@Khatoon AlSadah speaking of some interesting surnames www.cia.gov/library/abbottabad-compound/FC/FC2F5371043C48FDD95AEDE7B8A49624_Springmeier.-.Bloodlines.of.the.Illuminati.R.pdf
You left out "Lacy"... First arriving in Colonial Virginia in 1690, following the "Flight of the Wild Geese" after their defeat at the Defense of Limerick and after fighting for the King of France. They landed and immediately went to the frontier to avoid the British. This is the same Lacy/de Lacy family who's ancestor forced the King of England at the point of a sword to sign the Magna Carta...but some dispute this. Undisputed is that Peter Von Lacy, the highest ranking foreigner to ever serve in the courts of the Czars...is from this same Lacy family when 29 Lacy men were among the first wave of Irish Military Diaspora after their surrender and exile at the Defense of Limerick.
I heard you mention the surname evitts in a video... could you please send me more info at your convenience....I know My great grandfather came from the Hancock county Tenn area...ty for the great information you provide... god bless you...
My great grandfather also had double thumbs and I have heard that is a muhlungon trait...sry for the spelling.... there was a Evitts child born 10 yrs ago by a distant cousin and she also had double thumbs on on hand....her family immediately tried to get in touch with My dad as they knew his grandfather had that trait
@@johnevitts1687 Hi John, double thumbs are congenital defects that can occur among any race or ethnic group. It does sometimes run in families, as it has in your family.
I really appreciate you sharing your expertise with me, and also your time... I'm just trying to figure out if there is anything tying us to this group from Hancock county
@@johnevitts1687 Most of them have taken DNA tests. Why not do Ancestry DNA? If you have Sub-Saharan DNA, it will show up. Without that, it's not likely. You can also use their family finder at no extra charge. It can detect up to fifth to eighth cousins. It also allows you to see the ethnicity of your matches. They have sales from time to time. It was in the $50 range this week.
I have Ramey in my family. I have lots of Fitch in there also. And we have Clark. Any chance you know where Fikes Comes in? I have Lots of Scots and Irish in my DNA.
I have looked into both of my sides of the family of Clark, Brandon and Berk. I understand why so my Irish and Scots settled in the south because it looks a lot like Ireland. The Brandon and Clarks have been here before the Civil War. The Berks didn't come over until 1833.
Hi, Tim, I covered Owens in the first episode. The s refers to a pluralized form of Owen, or it could mean the son of Owen. I think you will find that it is Welsh.
Looking for name Jarrett,Jarrett found freeman ,n,Jarrett my ancestor born 1799 in VA or Kentucky. I'm interested in your meloungen series .grand father was dark with blue eyes he had 5 sisters all blonde and blue eyed his brother had dark features like him. How do I find out more on these people
Hi Sandra, first I want to say that members of the Ledford family have been friends with my mother's people (Cherokee County, North Carolina and Anderson County, Tennessee for many generations. Louthan is a name that belonged to a student had at Lincoln Memorial University. Sadly, he was killed in a motorcycle accident about 15 years ago. I think you will find that Louthan is an alternate form of Lothian, so it it is hence a Scottish toponymic.
Thank you for replying. These Louthan’s were mostly from the tazewell-Sneedsville area. The patriarch was John and wife Bonnie that had a farm about 20 miles up the holler from Tazewell
Both sides of my family have been in South Georgia long before the Creeks Indian where pushed out of this area My grandmother was a Fleetwood and a Jackson It’s been said she was related to President Jackson But Fleetwood is not heard of to much
My last name is Himes. I looked everywhere trying to figure out where it was from. Daddy always said it was German, but there seem to be fewer than 200 Anericans with my last name,and when I joined Ancestry we all seem to be related. My DNA seemed to show the last Himes before we came over the pond was in the 1700s though. I would be grateful if you can help, because the more I look the harder it gets. It's almost like a little German but a lot of Welsh and Irish, and all in Pennsylvania for the last 350 years. My ex husband was Murphy, so that was easy enough, but then my daughters DNA profile came back showing more Irish on my side than her father's.
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Rémy - A slight correction: Rémy is very French, and should be pronounced /ray-mee/, but yes, it was borrowed into English and some people may pronounce it /ree-mee/ and spell it without the acute accent mark from French. A quick lookup shows Rémy as the French name form of Remigius from Late Latin, and Rémy is the French cousin of Remigio in Spanish, Portuguese and Italian. Religious, the source says, is the name form of the word remigis, meaning an oarsman or rower. I would have guessed it was related to Remus, the brother of Romulus, the twin founders of Rome raised by a she-wolf Lupa, in Roman legends. (And all tht is from reading.) But this says Remigius instead. Rémy is a very French name. But I've seen it and a few others used even in the older generations by English speakers, Americans. -- Aside: This reminds me that my maternal grandmother (from Tis and Oklahoma) had a female cousin named Reenie. (That's the only spelling of it I've seen, and spelling back in their parents' generation was, uh, very iffy. At a guess, I would think Reenie might be a mispronunciation and misunderstanding of the French name Renée (feminine) and René (masculine). Both forms are from earlier Renata, Renato (Renatus), meaning reborn, born again, typically in the christian sense. Yes, Renato, Renata, René, Renée are related, the latter from French, the former from Latin, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian. Note some French names and words were borrowed into English back from the Norman (French) Cnquest, while others are more modern, from the 1700's on into the present. Note too, there were French immigrants, both from Canada and Louisiana, but also into the early 13 colonies, the first United States, due to trade, technology, diplomacy, and the American and French Revolutionary and philosophical connections which influenced our American Revolution. -- I've never seen the source claiming Rémy means a sweller in a wooded area, and I don't know any etymology source for that. Rémy is not a Gaelic / Celtic or Gaulish / Gallic origin word nor Frankish Northmen Norman word nor Breton Brittany or British word. (The Bretons or Bretagnards are the Gaelic people formerly of pre-Anglo-sason Britain who relocated to their home territory in Bretagne, Brittany, in northern France.) The Gauls (Gallia) were the Celtic / Gaelic people in Gaul (Gallia) which later became France (Francia, land of the Frankish Germanic tribes). and the Normans were the Northmen, related to Danes and Vikings. In other words, all of Northern Europe was littered with migrations and conquests from the Roman period on into medical times before settling down into modern peoples. The British Isles and France and near France were particularly prone to this.
Enterkin and Holloway (versus Halvey) -- Beware of equating Gaelic (Scottish and/or Irish) names with English names, although it is commonly done. The word-history (etymology) and sources are often completely different, and only equated from rough similarities, sometimes with not even much basis there. I would bet that Holloway and Scottish Halvey are not related in origin. And Holloway, either as a path in a hollow (holler) (a hollow was a word used in English at the time the colonies were founded, thus how it was used in Appalachian place-names), or else that sunken path /road. Either meaning seems equally plausible. -- The suffix -kin was an Old English and Middle English diminutive suffix used for girls or boys or for animals or things that were small, little, young, cute, new. Many English names have -kkin as a suffix, but today we don't even see it as a suffix because it became archaic, unused. So Adkins, Atkins, Aikin, Larkin, Watkins, Perkins, Simpkins, Tompkins, Wilkins, and on and on. Dawkins too. All were related to nicknames plus that -kin for little/cute, like we use -y or -ie today for nicknames. -- But Enterkin is not this, it's from Scots Gaelic somehow,, apparently. -- Bordrer, Boarder -- I believe English has "board" as in a plank, a piece of wood, separately from border (a boundary) or boarder (someone who gets room and board, board being an old term for a table or bench and table, and therefore food, dining, eating.) -- French has le lord, un lord, meaning a side, a border, which was borrowed into Middle English as border. (Bordeaux is unrelated.) So the surname Border or Border could be from any of these, either the English names or the French names. I don't know if there is a German word that's related, or a nmame. I don't speak enough German.
Fitch -- could be related to Fitz- which was the Norman French form of Parisian French fils (son). I think there's another meaning for Fitch, but don't recall where I saw it. But I/m agreeing with the video maker's statement. Ollis, etc. -- Oh, that, and the English respellings from the Gaelic (Scottish and Irish) sources are definitely Gaelic. The British / English (Sassenachs) had big trouble spelling Irish and Scottish Gaelic names, words, and often just plain substituted something halfway close in English. Clark and O'Clery -- These all go back to Latin "cleric," and so does the word clergy. A modern clerk is from a secretary, assistant, shopkeeper, someone who could write, tae notes, do arithmetic, bookkeeper, from that educated cleric background. In the Middle Ages, emerging townsfolk and merchant-class and bourgeoisie (just means townsfolk) (burgess), might have their sons tutored by a monk or priest or sent to study at the local church or monastery, because those were the few sources of education, reading and writing. So clerks developed from that background. In Middle English, clerk and clark were pronounced about the same, the eh or ay instead of ah or uh sometimes merged for -er-. So a clark was a clerk and vice versa. And O'Clery is likely from a similar term like cleric, clergy, clerk, borrowed into Irish and Scottish Gaelic (I don't know the etymology for Clery, Cleary, O'Clery, so I'd recommend boule-checking Cleary and Clery and O'Clery with Gaelic Scottish and Irish source material. -- Oh, and Eccles, Eckles, Eccleston -- are related to cleric and clergy too, Eccles, Eccleisastic, Ecclesiastes, mean a church or from the church (Ecclesias). Moder French église, Spanish Iglesias (yes, Julio and Enrique Iglesias) -- all mean a church, originally from Latin. The words got borrowed into English and Gaelic, and stayed from Latin into its daughter languages French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, Romanian, and a few others.
