Author Topic: Naming kids after ancestors  (Read 17523 times)

Offline suey

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Re: Naming kids after ancestors
« Reply #9 on: Sunday 07 November 04 23:35 GMT (UK) »

Nutkin -I think using family names is a lovely idea - both my girls have their Grandmothers first names as second names..if we'd had boys they would have had their Grandpa's names.

How about suggesting a name from your hubbies family or one from each as a compromise !
All census lookups are Crown Copyright from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk
Sussex - Knapp. Nailard. Potten. Coleman. Pomfrey. Carter. Picknell
Greenwich/Woolwich. - Clowting. Davis. Kitts. Ferguson. Lowther. Carvalho. Pressman. Redknap. Argent.
Hertfordshire - Sturgeon. Bird. Rule. Claxton. Taylor. Braggins

Offline Fitty

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Re: Naming kids after ancestors
« Reply #10 on: Monday 08 November 04 14:01 GMT (UK) »
I,m named after my Grandmother and her Grandmother and a few aunts.  My daughter is named after me and her daughter is named after her.

Fitty is very poplular in our family you know! <chortle>

seriously tho.. my middle Name is Helena with a funnywotsit on the 2nd E..so is pronounced  Helaina.   Which i was ok with till my dad told me it's a very old fashioned Dutch name and a bit like being called Gertrude or Ethel in England   :-\
---------------------------------------                    <br />                    (  @ @  )<br />-----------oOOo-(_)-oOOo---------<br /><br />       Any one seen any BAXENDALES?<br /><br />--------oooO---------------Oooo-------<br />           (    )                    (    )<br />            \\\\  (                      )  /<br />             \\\\_)                    (_/<br /><br />Brighouse:  Smith<br />Lambeth: Clisby<br />Leeds: Baxendale,Baxter, Beales,Bowe

Offline molar

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Re: Naming kids after ancestors
« Reply #11 on: Monday 08 November 04 18:23 GMT (UK) »
slightly off topic! both mine and my husbands family only have one forename, ( my grandad was even reg as Tom not Thomas). We carried on this tradition believing that our son and daughter would never have anyone giggling at their middle name. All was well until yesterday , my son informed me he had difficulty filling in an online form, it had a space for middle name! he left it blank,not accepted!! he tried using space bar,not accepted! he tried "none" o.k! he didn't continue because he wasn't sure he wanted future correspondance addressed to J**** none A******. Any suggestions what he should put? my idea was * or perhaps he could award himself more than 1!!
Allison:Atkinson:Cooper:Forster:Greenway:Grieves:Hickman(also Staffs):Mason:Reed:Tennent:Waggott: Nothumberland/Durham.
Armitage:Balam:Bowden:Dean:Etchells: Farney: Stockport /Manchester
Pollitt: Failsworth.
McVeety: Melia: Ireland/Manchester.
Wathen: Bristol
Voigt: Germany/Bristol/Manchester.
Census information is Crown Copyright,from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk

Offline Annahannah

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Re: Naming kids after ancestors
« Reply #12 on: Monday 08 November 04 18:48 GMT (UK) »
I,m named after my Grandmother and her Grandmother and a few aunts.  My daughter is named after me and her daughter is named after her.

Fitty is very poplular in our family you know! <chortle>

seriously tho.. my middle Name is Helena with a funnywotsit on the 2nd E..so is pronounced  Helaina.   Which i was ok with till my dad told me it's a very old fashioned Dutch name and a bit like being called Gertrude or Ethel in England   :-\

I'm glad I wasn't named after my grandmothers: they both had very "period" names.  But my Dutch Ggrandmother was Engelina, which I like.  Her mother was Johanna Catherina, like the previous 3 generations!

Anna
Tharratt, Smith - London
Canham, Harvey, Ship - Suffolk
Higgins. Bowden, Ayres/Eyre - Buckingham
McDonald - Scotland, Africa, Canada, USA


Offline Pollynation

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Re: Naming kids after ancestors
« Reply #13 on: Monday 08 November 04 21:54 GMT (UK) »
When i named my sons, i named them after relatives. One living and a dead grandad. This was years before starting my family tree.

In due course i have now found several generations with the same name. It's not like calling them John or Paul.  I thought Benjamin wasn't that common.  But now have a 1901 census with Benjamin's on it!! 

Pauline
Atkinson/Mountney/Gardner/Mellor/Finch/Higham-Lancashire
Cooper/Price-Shropshire
Lund/Foster/Wilkinson/Crawforth-Yorkshire
Calvert-Durham


Whoever said seek and ye shall find was NOT a genealogist.

Offline leagen

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Re: Naming kids after ancestors
« Reply #14 on: Tuesday 09 November 04 06:26 GMT (UK) »
I wish I had been named after an ancestor because they had nice names.  Mine was "Wanda" which my mother picked 'cause it sounded like my brother's which was Juan (pronounced "Wan")  Get it? Wan and Wanda.  He ended up Always being called Sonny but I was stuck w/Wanda.  It would be nice if I was Polish as it is a Polish name but no Poles in me!.. I go by my middle name, have since I was 20, it is now my legel name even on passport.  "Wanda" has died!  My mother had a first name and three middle names!,( but none family ones).  Plus she (m) 4 times to 3 men, trying to keep up w/Liz Taylor, another good Eng. woman there.
Jenkins-Salmon-Dwyer-Hill-Sargent/ Seargent-Young/ Jung-White-Kinney/ Kenny-Cook-Waterman-O'Neill-McDonald-Shufelt/ Shufeldt-Wilbur/ Wilber-Patterson--Covey-Tisdale-Wells-Dodge-Palmer.

Offline booger

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Re: Naming kids after ancestors
« Reply #15 on: Tuesday 09 November 04 13:33 GMT (UK) »
I think more people should give their children middle names. In fact it should be compulsory for people with names like Brown, Smith, King, Jones etc. to provide a middle name on registering the birth of the child - if they refuse, then the baby should automatically have it's mother's maiden name as a middle name. That'll sort 'em out!

Offline Hackstaple

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Re: Naming kids after ancestors
« Reply #16 on: Tuesday 09 November 04 13:42 GMT (UK) »
Molar and I share something - we both had grandfathers christened plain Tom [not Thomas]. This is not ideal as Tom gave his son 3 christian names.
I have the christian names of my maternal grandfather but reversed.
My granddaughter has my wife's first name as her second and my middle son has an uncle's name as his second. So - I am dead neutral in this so I don't know why I chipped in.
Southern or Southan [Hereford , Monmouthshire & Glos], Jenkins, Meredith and Morgan [Monmouthshire and Glos.], Murrill, Damary, Damry, Ray, Lawrence [all Middx. & London], Nethway from Kenn or Yatton. Also Riley and Lyons in South Africa and Riley from St. Helena.
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Offline booger

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Re: Naming kids after ancestors
« Reply #17 on: Tuesday 09 November 04 13:43 GMT (UK) »
Yes. And there should be tight quotas on names. Let's say that you go to register the birth of your child and you want to call it John Smith. Well, the registrar should look at his database and say 'sorry, John Smith was taken in AD 76. How about John5463453378 Smith?'. A bit like choosing a username really. Alternatively you could be given a suitable alternative like John Percival Arthur William Smith or choose a different Christian name altogether.  Just think how easy it would be to identify one of your ancestors if they had a unique name.