Hello Everybody,
I'm trying to get to the bottom of a long-standing mystery in my research. I'm trying to find out how the name Dixon-Dawson came about as it doesn't appear to be because a Dixon married a Dawson, which is how most double-barrelled names appear.
There is a family legend that a Mr Dixon was indebted to a family called Dawson (or was it the other way around?!) who took him in in hard times and adopted their name as a thank you.
My research so far has got me back to Henry Dawson born 1842. He appears as Henry Dixon in 1851, Henry Dawson in 1861, Dixon in 1871, Dixon in 1881, Dixon in 1891.
Then his son William appears in 1901 census as William D Dawson and finally William Dixon-Dawson in 1911!
This suggests to me that the family name was always Dixon-Dawson but the enumerators weren't sure whether to use the first or second of the surnames.
The 20th century family are well documented and the name Dixon-Dawson seems particular to Seaham and Horden in the North East. Was it common for working class families (coal miners) to have double-barrelled names or could it be that the legend is true but is too far back to find?
Any help much appreciated!
Anna