Hello from Montana, I'm still anticipating the explanation of my last name,,, I have family members in the south east,,, and Skinner,, and killing or killin,,, and these people are war like,,, anyway thanks 👍
Hi Cam, Dobson and Payne were already on the list to cover. I've added the other three. There are several hundred names before them, so I appreciate your patience. Kind regards, Barry Vann
My Cousin who lives in Pike Co Ky claims that the Appalachians speak Elizabethen English. I don't think he realises that he speech patterns have changed in the last 200 years in Appalachia. down hill.
Some of the words and expressions of Appalachian English are rooted in the 16th century, but those words have been slowly disappearing from use. Words like yunz and reckon are still around, but we seldom hear words like hankerin to used.
Episode One, but there are a few folks who claim that the Anderson surname in the South is Scandinavian. There have been few immigrants from Scandinavia relocating to the South or Appalachia. The bulk of them in the South are Scottish.
I forgot my dad's Sunday Moore, Kirk, Jarrell, Horn and many more, Atkins. There's lots of Mullins in Pike County, Kent, as was Johnson
Great video! Liked & subscribed!
Thanks for the sub! Barry Vann
Timothy Oliphant is also the great-great-great grandson of Cornelius Vanderbilt. I recently started watching “Justified” and looked him up. I was surprised to see the Vanderbilt connection.
That's interesting! Thanks!
Justified is one of my all time favorite shows, I have the whole series in my video library.
It remains a great watch! Barry
Thank you for covering Clark
I love metal music but no one who loves music could deny Roy Clark was one of the best. ❤
I love metal too. I am currently wearing out Armored Saint and Hellsmoke.
Roy was my neighbor's cousin.
Roy Clark could play it all: country, classical, jazz, rock, zydeco-all.
Sorry to digress 😀
My maiden name was here pre-revolutionary war. My maiden name was Basham. My mom’s Maiden name was Tallman and her mother’s maiden name was Sammons. My moms side was here pre-revolutionary war as well.
Hi Patricia, your surnames are already on the list of names to cover, but there a over a hundred names in front of them.
Thanks again, Dr. Vann!
You are welcome, Lin Lippy! Barry
Funny, I just started watching Justified last week, already into the earlier episodes of season 2.
Thanks for all you do to help us out and I hop you're feeling better.
Hi Janice, I'm stable. I have a blood condition called Polycythemia. They are trying to see if it is a form of cancer. On top of that, I am scheduled to get a new hip on the 13th of October. There is light at the end of the tunnel. Barry
Excellent series. Love your anecdotes associated with some of the surnames.
Thanks, David. That's mighty kind of you to say! Barry
Again, Thanks ... you do a terrific job!
You mean me sir or dr Barry please .
Edward, I appreciate the kind and supportive words! Barry
@@BarryVann Gra-ham as in Robbinsville!
My mother's maiden name was Light, but it was the Anglicized version of Leicht. Her dad's paternal line came from Germany via England, and the Isle of Man, to America in 1710. They first arrived in New York and grew from there. Germans changed their names to an English version to better fit in.
The family grew and eventually my 3rd great-grandfather moved to Virginia. After my 2nd great-grandfather died, his two sons were sent to the newly formed state of West Virginia to be brought up by their uncle. That's where my parents met and I was born.
Michael, you are correct. Many Germans anglicized their names upon arrival. Schwartz became Black and on.
Thank you for posting Light!
My pleasure!
Hi Barry, I really enjoy and look forward to your shows. I have a few surnames you can look up. PINSON, MAYNARD, and STATON. Thanks and God bless!
Thanks for the info!
This was wonderful to hear of the Clarks. Thank you!
Thanks for listening
My mom’s maiden name is Clarke. Wonder what the difference is.
@@samanthab1923the E at the end denotes English origin.
@@chomama1628 That’s interesting. Thanks 👋
Great bunch of names today
Hi Rose, I'm glad that you liked them. Barry
Thanks for another interesting and informative post.
Thanks for watching, Harry!
BTW, this is an awesome series!!! Thank u.
Glad you enjoy it!
Thank you for another great episode !
Glad you enjoyed it! Barry
Always a pleasure to learn from you, Barry! YOU are so awesome! Plus, this is very fun waiting to see and hear the names that come up! We had two today, Fitch and Clark! So fun!!!
Thanks, DD! Barry
@@BarryVann oliphant is elephant it was a swarty noble family in hungary, with negro head in coat of arm
hu.wikipedia.org/wiki/Als%C3%B3elef%C3%A1nt
gőg = crazy proud
góg= magog
nagyok= big ones
ég= sky
gök türks= sky blue flag
kék=blue (eye), albino (budiinii scythian)
@@BarryVann skinner is who take the skin down from a dead body or kills you alive
skinner= szűcs, saka kinde of szőke/blond folks ( sons of Chaak maya kukorica/corn god, children of corn)
kiss/ szűcs / zács / succ-er, zahár.....
de skin = peel down, pale family of baal/alba=white
@@BarryVann úr= lord in power=erő
rém= my ré ( make me rí=cry), rém= monster, rém-y= of the rém family, monsters ( wild man in heraldics)
uram= my lord, my ancestor, sasquach
Hi Barry! I was just catching up on the last few videos. The info on the Melungeon Mystery was very interesting. Have you ever heard of a group of blue skinned people living in eastern Kentucky? I saw something recently about that and was wondering if that is true. Thank you for all your videos. I find each and every one so interesting.
Yes I have: The Blue Fugates of Kentucky. Thanks for writing, Joan! Barry
@@BarryVann
I wondered if that was true. My mom worked with a man whose name was Gabe Fugate. He was from eastern Kentucky but his skin was normal color. That’s why I wondered if it was true.
Very interesting, as usual, Dr. Barry! I particularly enjoyed your explanation of the Viking-rich north of England. My Ancestry DNA test came back 17%. Norway, but none in my family can find any Norwegian surnames in our family tree. We have traced a few of our ancestors to Yorkshire and Merseyside. This is so fascinating!
Gracie, you would enjoy watching the tv series Last Kingdom. It's always a pleasure to hear from you, Barry
Three things come to mind. Some parts of the United Kingdom were heavily colonized by Norwegians; my grandmother came from a half Viking clan, Maxwell. It is seemingly from that side of the family that some of us have the Swedish variant of a certain blood condition. The people of the Orkney Islands are of Viking descent, and are considered distinct from other Scottish ethnic groups.
Another is that many Scandinavian names were easy to alter to an English counterpart. This is why Johnson is much more common in this country than in Great Britain. It's also easy to see how "-fjord" could change to "-ford".
The third is that family surnames are a historically recent innovation in Norway. In Iceland, your surname is still a patronymic; showing that you are the son or daughter of your father's given name.
Thank you!
You're welcome!
My great-grandmother was Skinner!
That's a fine name to have!
I have binged watched all the surname videos. I enjoyed each of them. Can I add Fisher and Branch to your list. Thank you so much for the information you share with us.
Hi Dorothy! Both names are already on the list, but they are not together; there are quite a few names in front of them. I appreciate your patience as I make my way through them. Kind regards, Barry
Thank you, Dr. V.
Ramey has become something of a name fad among the young LDS parents of Utah. ❤️
You are welcome, so very pretty! Barry
One of my best friends lives a few doors down from Timothy Olyphant in Brentwood. His wife and my wife used to walk up by his house to see if they could get a glimpse. No luck but my friend’s wife did see him taking out the trash one morning. Oh, and we are from near Lexington Kentucky so we were dedicated to watching Justified.
That's a great story and show. Thanks! Barry
Thanks Barry and hope all is well in the sunny state of Powell Valley. Sunny here too and leaves are turning and starting to fall. Got to go mopw but the crickets are hollering right loud so frost won't be long. Been raised with a batch of Ramey's so all is well but still no comments received. As Toots sais, they can still sit on it. Be BLESSED, Brother!
Thanks, Lewie! I hope the good Lord smiles on you and yours today! Barry
I have friends here named Clarke. They are from Pennsylvania and have tracked their ancestors to Ireland. I have cousins, Clark who are Scottish.
Hi Chris, are you in Ireland? Barry
Clark/ clarke can also be found in early days of the Virginia colony around jamestown and surrounding counties of king William and New Kent,va. In 1600's through mid 1700's.
My jones intermartied with clarks.
Interesting. My moms a Clarke.
My. Paternal grandmother. Name was Johnson. Then I was told told some black dutch. She eas born in Chattsnooga snd gsmikt nw GA lookout mtn area
Johnson in that part of the country, if the family was here before the Civil War, is most likely Scottish.
Today's surnames were really interesting because there were a number of them I've never seen before. And I'm a senior citizen who has moved frequently.
That is a good observation! There are almost always one or two in a show that I had not seen until they were requested. Barry
A boarder in my part of the world is someone who rented a room in a private home ,and got provided with meals and laundry .In England they were called lodgers. A 'star boarder' was someone who outstayed their welcome and couldn't or wouldn't pay the rent.
Father's blessings brother Barry💪😎
Many thanks, brother! Barry
Go to Tazewell and Buchanan County Va an you will find a few Rameys.
I loved Justified, what a series! I remember starting out you just HATE Boyd and then you start feeling for him and the exchange between Boyd and Raylan was always priceless. I still use some of those quotes. Ava and her shotgun pointed at Boyd eating fried chicken 🐓 was just great 👍 Boyd: Cause we dug coal together.
Yes, it was captivating! He did warm on me, too!
@@BarryVann what is funny in Remy is the real origin, dweller who living in woods, and feared monster is pure blood ROMA of europe. bushman of europe who were forced out of forests in 1920's central europe
so REMY is a roma family , sure swarty appalachian melanated /melungeon ones
I like the book display bud 👍😎.
Thanks, mate!
Good one, thanks.How about Long , Blassingame and Judkins.
Thanks, Debbie!
