Rare/Unusual Surnames
Moderator: Global Moderators
-
- Posts: 15
- Joined: Mon Aug 01, 2005 11:53 am
Rare/Unusual Surnames
Hello all,
One of my lines includes the RAWER, sometimes RAWYER or RAYWER, family of Birse and probably Lumphannan at an earlier stage.
I believe the name is pretty much extinct now in NE Scotland and have not found any other significant record of it elsewhere in Scotland although there is a farm or hill named Rawer in the SW near Stranraer I think I found.. I have very limited info about this name but it appears in the NE about 1745 in the IGI. Does anyone have this name in their line or have a suggestion on where it may have come from? (Possibly German, a google shows a German witha website named Rawer)
Does anywone else have any unusal names that appear in a limited area for a time and then disappear?
Barclay
One of my lines includes the RAWER, sometimes RAWYER or RAYWER, family of Birse and probably Lumphannan at an earlier stage.
I believe the name is pretty much extinct now in NE Scotland and have not found any other significant record of it elsewhere in Scotland although there is a farm or hill named Rawer in the SW near Stranraer I think I found.. I have very limited info about this name but it appears in the NE about 1745 in the IGI. Does anyone have this name in their line or have a suggestion on where it may have come from? (Possibly German, a google shows a German witha website named Rawer)
Does anywone else have any unusal names that appear in a limited area for a time and then disappear?
Barclay
-
- Global Moderator
- Posts: 2927
- Joined: Tue May 30, 2006 12:50 am
- Location: Born in Glasgow: now in Bristol
I have ancestors with the surname Girtrig (other spellings Girtrigg, Gitrig/g, Gerthrigg, Girtridge, Gutrig, and a few others), all originating in Ayrshire back to 1600's.
In the same area there is, on old maps, a Girtrig Mill, Girtrig farm and Girtrig mound or mount.
My Great grandmother is the last one carrying this surname I have been able to find, although my Grandmother's middle name was Girtrig.
Another TS member told me there was a Scottish architect who also had the same middle name, but I have been unable to connect him to my ancestors.
In the same area there is, on old maps, a Girtrig Mill, Girtrig farm and Girtrig mound or mount.
My Great grandmother is the last one carrying this surname I have been able to find, although my Grandmother's middle name was Girtrig.
Another TS member told me there was a Scottish architect who also had the same middle name, but I have been unable to connect him to my ancestors.
[b]Mary[/b]
A cat leaves pawprints on your heart
McDonald or MacDonald (some couldn't make up their mind!), Bonner, Crichton, McKillop, Campbell, Cameron, Gitrig (+other spellings), Clark, Sloan, Stewart, McCutcheon, Ireland (the surname)
A cat leaves pawprints on your heart
McDonald or MacDonald (some couldn't make up their mind!), Bonner, Crichton, McKillop, Campbell, Cameron, Gitrig (+other spellings), Clark, Sloan, Stewart, McCutcheon, Ireland (the surname)
-
- Posts: 43
- Joined: Sat Aug 19, 2006 10:49 pm
- Location: Lancashire
Re: Rare/Unusual Surnames
Hi
http://www.spatial-literacy.org/UCLnames/Surnames.aspx
Checking on the site below it would appear that there were less than 100 individuals with these names in the whole of Great Britain in 1998 and because of that it can't give locations for 1881 either.Barclay wrote:Hello all,
One of my lines includes the RAWER, sometimes RAWYER or RAYWER, family of Birse and probably Lumphannan at an earlier stage.
I believe the name is pretty much extinct now in NE Scotland and have not found any other significant record of it elsewhere in Scotland although there is a farm or hill named Rawer in the SW near Stranraer I think I found.. I have very limited info about this name but it appears in the NE about 1745 in the IGI. Does anyone have this name in their line or have a suggestion on where it may have come from? (Possibly German, a google shows a German witha website named Rawer)
Does anywone else have any unusal names that appear in a limited area for a time and then disappear?
Barclay
http://www.spatial-literacy.org/UCLnames/Surnames.aspx
I'm a Cousin - are you? http://www/LostCousins.com
Looking for Beck and Trotter in Hawick and
Roxburghshire
Looking for Beck and Trotter in Hawick and
Roxburghshire
-
- Posts: 271
- Joined: Wed Oct 05, 2005 6:23 pm
- Location: Central Florida
-
- Global Moderator
- Posts: 2927
- Joined: Tue May 30, 2006 12:50 am
- Location: Born in Glasgow: now in Bristol
Hi Karen,
I've wondered if some of them might have emigrated but have never managed to find any yet.
Maybe your English teacher is descended from the same family.
I've wondered if some of them might have emigrated but have never managed to find any yet.
Maybe your English teacher is descended from the same family.