Just emailed for the list of names covered, but in the meantime... Here are my family names in case you haven't covered some of them yet: Ray, Wofford, Saylors, Wright, Williams, Chapman, Hurst, Reese, Lillie, Culver, Barger, Stringfield, Ingle, Robbins, Pye, Crump. Some seem to be unique. Hope you can cover them soon. Love the series!!!
David, it looks like you are in luck for some of those names are already on the list. There are hundreds that are on the list to cover. I appreciate the kind words. They mean a lot. Barry
What an interesting channel. I just found it. My name is Walkem. I don't know where it came from, but I do there are not a lot of Walkems.
Take a look at Woolcombe; it's a Devonshire England surname.
All the townsfolk in Hot Fuzz had names that ended in ER. Draper, Cooper, Shooter, Farmer,
Thank you for getting to my name I will add that Skinner is also possibly from the Scottish Gaelic skene for hide from the same reasoning of the Norwegian terminology it was also a common alias of clan Gregor members escaping persecution and the fact they worked with cattle 😁
Bob Skinner is a Scottish Detective in Quintin Jardine's novels set in Edinburgh.
Blake, I thought that "skene" was a Scottish dagger as well as a surname. In fact, that's how Collins Dictionary defines it.
@Blake Skinner Im assuming that they were Travellers who were avoiding persecution
@@BarryVann you're right I had must have gotten it mixed around in my head still i know i read that it has possible similar origins to becoming the name Skinner as a tool used in the trade that signifies the trade that turned into the last name as it was anglicized
@@blakeskinner3878 I always enjoyed how Carroll O Conner called out "Skinner" on the Heat of the night TV show🙂
love Roy Clark.
Thanks, Mechell! I hope you are doing well.
I have neighbors with the surname Skinner and Board. My line is Scottish ( McDonald, Graham, Cunningham, Wallace,) Irish-- Murphy, Spanish, Welsh--James, Native American through Tecumseh, English,
Polish, German, French, Dutch and French Hugenot.
Nice to hear from you. Thanks for the comment! Barry
@@BarryVann Thank you!
Jonathan Ramey and I were at Cumberland as students together. We both majored in math. Recently found out one of my ancestors was adopted and was originally a Ramey/Rémy. Have you covered the names Tipton, Abney, Bishop, Gabbard or Estes yet?
Hi Kimberly, it's always good to hear from someone who has a connection to Williamsburg, Kentucky! I have not covered those surnames. Kind regards, Barry
How are you doing dr Barry as always iam gathering main information about topics you mentioned briefly here it’s oldest English surname on record was actually from East Anglia . Surname in medieval England had meaning and history attached to them . They started simply as additional name and later were regarded as family names as today . Using of surnames became prominent following Norman - conquest in 1606 , when the population began to grow expanding. The Irish and welsh rulers kept this system and didn’t adopt surname. The first English monarch to use hereditary surname was Edward 1v . Anglo Saxon didn’t have surnames in same way that we do today , they distinguished between two people with same name by adding the place they came from or job they did or their first name , for example woman named Edith who in town of black Bourn would be known as Edith of... .
Hi Khatoon, the Norman Conquest happened in 1066.
It’s believed in Canada that lightfoot is a native Indian name
Hi Lucy, thanks for watching and for writing. There are many Native Americans carrying European surnames, so it's rather easy to conclude that the surname in question is Native American. I have the same issue with my own last name; it's thought of as a Cherokee name. Lightfoot is English and it has been in the Irish records since the Medieval era.
Wow I never would have thought that thanks
Would you please do video on the meaning of the term black dutch. My great grandmother said we were black dutch. The family was from perry mississippi with roots as far back as Jamestown virginia and spread into the carolinas and Alabama. In my own geneological research , we have many melungeon names, im trying to makes sense of it....thank you for a great and fascinating channel.
Many thanks, Dusty! Thanks for the suggestion on the Black Dutch; there's also the Black Irish. They are not the result of black-white genetic mixing. The Melungeons are a specific community of mixed race people in Hancock County, Tennessee. They have typical Appalachian surnames because they have intermarried so often. You mentioned a connection to colonial Jamestown. I am descended from Jamestown's Proctor family. We might be distant cousins.
I am decendent from Bridges Freeman , he is the first of my Freeman line to come from england, he came in his late teens as an indentured servant, 10 years later had a position with the house of burgeous, he arrived sometime near to the massacre in 1622, i have seen him listed as a survivor . It was my great grandmother Linnie (summuers)Freeman that referred to us as black dutch. I have found where native and african mixed in both the Freeman line and the Summers line.
My mother was Freeman on her maternal and Hooker on her paternal. My great 11x grandfather was founding father rev thomas hooker of hartford conn. Through his line i have traced us to the mayflower. LT JOSEPH Rogers. I this was family folk lore until my grandfather dwight hooker did the research to prove it, inspired by that claim , i recently traced the line myself.
Thank you again for a wonderful channel.
my family arrived in the colonies in 1640's and settled in surry virginia from knighsbrige england. around 1740 they moved to johnston county N.C where a good portion still live.
Michael, I knew some Barefoot folk in Charleston, Mississippi.
@@BarryVann i don't know them. ask them where their grandparents were born. i'll bet it was north carolina.
We were always told that Fugate was a French name, but DNA doesn’t bear that out . We’ve turned up lots of English ancestry . Any chance you could shed some light on our name ?
@johelenfugate3498 I covered Fugate. Send an email to vanntagepoint22@gmail.com and I'll send you the list of 950 plus names and their episodes. It will be an attached file.
My family is from Harlan KY. Lyttle, Gay, Asher are some of the Surnames
Thanks for watching and for writing, Amber. Kind regards, Barry Vann
The name Clark is derived from the word cleric. Clerics could makes extra money from the nobility in early by hiring out to them to take care of their record keeping and letter writing because during the dark ages and in to the early renaissance many nobles didn't read or write well.
A cleric would certainly by a member of a religious order. Thanks, Earl.
Speaking of Hee Haw, my grandmother was a cousin of the Samples family, as in Junior Samples, on her mother’s side. I doubt she ever knew it; she lost her mother when she was very young and didn’t get the family stories. It’s a pity she didn’t know because my grandfather loved Junior Samples and would have been pleased as punch.
Hi Luann! Junior was the genuine article! Barry
Not sure if annyone mentioned in the comments but Pike County Kentuckys own Patty Loveless is Patty Ramey from Elkhorn City KY.
Nope. No one mentioned that, but I did cover Ramey too!
What about Hardison? I'm having trouble tracking down past my ancestor Jasper Hardison. I see a town of Hardisty Hill in England that maybe we come from but the research is shaky at best.
That explain is also given by House of Names. None of my surname books list that name. It has all the markings of an Anglo-Saxon name, so House of Names might well be correct. Barry
My husband’s maternal grandmother’s last name was Ramey. Pike county Kentucky
I think that is where Dr. John Ramey was grew up.
Can you do the names Rogers, Price and Welch? You may have already done them but I couldn't find it.
Hi Rita, each of them are already on the list to cover. I have not covered them. Barry
Have you done a video on Rhoten or Rhoton?
Hi Vala, thanks for watching and for writing. Your request for Rhoten is the first that I have received. I plan to return to making videos in a month, so please stay tuned. Barry
If you can , I would like to know about Spires, Youmans and Averitt.
Barry, they are on the list, but the there are two hundred names on front of them.
Great information.
I’ve always wondered about “Teague”
Could it be a derivative of “Montegue”?
No, I am afraid not. I have Teague on the list to cover; I am a great, great grandson of Jane Teague from Sevier County, Tennessee, so I have had my eyes on this surname for decades. Thanks, Barry
Last part of my research there are British royal surnames such as Baskerville, Darcy , Neville, Percy , capell , Bryan, Clifford. Some of medieval surnames found in England with their meanings such as brown ( brown haired or dark skinned). Nash ( dweller by ash tree ). Foreman ( looks after pigs ) . Cooper ( wooden bucket maker ). Bennett ( blessed). Bigge ( big and strong). Fletcher ( maker of arrows ). Webb( weaver ). Wood ( dweller by wood ) . God Frey ( god -peace ) . Gregory ( watchful). If you please there are British channel named fact feast have series of Victorian and Edwardian era and major difference between low and high class . We need special episodes about USA history and president’s profiles and their achievements. Ihope you like my research stay safe blessed good luck to you your family friends.
Nice job, Khatoon!
@Khatoon AlSadah speaking of some interesting surnames www.cia.gov/library/abbottabad-compound/FC/FC2F5371043C48FDD95AEDE7B8A49624_Springmeier.-.Bloodlines.of.the.Illuminati.R.pdf
You left out "Lacy"... First arriving in Colonial Virginia in 1690, following the "Flight of the Wild Geese" after their defeat at the Defense of Limerick and after fighting for the King of France. They landed and immediately went to the frontier to avoid the British.
This is the same Lacy/de Lacy family who's ancestor forced the King of England at the point of a sword to sign the Magna Carta...but some dispute this.
Undisputed is that Peter Von Lacy, the highest ranking foreigner to ever serve in the courts of the Czars...is from this same Lacy family when 29 Lacy men were among the first wave of Irish Military Diaspora after their surrender and exile at the Defense of Limerick.
Side Note.. I LOVE ‘JUSTIFIED’ !!! 👍❤️🎉
I hear that it is being resurrected!
I heard you mention the surname evitts in a video... could you please send me more info at your convenience....I know My great grandfather came from the Hancock county Tenn area...ty for the great information you provide... god bless you...
Hi John, I have not covered Evitts to date. I covered Estep. It's in Episode 54. I can tell you that it's a West Midlands (England) surname.
My great grandfather also had double thumbs and I have heard that is a muhlungon trait...sry for the spelling.... there was a Evitts child born 10 yrs ago by a distant cousin and she also had double thumbs on on hand....her family immediately tried to get in touch with My dad as they knew his grandfather had that trait
@@johnevitts1687 Hi John, double thumbs are congenital defects that can occur among any race or ethnic group. It does sometimes run in families, as it has in your family.
I really appreciate you sharing your expertise with me, and also your time... I'm just trying to figure out if there is anything tying us to this group from Hancock county
@@johnevitts1687 Most of them have taken DNA tests. Why not do Ancestry DNA? If you have Sub-Saharan DNA, it will show up. Without that, it's not likely. You can also use their family finder at no extra charge. It can detect up to fifth to eighth cousins. It also allows you to see the ethnicity of your matches. They have sales from time to time. It was in the $50 range this week.
My ancestors go back to England, then Normandy, then over to Sweden from the Island of Goteland. Geat, Mergeat,Marrot Marriott Merritt.
That's some serious ancestry over time. Thanks for writing!
I have Ramey in my family. I have lots of Fitch in there also. And we have Clark. Any chance you know where Fikes Comes in? I have Lots of Scots and Irish in my DNA.
Thanks, Julie! I appreciate the feedback and request. Fike(s) is on the list of names to cover. It should be coming up in the next few weeks. Barry
@@BarryVann Thank you so much.
I have looked into both of my sides of the family of Clark, Brandon and Berk. I understand why so my Irish and Scots settled in the south because it looks a lot like Ireland. The Brandon and Clarks have been here before the Civil War. The Berks didn't come over until 1833.
Yes. They could carryon with life as they knew it.
Please do the surname Owen if you haven't already, thanks
Hi, Tim, I covered Owens in the first episode. The s refers to a pluralized form of Owen, or it could mean the son of Owen. I think you will find that it is Welsh.
My maiden name is Dodds and married name is Miler. Have you covered these names?
Write me at vanntagepoint22@gmail.com. It lists all of the names I have covered. Barry
Roberts as well
I have season one of Justified
Looking for name Jarrett,Jarrett found freeman ,n,Jarrett my ancestor born 1799 in VA or Kentucky. I'm interested in your meloungen series .grand father was dark with blue eyes he had 5 sisters all blonde and blue eyed his brother had dark features like him. How do I find out more on these people
Do a DNA test to see if you have Sub-Saharan genes. The Melungeon are a small community in Hancock County. Do you have family from there and do you have about 10% African DNA. If you have both, you might just be received in that community as a relative, but I don't speak for them. Lots of Europeans have dark skin and blues eyes, so I wouldn't latch onto anything until I did a DNA test.
Episode 1 November 15, 2021:
Anderson
Buchanan
Callahan
Duncan
Evans
Graham
Johnson/ Jones
Owens
Murphy
Parton
Relevant
Episode 2 December 16, 2021
Reed
Wallace
Sneed
Parsons
Morgan
Dunlap
Waddie
Williams
Walker
Ferguson
Episode 3 December 21, 2021
Hutchison/Hutchinson
Thompson/Thomson
Wynn
Shackelford
Walmsley
Devol
Beverly
Cobb
Moore
Spence
Cochran
Episode 4 December 20, 2021
Cornett
Stone/Stane
Ratcliff
Bush
McNair
Spiller
Lewis
Wright
Hall
Ham
Episode 5 January 4, 2021
Hale
Zwingli, Singly
Colvin
Pepper
Phipps/Phillips
Warren
Ausmus
Quinn
Monroe
Jerrell/Gerald
Mooney
Episode 6 January 11, 2021
Lyle(s)/Lisle(s)
Lindsey
Carlin
Dominey
Oliver
Adkins
Browning
Hensley
Crum
Lee/Lea
Episode 7 January 20, 2021
Meeks
Harvey
Prater
White
Copeland
Keen/Keene
Patterson
Hawkins
Kilby
Gordon
Fugate
Episode 8
Gibson
Chisholm
Branscomb
Hughes
Sizemore
Kirkland
Roberts
Robertson
Watson
Hatfield
Mullins
Episode 9 (February 3, 2022)
Coots
Russell
Byers
Poland
Hicks
Tomlinson
Scantlin/Scanlon
Upchurch
Wilson
Episode 10 (February 10, 2022)
Blevins
Talley/Tally
Newell
Simpson/Simms/Simson
Hood
Crowder
Priddy
Sanders/Saunders
Evans
Episode 11 (February 15, 2022)
Longmire
Hatfield
Kildare
Kincaid
Stewart/Stuart
McCollough
Haney
Bell
Caldwell
Episode 12 (February 17, 2022)
Grier or Greer
Sumner
Burke
Barnett
Perry or Parry
Fultz
Gatlin
Dunn or Dunne or Dunning
Corbin
Episode 13 (February 23, 2022)
Burrell
Carver
Stokes
Franklin
Cox
Tipton
Hamilton
Skene
Marcum
Episode 14 (March 1, 2022)
Suttles
Perkins
Lamb
Davis
Gallaher
Philpot
Graves
Pichon
Ramsey
Episode 15 (March 4, 2022)
Gray
Bussell
Lanham
Coulter
Runyon
Stapleton
Broom
Meade
Montgomery
Cooper
Episode 16 (March 10, 2022)
Underwood
Scoggins
Pearson
Cressy
Finlay
Bond
Johnston
Tait
Episode 17
Jeffers
Mitchell
Harrison
Hunt
Pickett
Eldridge
Crowe
Caudill
Morris
Langdon or Langton
Episode 18
Couch
Kees
Bailey
Miller
Culbertson
MacArthur
Lovell
Shinn
Hankins
Spencer
Episode 19
Fox
Ledford
Mason
Alexander
Halsey
Warden
Whaley
Bennett
Stringer
Hewitt
Episode 20 (April 5, 2022)
Snyder
Brock
Hancock
Whitehead
Collins
Gregory
Craven
Orr
Episode 21 (April 12, 2022)
Masters
Kirkland
McKiddy (No find)
Gruggett (No Find)
Glozier (No Find)
Hamby
Houston
Boren
Gooden
Carroll
Austin
Herndon
Episode 22 (April 19, 2022)
Sherril
Millsaps
Rowland
Morton
Conley
Sanson
Rader
Autry
McDowell
Episode 23 (April 27, 2022)
Bryan, Brien, Bryan, Bryant
Keziah, Kiziah
Clowers
Dunford
Harmon, Harman, Herman
Aycock, Heycock
Nash
Golden
Holbrook
Bilbrey, Bilbray, Bilby
Episode 24 (May 3, 2022)
Bird/Byrd
Bridgeman
Huddleston/Hiddleston
Scott
Hopkins
Holyfield
Bradley
Jackson
Rice/Rhys
Episode 25 (May 9, 2022)
Baldwin
Baker
Burris
McClain
Cummings
Boggs
Pritchard
Nolan
Episode 26 (May 17, 2022)
Clary
McNeal
Rathbone
Belcher
Holmes
Harris
Barr
Ford
Tucker
Episode 27 (May 24, 2022)
Forbes
Combs
Adkinson/Atkinson /Acheson
Howard
Bruce
Duggan
Butler
Goins
Mader
Powell
Episode 28 (May 31, 2022)
Hannah
Hoskins
Mosley
Higginbotham
Davenport
Durley
Reynolds
Bays
Campbell
Episode 29 (June 7, 2022)
Hodgkinson and Hodges
Brazil (O’ Breasal)
Newsome
Wood(s)
Elkins
Lunsford
DeHart
Varney
Episode 30 (June 14, 2022)
Woodland
Flatt and Flett
Gentry
Ison
Hamrick and Hammerich
Snell and Schnell
Jaynes and Janes
Jude
Puckett
Episode 31 (June 21, 2022)
Brown
Hartley
Fletcher
Hildebrand
Duggar
Dalton
Bunch
Hardwick
McWhorter
Episode 32 (June 28, 2022)
Young/Younger
Basham
Head
Frick(s)
Gilley
Shelton
Frances
Pearce
Episode 33 (July 6, 2022)
Beach
Gardiner
Kerr/Carr
Hedger
Bowles
Curd
Mercer
Kendrick
Dischner
Episode 34 (July 12, 2022)
Brimmer, Brymer
Childress, Childers, Childs
Honaker, Honegger
Wood, Woods
Dooley
Lynch
Simmons, Simonds,
Knowles
Horne
Episode 35 (July 19, 2022)
Redden
Rowan
Hollon
Palmer
Wilde
Clayborne
Jenkins
Meadows
Forester
Episode 36 (July 26, 2022)
West
Lay
Foster
Leavey
Bolling
Webster
Ballard
Barnes
Eason
Ashcroft
Episode 37 (August 2, 2022)
King
Fortune
Darling, Darlin
Christian
Taylor
Moody, Moodie
Duff
Campbell
Allen, Alen, Allan, Alan
Cable
Episode 38 (August 9, 2022)
Barker
Petry
Pauley
Brumfield
Henry
Shannon
Templeton
Oney, Onley, Onely
Sledge
McKee
MacIan
Episode 39 (August 16, 2022)
Leverett, Liverett
Smallwood
Stow(e)
Lovejoy
Burnside
Selvage
Lawson
Mattox/Maddox
McClister, McAllister
Lowe
Episode 40 (August 23, 2022)
Rowe
Collinsworth
Roark
McReynolds
Gilbert
Perkey
Badgett
Gilliland
Webb
Pirtle
Episode 41 (August 30, 2022)
Mayes
Fortenberry
Fortner, Furtner
Hammett
Fleenor
Grantham
Cairns, Karnes
Pitt(s)
Berry
Barry, Barrie
Episode 42 (September 6, 2022)
Mayberry/ Maybury
Martin
Griffin
Midkiff
Adams
Episode 43 (September 13, 2022)
Yonts, Janz
Parrott
Kinder
Wingfield
Rose
Yates
Queen, McQueen
Mulkeahey, Mulcahy
Mitchusson, Mitchelson
Galloway
Episode 44 (September 21, 2022)
Goggans, Goggins
Light
Skinner
Ramey
Enterkin
Holloway
Borders
Fitch
Ollis, Ollas, Olice
Clark
Episode 45 (September 27, 2022)
Ray/Rhea/ Wray
Craddock
Castle, Kassel
Grimm, Grim, and Grime
Mixon, Nixon (Shout out to David Orochena (Ore-O-Chen-a.).