[b]Mary[/b]
A cat leaves pawprints on your heart
McDonald or MacDonald (some couldn't make up their mind!), Bonner, Crichton, McKillop, Campbell, Cameron, Gitrig (+other spellings), Clark, Sloan, Stewart, McCutcheon, Ireland (the surname)
A cat leaves pawprints on your heart
McDonald or MacDonald (some couldn't make up their mind!), Bonner, Crichton, McKillop, Campbell, Cameron, Gitrig (+other spellings), Clark, Sloan, Stewart, McCutcheon, Ireland (the surname)
-
- Posts: 381
- Joined: Wed Aug 30, 2006 1:13 pm
- Location: Edinburgh
Hi Barclay
Well my name is Sorbie & is, in Scotland, usually spelt that way - the English version is the one with the y. There are not that many of us & we can mostly trace ourselves back to the early 1700s in the Stonehouse area of Lanarkshire & there's still quite a lot of us there or thereabouts. (Family legend says we did come from Wigtownshire originally & took the name of the place when we moved). However, another Stonehouse/Lanarkshire name which appears in the records & on gravestones etc. is Muter & it has completely disappeared from that area. Perhaps if the families tended to have girls it just gradually died out - any Muters out there to confirm?
Muriel
Well my name is Sorbie & is, in Scotland, usually spelt that way - the English version is the one with the y. There are not that many of us & we can mostly trace ourselves back to the early 1700s in the Stonehouse area of Lanarkshire & there's still quite a lot of us there or thereabouts. (Family legend says we did come from Wigtownshire originally & took the name of the place when we moved). However, another Stonehouse/Lanarkshire name which appears in the records & on gravestones etc. is Muter & it has completely disappeared from that area. Perhaps if the families tended to have girls it just gradually died out - any Muters out there to confirm?
Muriel
Searching Ross - Lochwinnoch & Eaglesham, Renfrewshire; Glasgow; Glover - Paisley; Macadam - Glasgow.
-
- Posts: 271
- Joined: Wed Oct 05, 2005 6:23 pm
- Location: Central Florida
Mary
Could be , she was a sweet but tough old broad! I dont believe she was married, and was probably in her late 50's or early 60's then. I lost my high school yearbook in a firel but have e-mailed a pal to look her up, and see if there was any bio info on the teachers in it. I'll let you know.
Karen
Could be , she was a sweet but tough old broad! I dont believe she was married, and was probably in her late 50's or early 60's then. I lost my high school yearbook in a firel but have e-mailed a pal to look her up, and see if there was any bio info on the teachers in it. I'll let you know.
Karen
Make it a great day!
RESEARCHING:::MCMENEMY, MITCHELL (LKS), CAMPBELL, FEENEY, MCCALLUM, MCCULLOCH,
ROONEY, and many others......
RESEARCHING:::MCMENEMY, MITCHELL (LKS), CAMPBELL, FEENEY, MCCALLUM, MCCULLOCH,
ROONEY, and many others......
-
- Global Moderator
- Posts: 2927
- Joined: Tue May 30, 2006 12:50 am
- Location: Born in Glasgow: now in Bristol
Hi Karen,
That would be great! Thank you so much for doing that.
My GG Grandmother was still working into her 70's, and that's after rearing six kids, so must have been a bit of a tough lady as well
That would be great! Thank you so much for doing that.
My GG Grandmother was still working into her 70's, and that's after rearing six kids, so must have been a bit of a tough lady as well
[b]Mary[/b]
A cat leaves pawprints on your heart
McDonald or MacDonald (some couldn't make up their mind!), Bonner, Crichton, McKillop, Campbell, Cameron, Gitrig (+other spellings), Clark, Sloan, Stewart, McCutcheon, Ireland (the surname)
A cat leaves pawprints on your heart
McDonald or MacDonald (some couldn't make up their mind!), Bonner, Crichton, McKillop, Campbell, Cameron, Gitrig (+other spellings), Clark, Sloan, Stewart, McCutcheon, Ireland (the surname)
-
- Posts: 202
- Joined: Thu Aug 31, 2006 9:07 pm
- Location: Glasgow
Well I have Testard from around Ballater in Aberdeenshire and Loynachan in Argyll which has been trnslated to Lang.
Lang/loynachan/oloynachan/Gillies/Scally/McIlchere- Argyll, Denovan/Rollo, Stirling/Burns-Stirling Mackie/Grant/Ingils/Campbell-Aberdeen,Stewart/Bell-Glasgow
Brown-Ardrossan/Dundonald, Gemmell- Johnstone/Partick
McKelvie-Arran/ayrshire
Brown-Ardrossan/Dundonald, Gemmell- Johnstone/Partick
McKelvie-Arran/ayrshire
-
- Posts: 1
- Joined: Fri Dec 03, 2021 8:33 am
Re: Rare/Unusual Surnames
Hi Barclay,
Don’t know if you are still around on here but I have been researching my family tree and the surname Rawer has cropped up as direct descendants of mine.
Reply to this if you are still here and we can possibly compare notess
Don’t know if you are still around on here but I have been researching my family tree and the surname Rawer has cropped up as direct descendants of mine.
Reply to this if you are still here and we can possibly compare notess