Pace
Capps
Beasley
Episode 46 (October 4, 2022)
Baxter
Coomer, Comber
Bass
Maggard
Arthur
Crisman, Chrisman
Radabaugh
York
Episode 47 (October 11, 2022)
Godfrey
Kinsey, Kimsey
Long
Addington
Medley
Medlin
Ferris, Farris
Episode 48 (October 25, 2022)
Thacker
Childers
Gossett
Sharpe
Jordan
Case
Sutton
Episode 49 (November 1, 2022)
Rambert
Webster
Ballard
Crookshanks, Cruickshank
Hacker
Huggins, Hugans, Huggons
Hanson, Hansen
Huckaby, Huckabee, Huccaby
Episode 50 (November 8, 2022)
Shamblin/Chamblin
Norwood
Jarvis
Ramsey
Truman
Bragg
Sloan, Slone
Nichols
Hammond
Episode 51 (Recorded out of order on January 10, 2023)
Bain
Cantrell
Christopher
Black
Garman
Mason
Litton/Lytton
Helton
Turpin
Episode 52 (December 13, 2022)
Choat, Choate
Todd
Sircy, Searcy
Dickson, Dixon
Peoples
Aycock, Adcock
Grace
Harrington
Episode 53 (January 17, 2023)
Helton
Turpin
Massey
McGibbon
Younger
Hurst
Henderson
Episode 54 (January 21, 2023)
Hammack
Thurston
Persinger, Bersinger
Robbins
McHam
Estep
Drummond
O’Neal, O’Neil, O’Neal
Episode 55 (April 5, 2023)
Harlan(d)
Buffington
Shields
Grant
Emery, Emory
Luttrell
Archer
Ayers, Ayres
Episode 56 (April 12, 2023)
Chester
Kemplin
Lay(s)
Kelley, Kelly
Peters
Robinson
Goble, Gobble
Episode 57 (April 18, 2023)
Hob, Hobb, Hobbs
Wilcox, Wilcocks
Lawson
Thomas, McTavish, MacThomas
Lane
Marshall
Maloney, Moloney
Hughes, Huws
Episode 58 (May 9, 2023)
Deaton
Couch
Colburn
Mayo
Maness
Hutton
Bartlett
deHart
Episode 59 (May 16, 2023)
Cremeans
Catlett
Croft
Marshman
Craver
Hanes
Everhart
Loftin
Episode 60 (May 26, 2023)
Mize
Etherton
Burchfield
Moon
Strange
Sherrill
Lyon
Payne
Episode 61 (June 6, 2023)
Collett
Sample(s)
Scruggs
McCann
Hill
Skaggs
Sparks
Sturgill, Stodghill
Episode 62 (June 13, 2023)
Doss/Dawes
Sandifer
Estes
Rogers
Barnes
Eason
Ashcroft
Episode 63 (June 22, 2023)
Burton
Windolph
Shinkle, Schinkel, Schenkel
McFarlin
Manning
Pendleton
Poage
Kennedy
Episode 64 (June 27, 2023)
Brooks
Fike
Basham
Spradlin
Fettinger
Maynard
Kidwell
Murray
Episode 65 (July 11, 2023)
Cline
Stepp
Coppess
Westbrook
Burnham
Setzer
Stevens, Stephens
Hawthorn
Craig
Episode 66 (July 18, 2023)
Lanier
Ferebee
Presley
Blankenship
Sisson
MacCarroll
Hastings
Winters
Episode 67 (July 31, 2023)
Ginn
Tallman
Stooksbury
Kyker, Keicher
Ailor, Aylor
Weaver
Whitehead
Oxendine
Episode 68 (August 8, 2023)
Absher
Prather
Pigman
Wetzel
McGhee
Stanley
Garrett
Episode 69 (August 22, 2023)
Meece
Van Hook
Vanover
Holt
Hargis
Sinclair
Scott
Some surnames are Newsome, Compton, Coleman, and Branham
I was married to a Appalachia family named Louthan. They were redhaired Irish but I have found the name is supposed to be English. What do you think?
Hi Sandra, first I want to say that members of the Ledford family have been friends with my mother's people (Cherokee County, North Carolina and Anderson County, Tennessee for many generations. Louthan is a name that belonged to a student had at Lincoln Memorial University. Sadly, he was killed in a motorcycle accident about 15 years ago. I think you will find that Louthan is an alternate form of Lothian, so it it is hence a Scottish toponymic.
Thank you for replying. These Louthan’s were mostly from the tazewell-Sneedsville area. The patriarch was John and wife Bonnie that had a farm about 20 miles up the holler from Tazewell
@@sandraledford4615 I had a student at LMU named Chris Louthan who was killed on a motorcycle. I think he was part of that family.
Both sides of my family have been in South Georgia long before the Creeks Indian where pushed out of this area
My grandmother was a Fleetwood and a Jackson
It’s been said she was related to President Jackson
But Fleetwood is not heard of to much
Hi Ed, I too am connected to Andrew Jackson through his mom's family (McKamey). See Episode 24 for Jackson.
Mick Fleetwood, the British drummer in Fleetwood Mac
My last name is Himes. I looked everywhere trying to figure out where it was from. Daddy always said it was German, but there seem to be fewer than 200 Anericans with my last name,and when I joined Ancestry we all seem to be related. My DNA seemed to show the last Himes before we came over the pond was in the 1700s though. I would be grateful if you can help, because the more I look the harder it gets. It's almost like a little German but a lot of Welsh and Irish, and all in Pennsylvania for the last 350 years. My ex husband was Murphy, so that was easy enough, but then my daughters DNA profile came back showing more Irish on my side than her father's.
Joanna, check out the German Heimes.
@@BarryVann Thank you! I had sorta wondered about that
My dad was a Glenn, my mom was a Gallamore
Thanks for watching and for writing, Barb!
They say “patience is a virtue” so I wait…😊😊😊
I bet that is a virtue in the Marine Corps.
Check out this Marine Arnold Murray from The shepherds chapel Lost tribes of Israel found, kentucky stones, Bat Creek stones, horse's of the Bible, ship's of God, rapture theory,etc.Or Eagle wings ministries, Just Thoughts studies, Smyrna Christian Church in Kokomo.💪😇🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
Cottrell Townsend
I am having a hard time finding the origin and meaning of the last name Ingle. Can you help me?
See my comment that you submitted earlier.
Lots of Ramey and Ramsey in my line.
Hi Mary, like you, I have Ramsey genes in me.
Rémy - A slight correction: Rémy is very French, and should be pronounced /ray-mee/, but yes, it was borrowed into English and some people may pronounce it /ree-mee/ and spell it without the acute accent mark from French. A quick lookup shows Rémy as the French name form of Remigius from Late Latin, and Rémy is the French cousin of Remigio in Spanish, Portuguese and Italian. Religious, the source says, is the name form of the word remigis, meaning an oarsman or rower. I would have guessed it was related to Remus, the brother of Romulus, the twin founders of Rome raised by a she-wolf Lupa, in Roman legends. (And all tht is from reading.) But this says Remigius instead. Rémy is a very French name. But I've seen it and a few others used even in the older generations by English speakers, Americans. -- Aside: This reminds me that my maternal grandmother (from Tis and Oklahoma) had a female cousin named Reenie. (That's the only spelling of it I've seen, and spelling back in their parents' generation was, uh, very iffy. At a guess, I would think Reenie might be a mispronunciation and misunderstanding of the French name Renée (feminine) and René (masculine). Both forms are from earlier Renata, Renato (Renatus), meaning reborn, born again, typically in the christian sense. Yes, Renato, Renata, René, Renée are related, the latter from French, the former from Latin, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian. Note some French names and words were borrowed into English back from the Norman (French) Cnquest, while others are more modern, from the 1700's on into the present. Note too, there were French immigrants, both from Canada and Louisiana, but also into the early 13 colonies, the first United States, due to trade, technology, diplomacy, and the American and French Revolutionary and philosophical connections which influenced our American Revolution. -- I've never seen the source claiming Rémy means a sweller in a wooded area, and I don't know any etymology source for that. Rémy is not a Gaelic / Celtic or Gaulish / Gallic origin word nor Frankish Northmen Norman word nor Breton Brittany or British word. (The Bretons or Bretagnards are the Gaelic people formerly of pre-Anglo-sason Britain who relocated to their home territory in Bretagne, Brittany, in northern France.) The Gauls (Gallia) were the Celtic / Gaelic people in Gaul (Gallia) which later became France (Francia, land of the Frankish Germanic tribes). and the Normans were the Northmen, related to Danes and Vikings. In other words, all of Northern Europe was littered with migrations and conquests from the Roman period on into medical times before settling down into modern peoples. The British Isles and France and near France were particularly prone to this.
Enterkin and Holloway (versus Halvey) -- Beware of equating Gaelic (Scottish and/or Irish) names with English names, although it is commonly done. The word-history (etymology) and sources are often completely different, and only equated from rough similarities, sometimes with not even much basis there. I would bet that Holloway and Scottish Halvey are not related in origin. And Holloway, either as a path in a hollow (holler) (a hollow was a word used in English at the time the colonies were founded, thus how it was used in Appalachian place-names), or else that sunken path /road. Either meaning seems equally plausible. -- The suffix -kin was an Old English and Middle English diminutive suffix used for girls or boys or for animals or things that were small, little, young, cute, new. Many English names have -kkin as a suffix, but today we don't even see it as a suffix because it became archaic, unused. So Adkins, Atkins, Aikin, Larkin, Watkins, Perkins, Simpkins, Tompkins, Wilkins, and on and on. Dawkins too. All were related to nicknames plus that -kin for little/cute, like we use -y or -ie today for nicknames. -- But Enterkin is not this, it's from Scots Gaelic somehow,, apparently. --
Bordrer, Boarder -- I believe English has "board" as in a plank, a piece of wood, separately from border (a boundary) or boarder (someone who gets room and board, board being an old term for a table or bench and table, and therefore food, dining, eating.) -- French has le lord, un lord, meaning a side, a border, which was borrowed into Middle English as border. (Bordeaux is unrelated.) So the surname Border or Border could be from any of these, either the English names or the French names. I don't know if there is a German word that's related, or a nmame. I don't speak enough German.
Fitch -- could be related to Fitz- which was the Norman French form of Parisian French fils (son). I think there's another meaning for Fitch, but don't recall where I saw it. But I/m agreeing with the video maker's statement.
Ollis, etc. -- Oh, that, and the English respellings from the Gaelic (Scottish and Irish) sources are definitely Gaelic. The British / English (Sassenachs) had big trouble spelling Irish and Scottish Gaelic names, words, and often just plain substituted something halfway close in English.
Clark and O'Clery -- These all go back to Latin "cleric," and so does the word clergy. A modern clerk is from a secretary, assistant, shopkeeper, someone who could write, tae notes, do arithmetic, bookkeeper, from that educated cleric background. In the Middle Ages, emerging townsfolk and merchant-class and bourgeoisie (just means townsfolk) (burgess), might have their sons tutored by a monk or priest or sent to study at the local church or monastery, because those were the few sources of education, reading and writing. So clerks developed from that background. In Middle English, clerk and clark were pronounced about the same, the eh or ay instead of ah or uh sometimes merged for -er-. So a clark was a clerk and vice versa. And O'Clery is likely from a similar term like cleric, clergy, clerk, borrowed into Irish and Scottish Gaelic (I don't know the etymology for Clery, Cleary, O'Clery, so I'd recommend boule-checking Cleary and Clery and O'Clery with Gaelic Scottish and Irish source material. -- Oh, and Eccles, Eckles, Eccleston -- are related to cleric and clergy too, Eccles, Eccleisastic, Ecclesiastes, mean a church or from the church (Ecclesias). Moder French église, Spanish Iglesias (yes, Julio and Enrique Iglesias) -- all mean a church, originally from Latin. The words got borrowed into English and Gaelic, and stayed from Latin into its daughter languages French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, Romanian, and a few others.
Thanks, Ben! Barry
Yes sir, I am curious if surname of Hicks, potter and roulette
Episode 1 November 15, 2021:
Anderson
Buchanan
Callahan
Duncan
Evans
Graham
Johnson/ Jones
Owens
Murphy
Parton
Relevant
Episode 2 December 16, 2021
Reed
Wallace
Sneed
Parsons
Morgan
Dunlap
Waddie
Williams
Walker
Ferguson
Episode 3 December 21, 2021
Hutchison/Hutchinson
Thompson/Thomson
Wynn
Shackelford
Walmsley
Devol
Beverly
Cobb
Moore
Spence
Cochran
Episode 4 December 20, 2021
Cornett
Stone/Stane
Ratcliff
Bush
McNair
Spiller
Lewis
Wright
Hall
Ham
Episode 5 January 4, 2021
Hale
Zwingli, Singly
Colvin
Pepper
Phipps/Phillips
Warren
Ausmus
Quinn
Monroe
Jerrell/Gerald
Mooney
Episode 6 January 11, 2021
Lyle(s)/Lisle(s)
Lindsey
Carlin
Dominey
Oliver
Adkins
Browning
Hensley
Crum
Lee/Lea
Episode 7 January 20, 2021
Meeks
Harvey
Prater
White
Copeland
Keen/Keene
Patterson
Hawkins
Kilby
Gordon
Fugate
Episode 8
Gibson
Chisholm
Branscomb
Hughes
Sizemore
Kirkland
Roberts
Robertson
Watson
Hatfield
Mullins
Episode 9 (February 3, 2022)
Coots
Russell
Byers
Poland
Hicks
Tomlinson
Scantlin/Scanlon
Upchurch
Wilson
Episode 10 (February 10, 2022)
Blevins
Talley/Tally
Newell
Simpson/Simms/Simson
Hood
Crowder
Priddy
Sanders/Saunders
Evans
Episode 11 (February 15, 2022)
Longmire
Hatfield
Kildare
Kincaid
Stewart/Stuart
McCollough
Haney
Bell
Caldwell
Episode 12 (February 17, 2022)
Grier or Greer
Sumner
Burke
Barnett
Perry or Parry
Fultz
Gatlin
Dunn or Dunne or Dunning
Corbin
Episode 13 (February 23, 2022)
Burrell
Carver
Stokes
Franklin
Cox
Tipton
Hamilton
Skene
Marcum
Episode 14 (March 1, 2022)
Suttles
Perkins
Lamb
Davis
Gallaher
Philpot
Graves
Pichon
Ramsey
Episode 15 (March 4, 2022)
Gray
Bussell
Lanham
Coulter
Runyon
Stapleton
Broom
Meade
Montgomery
Cooper
Episode 16 (March 10, 2022)
Underwood
Scoggins
Pearson
Cressy
Finlay
Bond
Johnston
Tait
Episode 17
Jeffers
Mitchell
Harrison
Hunt
Pickett
Eldridge
Crowe
Caudill
Morris
Langdon or Langton
Episode 18
Couch
Kees
Bailey
Miller
Culbertson
MacArthur
Lovell
Shinn
Hankins
Spencer
Episode 19
Fox
Ledford
Mason
Alexander
Halsey
Warden
Whaley
Bennett
Stringer
Hewitt
Episode 20 (April 5, 2022)
Snyder
Brock
Hancock
Whitehead
Collins
Gregory
Craven
Orr
Episode 21 (April 12, 2022)
Masters
Kirkland
McKiddy (No find)
Gruggett (No Find)
Glozier (No Find)
Hamby
Houston
Boren
Gooden
Carroll
Austin
Herndon
Episode 22 (April 19, 2022)
Sherril
Millsaps
Rowland
Morton
Conley
Sanson
Rader
Autry
McDowell
Episode 23 (April 27, 2022)
Bryan, Brien, Bryan, Bryant
Keziah, Kiziah
Clowers
Dunford
Harmon, Harman, Herman
Aycock, Heycock
Nash
Golden
Holbrook
Bilbrey, Bilbray, Bilby
Episode 24 (May 3, 2022)
Bird/Byrd
Bridgeman
Huddleston/Hiddleston
Scott
Hopkins
Holyfield
Bradley
Jackson
Rice/Rhys
Episode 25 (May 9, 2022)
Baldwin
Baker
Burris
McClain
Cummings
Boggs
Pritchard
Nolan
Episode 26 (May 17, 2022)
Clary
McNeal
Rathbone
Belcher
Holmes
Harris
Barr
Ford
Tucker
Episode 27 (May 24, 2022)
Forbes
Combs
Adkinson/Atkinson /Acheson
Howard
Bruce
Duggan
Butler
Goins
Mader
Powell
Episode 28 (May 31, 2022)
Hannah
Hoskins
Mosley
Higginbotham
Davenport
Durley
Reynolds
Bays
Campbell
Episode 29 (June 7, 2022)
Hodgkinson and Hodges
Brazil (O’ Breasal)
Newsome
Wood(s)
Elkins
Lunsford
DeHart
Varney
Episode 30 (June 14, 2022)
Woodland
Flatt and Flett
Gentry
Ison
Hamrick and Hammerich
Snell and Schnell
Jaynes and Janes
Jude
Puckett
Episode 31 (June 21, 2022)
Brown
Hartley
Fletcher
Hildebrand
Duggar
Dalton
Bunch
Hardwick
McWhorter
Episode 32 (June 28, 2022)
Young/Younger
Basham
Head
Frick(s)
Gilley
Shelton
Frances
Pearce
Episode 33 (July 6, 2022)
Beach
Gardiner
Kerr/Carr
Hedger
Bowles
Curd
Mercer
Kendrick
Dischner
Episode 34 (July 12, 2022)
Brimmer, Brymer
Childress, Childers, Childs
Honaker, Honegger
Wood, Woods
Dooley
Lynch
Simmons, Simonds,
Knowles
Horne
Episode 35 (July 19, 2022)
Redden
Rowan
Hollon
Palmer
Wilde
Clayborne
Jenkins
Meadows
Forester
Episode 36 (July 26, 2022)
West
Lay
Foster
Leavey
Bolling
Webster
Ballard
Barnes
Eason
Ashcroft
Episode 37 (August 2, 2022)
King
Fortune
Darling, Darlin
Christian
Taylor
Moody, Moodie
Duff
Campbell
Allen, Alen, Allan, Alan
Cable
Episode 38 (August 9, 2022)
Barker
Petry
Pauley
Brumfield
Henry
Shannon
Templeton
Oney, Onley, Onely
Sledge
McKee
MacIan
Episode 39 (August 16, 2022)
Leverett, Liverett
Smallwood
Stow(e)
Lovejoy
Burnside
Selvage
Lawson
Mattox/Maddox
McClister, McAllister
Lowe
Episode 40 (August 23, 2022)
Rowe
Collinsworth
Roark
McReynolds
Gilbert
Perkey
Badgett
Gilliland
Webb
Pirtle
Episode 41 (August 30, 2022)
Mayes
Fortenberry
Fortner, Furtner
Hammett
Fleenor
Grantham
Cairns, Karnes
Pitt(s)
Berry
Barry, Barrie
Episode 42 (September 6, 2022)
Mayberry/ Maybury
Martin
Griffin
Midkiff
Adams
Episode 43 (September 13, 2022)
Yonts, Janz
Parrott
Kinder
Wingfield
Rose
Yates
Queen, McQueen
Mulkeahey, Mulcahy
Mitchusson, Mitchelson
Galloway
Episode 44 (September 21, 2022)
Goggans, Goggins
Light
Skinner
Ramey
Enterkin
Holloway
Borders
Fitch
Ollis, Ollas, Olice
Clark
Episode 45 (September 27, 2022)
Ray/Rhea/ Wray
Craddock
Castle, Kassel
Grimm, Grim, and Grime
Mixon, Nixon (Shout out to David Orochena (Ore-O-Chen-a.).
Pace
Capps
Beasley
Episode 46 (October 4, 2022)
Baxter
Coomer, Comber
Bass
Maggard
Arthur
Crisman, Chrisman
Radabaugh
York
Episode 47 (October 11, 2022)
Godfrey
Kinsey, Kimsey
Long
Addington
Medley
Medlin
Ferris, Farris
Episode 48 (October 25, 2022)
Thacker
Childers
Gossett
Sharpe
Jordan
Case
Sutton
Episode 49 (November 1, 2022)
Rambert
Webster
Ballard
Crookshanks, Cruickshank
Hacker
Huggins, Hugans, Huggons
Hanson, Hansen
Huckaby, Huckabee, Huccaby
Episode 50 (November 8, 2022)
Shamblin/Chamblin
Norwood
Jarvis
Ramsey
Truman
Bragg
Sloan, Slone
Nichols
Hammond
Episode 51 (Recorded out of order on January 10, 2023)
Bain
Cantrell
Christopher
Black
Garman
Mason
Litton/Lytton
Helton
Turpin
Episode 52 (December 13, 2022)
Choat, Choate
Todd
Sircy, Searcy
Dickson, Dixon
Peoples
Aycock, Adcock
Grace
Harrington
Episode 53 (January 17, 2023)
Helton
Turpin
Massey
McGibbon
Younger
Hurst
Henderson
Episode 54 (January 21, 2023)
Hammack
Thurston
Persinger, Bersinger
Robbins
McHam
Estep
Drummond
O’Neal, O’Neil, O’Neal
Episode 55 (April 5, 2023)
Harlan(d)
Buffington
Shields
Grant
Emery, Emory
Luttrell
Archer
Ayers, Ayres
Episode 56 (April 12, 2023)
Chester
Kemplin
Lay(s)
Kelley, Kelly
Peters
Robinson
Goble, Gobble
Episode 57 (April 18, 2023)
Hob, Hobb, Hobbs
Wilcox, Wilcocks
Lawson
Thomas, McTavish, MacThomas
Lane
Marshall
Maloney, Moloney
Hughes, Huws
Episode 58 (May 9, 2023)
Deaton
Couch
Colburn
Mayo
Maness
Hutton
Bartlett
deHart
Episode 59 (May 16, 2023)
Cremeans
Catlett
Croft
Marshman
Craver
Hanes
Everhart
Loftin
Episode 60 (May 26, 2023)
Mize
Etherton
Burchfield
Moon
Strange
Sherrill
Lyon
Payne
Episode 61 (June 6, 2023)
Collett
Sample(s)
Scruggs
McCann
Hill
Skaggs
Sparks
Sturgill, Stodghill
Episode 62 (June 13, 2023)
Doss/Dawes
Sandifer
Estes
Rogers
Barnes
Eason
Ashcroft
Episode 63 (June 22, 2023)
Burton
Windolph
Shinkle, Schinkel, Schenkel
McFarlin
Manning
Pendleton
Poage
Kennedy
Episode 64 (June 27, 2023)
Brooks
Fike
Basham
Spradlin
Fettinger
Maynard
Kidwell
Murray
Episode 65 (July 11, 2023)
Cline
Stepp
Coppess
Westbrook
Burnham
Setzer
Stevens, Stephens
Hawthorn
Craig
Episode 66 (July 18, 2023)
Lanier
Ferebee
Presley
Blankenship
Sisson
MacCarroll
Hastings
Winters
Episode 67 (July 31, 2023)
Ginn
Tallman
Stooksbury
Kyker, Keicher
Ailor, Aylor
Weaver
Whitehead
Oxendine
Episode 68 (August 8, 2023)
Absher
Prather
Pigman
Wetzel
McGhee
Stanley
Garrett
Episode 69 (August 22, 2023)
Meece
Van Hook
Vanover
Holt
Hargis
Sinclair
Scott
Episode 70 (September 5, 2023)
Mims
Hurley
Easterly
Knox
Gillette
Peak
Coley, Colley, Collie
Episode 71 (September 12, 2023)
House
Doherty
McManus
Hagler
Fields
Messer
Renfro, Renfroe, Renfrow
Episode 72 (September 20, 2023)
Hunter
Coffee
Gunter
Muse
Rigney
Wood, Woods, Woodson
McCleve /McCleave
Episode 73 (September 26, 2023)
Pike
Lambert
Heavens
Burgess
Crider
Bethea
Westray
Thank you
Any info on the name BADGER?
Sharon, it's on the list to cover, but there are quite a few in front of it.
what about the name Colley of appalachian mountains
Hi! I can look into it.
Hello from Montana, I'm still anticipating the explanation of my last name,,, I have family members in the south east,,, and Skinner,, and killing or killin,,, and these people are war like,,, anyway thanks 👍
Thanks, Guy! Barry
Payne, Poyner, Sims, Tarkenton, Dodson, Kidd,
Hi Cam, Dobson and Payne were already on the list to cover. I've added the other three. There are several hundred names before them, so I appreciate your patience. Kind regards, Barry Vann
@@BarryVann Thank-you and thanks for the reply ! Much appreciated...! You are !!!
@@BarryVann oooh...it's Do"D"son as well.
Requesting....surnames....stidham...and....wisener....thanks....
Added! Thanks, Grady! There are several hundred names before them, so I appreciate your patience as I make my way to them. Barry
Cottrell Townsend
User, they are on the list of names to cover, but they are not together.
My Cousin who lives in Pike Co Ky claims that the Appalachians speak Elizabethen English. I don't think he realises that he speech patterns have changed in the last 200 years in Appalachia. down hill.
Some of the words and expressions of Appalachian English are rooted in the 16th century, but those words have been slowly disappearing from use. Words like yunz and reckon are still around, but we seldom hear words like hankerin to used.
Allman?
Hi Alvin, it's on the list. Thanks! Barry
Surnames of Harbison, reed, word or sparks
Episode 1 November 15, 2021:
Anderson
Buchanan
Callahan
Duncan
Evans
Graham
Johnson/ Jones
Owens
Murphy
Parton
Relevant
Episode 2 December 16, 2021
Reed
Wallace
Sneed
Parsons
Morgan
Dunlap
Waddie
Williams
Walker
Ferguson
Episode 3 December 21, 2021
Hutchison/Hutchinson
Thompson/Thomson
Wynn
Shackelford
Walmsley
Devol
Beverly
Cobb
Moore
Spence
Cochran
Episode 4 December 20, 2021
Cornett
Stone/Stane
Ratcliff
Bush
McNair
Spiller
Lewis
Wright
Hall
Ham
Episode 5 January 4, 2021
Hale
Zwingli, Singly
Colvin
Pepper
Phipps/Phillips
Warren
Ausmus
Quinn
Monroe
Jerrell/Gerald
Mooney
Episode 6 January 11, 2021
Lyle(s)/Lisle(s)
Lindsey
Carlin
Dominey
Oliver
Adkins
Browning
Hensley
Crum
Lee/Lea
Episode 7 January 20, 2021
Meeks
Harvey
Prater
White
Copeland
Keen/Keene
Patterson
Hawkins
Kilby
Gordon
Fugate
Episode 8
Gibson
Chisholm
Branscomb
Hughes
Sizemore
Kirkland
Roberts
Robertson
Watson
Hatfield
Mullins
Episode 9 (February 3, 2022)
Coots
Russell
Byers
Poland
Hicks
Tomlinson
Scantlin/Scanlon
Upchurch
Wilson
Episode 10 (February 10, 2022)
Blevins
Talley/Tally
Newell
Simpson/Simms/Simson
Hood
Crowder
Priddy
Sanders/Saunders
Evans
Episode 11 (February 15, 2022)
Longmire
Hatfield
Kildare
Kincaid
Stewart/Stuart
McCollough
Haney
Bell
Caldwell
Episode 12 (February 17, 2022)
Grier or Greer
Sumner
Burke
Barnett
Perry or Parry
Fultz
Gatlin
Dunn or Dunne or Dunning
Corbin
Episode 13 (February 23, 2022)
Burrell
Carver
Stokes
Franklin
Cox
Tipton
Hamilton
Skene
Marcum
Episode 14 (March 1, 2022)
Suttles
Perkins
Lamb
Davis
Gallaher
Philpot
Graves
Pichon
Ramsey
Episode 15 (March 4, 2022)
Gray
Bussell
Lanham
Coulter
Runyon
Stapleton
Broom
Meade
Montgomery
Cooper
Episode 16 (March 10, 2022)
Underwood
Scoggins
Pearson
Cressy
Finlay
Bond
Johnston
Tait
Episode 17
Jeffers
Mitchell
Harrison
Hunt
Pickett
Eldridge
Crowe
Caudill
Morris
Langdon or Langton
Episode 18
Couch
Kees
Bailey
Miller
Culbertson
MacArthur
Lovell
Shinn
Hankins
Spencer
Episode 19
Fox
Ledford
Mason
Alexander
Halsey
Warden
Whaley
Bennett
Stringer
Hewitt
Episode 20 (April 5, 2022)
Snyder
Brock
Hancock
Whitehead
Collins
Gregory
Craven
Orr
Episode 21 (April 12, 2022)
Masters
Kirkland
McKiddy (No find)
Gruggett (No Find)
Glozier (No Find)
Hamby
Houston
Boren
Gooden
Carroll
Austin
Herndon
Episode 22 (April 19, 2022)
Sherril
Millsaps
Rowland
Morton
Conley
Sanson
Rader
Autry
McDowell
Episode 23 (April 27, 2022)
Bryan, Brien, Bryan, Bryant
Keziah, Kiziah
Clowers
Dunford
Harmon, Harman, Herman
Aycock, Heycock
Nash
Golden
Holbrook
Bilbrey, Bilbray, Bilby
Episode 24 (May 3, 2022)
Bird/Byrd
Bridgeman
Huddleston/Hiddleston
Scott
Hopkins
Holyfield
Bradley
Jackson
Rice/Rhys
Episode 25 (May 9, 2022)
Baldwin
Baker
Burris
McClain
Cummings
Boggs
Pritchard
Nolan
Episode 26 (May 17, 2022)
Clary
McNeal
Rathbone
Belcher
Holmes
Harris
Barr
Ford
Tucker
Episode 27 (May 24, 2022)
Forbes
Combs
Adkinson/Atkinson /Acheson
Howard
Bruce
Duggan
Butler
Goins
Mader
Powell
Episode 28 (May 31, 2022)
Hannah
Hoskins
Mosley
Higginbotham
Davenport
Durley
Reynolds
Bays
Campbell
Episode 29 (June 7, 2022)
Hodgkinson and Hodges
Brazil (O’ Breasal)
Newsome
Wood(s)
Elkins
Lunsford
DeHart
Varney
Episode 30 (June 14, 2022)
Woodland
Flatt and Flett
Gentry
Ison
Hamrick and Hammerich
Snell and Schnell
Jaynes and Janes
Jude
Puckett
Episode 31 (June 21, 2022)
Brown
Hartley
Fletcher
Hildebrand
Duggar
Dalton
Bunch
Hardwick
McWhorter
Episode 32 (June 28, 2022)
Young/Younger
Basham
Head
Frick(s)
Gilley
Shelton
Frances
Pearce
Episode 33 (July 6, 2022)
Beach
Gardiner
Kerr/Carr
Hedger
Bowles
Curd
Mercer
Kendrick
Dischner
Episode 34 (July 12, 2022)
Brimmer, Brymer
Childress, Childers, Childs
Honaker, Honegger
Wood, Woods
Dooley
Lynch
Simmons, Simonds,
Knowles
Horne
Episode 35 (July 19, 2022)
Redden
Rowan
Hollon
Palmer
Wilde
Clayborne
Jenkins
Meadows
Forester
Episode 36 (July 26, 2022)
West
Lay
Foster
Leavey
Bolling
Webster
Ballard
Barnes
Eason
Ashcroft
Episode 37 (August 2, 2022)
King
Fortune
Darling, Darlin
Christian
Taylor
Moody, Moodie
Duff
Campbell
Allen, Alen, Allan, Alan
Cable
Episode 38 (August 9, 2022)
Barker
Petry
Pauley
Brumfield
Henry
Shannon
Templeton
Oney, Onley, Onely
Sledge
McKee
MacIan
Episode 39 (August 16, 2022)
Leverett, Liverett
Smallwood
Stow(e)
Lovejoy
Burnside
Selvage
Lawson
Mattox/Maddox
McClister, McAllister
Lowe
Episode 40 (August 23, 2022)
Rowe
Collinsworth
Roark
McReynolds
Gilbert
Perkey
Badgett
Gilliland
Webb
Pirtle
Episode 41 (August 30, 2022)
Mayes
Fortenberry
Fortner, Furtner
Hammett
Fleenor
Grantham
Cairns, Karnes
Pitt(s)
Berry
Barry, Barrie
Episode 42 (September 6, 2022)
Mayberry/ Maybury
Martin
Griffin
Midkiff
Adams
Episode 43 (September 13, 2022)
Yonts, Janz
Parrott
Kinder
Wingfield
Rose
Yates
Queen, McQueen
Mulkeahey, Mulcahy
Mitchusson, Mitchelson
Galloway
Episode 44 (September 21, 2022)
Goggans, Goggins
Light
Skinner
Ramey
Enterkin
Holloway
Borders
Fitch
Ollis, Ollas, Olice
Clark
Episode 45 (September 27, 2022)
Ray/Rhea/ Wray
Craddock
Castle, Kassel
Grimm, Grim, and Grime
Mixon, Nixon (Shout out to David Orochena (Ore-O-Chen-a.).
Pace
Capps
Beasley
Episode 46 (October 4, 2022)
Baxter
Coomer, Comber
Bass
Maggard
Arthur
Crisman, Chrisman
Radabaugh
York
Episode 47 (October 11, 2022)
Godfrey
Kinsey, Kimsey
Long
Addington
Medley
Medlin
Ferris, Farris
Episode 48 (October 25, 2022)
Thacker
Childers
Gossett
Sharpe
Jordan
Case
Sutton
Episode 49 (November 1, 2022)
Rambert
Webster
Ballard
Crookshanks, Cruickshank
Hacker
Huggins, Hugans, Huggons
Hanson, Hansen
Huckaby, Huckabee, Huccaby
Episode 50 (November 8, 2022)
Shamblin/Chamblin
Norwood
Jarvis
Ramsey
Truman
Bragg
Sloan, Slone
Nichols
Hammond
Episode 51 (Recorded out of order on January 10, 2023)
Bain
Cantrell
Christopher
Black
Garman
Mason
Litton/Lytton
Helton
Turpin
Episode 52 (December 13, 2022)
Choat, Choate
Todd
Sircy, Searcy
Dickson, Dixon
Peoples
Aycock, Adcock
Grace
Harrington
Episode 53 (January 17, 2023)
Helton
Turpin
Massey
McGibbon
Younger
Hurst
Henderson
Episode 54 (January 21, 2023)
Hammack
Thurston
Persinger, Bersinger
Robbins
McHam
Estep
Drummond
O’Neal, O’Neil, O’Neal
Episode 55 (April 5, 2023)
Harlan(d)
Buffington
Shields
Grant
Emery, Emory
Luttrell
Archer
Ayers, Ayres
Episode 56 (April 12, 2023)
Chester
Kemplin
Lay(s)
Kelley, Kelly
Peters
Robinson
Goble, Gobble
Episode 57 (April 18, 2023)
Hob, Hobb, Hobbs
Wilcox, Wilcocks
Lawson
Thomas, McTavish, MacThomas
Lane
Marshall
Maloney, Moloney
Hughes, Huws
Episode 58 (May 9, 2023)
Deaton
Couch
Colburn
Mayo
Maness
Hutton
Bartlett
deHart
Episode 59 (May 16, 2023)
Cremeans
Catlett
Croft
Marshman
Craver
Hanes
Everhart
Loftin
Episode 60 (May 26, 2023)
Mize
Etherton
Burchfield
Moon
Strange
Sherrill
Lyon
Payne
Episode 61 (June 6, 2023)
Collett
Sample(s)
Scruggs
McCann
Hill
Skaggs
Sparks
Sturgill, Stodghill
Episode 62 (June 13, 2023)
Doss/Dawes
Sandifer
Estes
Rogers
Barnes
Eason
Ashcroft
Episode 63 (June 22, 2023)
Burton
Windolph
Shinkle, Schinkel, Schenkel
McFarlin
Manning
Pendleton
Poage
Kennedy
Episode 64 (June 27, 2023)
Brooks
Fike
Basham
Spradlin
Fettinger
Maynard
Kidwell
Murray
Episode 65 (July 11, 2023)
Cline
Stepp
Coppess
Westbrook
Burnham
Setzer
Stevens, Stephens
Hawthorn
Craig
Episode 66 (July 18, 2023)
Lanier
Ferebee
Presley
Blankenship
Sisson
MacCarroll
Hastings
Winters
Episode 67 (July 31, 2023)
Ginn
Tallman
Stooksbury
Kyker, Keicher
Ailor, Aylor
Weaver
Whitehead
Oxendine
Episode 68 (August 8, 2023)
Absher
Prather
Pigman
Wetzel
McGhee
Stanley
Garrett
Episode 69 (August 22, 2023)
Meece
Van Hook
Vanover
Holt
Hargis
Sinclair
Scott
Episode 70 (September 5, 2023)
Mims
Hurley
Easterly
Knox
Gillette
Peak
Coley, Colley, Collie
Episode 71 (September 12, 2023)
House
Doherty
McManus
Hagler
Fields
Messer
Renfro, Renfroe, Renfrow
Episode 72 (September 20, 2023)
Hunter
Coffee
Gunter
Muse
Rigney
Wood, Woods, Woodson
McCleve /McCleave
Episode 73 (September 26, 2023)
Pike
Lambert
Heavens
Burgess
Crider
Bethea
Westray
A geographer will spot incorrect landscape elements in a movie!
It's one of the fun things that I like to do, Tom!
ANDERSON? Anyone
Episode One, but there are a few folks who claim that the Anderson surname in the South is Scandinavian. There have been few immigrants from Scandinavia relocating to the South or Appalachia. The bulk of them in the South are Scottish.