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| Surnames in order of appearance on American shores |
Surnames
represented in alphabetical order
|
Dedicated
to Trevor & Sammy Jack.
Geneology:
That study in which we confuse the dead and disturb the living
Alphabetical Listing of Surnames [linked to first known present in America] :
BATES,
BAR
[BEAR/BAIR],
BAUGHMAN,
BENDER [PENTER], BENTZ [PENCE/BENS],
BRENNEMAN
[BROENNIMANN]
, CARY,
CHILD,
CREIGHTON,
COFIELD,
DOTTERER
or [DUDDRA ] EICHELBERGER,
EMLEN,
FERRIS,
FISHER,
FLEMING,
FOWLER,
GARRETT,
GRAY,
HEATH,
HERR,
HOKE,HOWARD,
HUMICKHAUSEN
or HUMRICKHOUSE, KIRK,
LARCOME,
LINE
[LINE/LYNE], LOGAN,
McCURDY,
McGEHEE,
MEALS[MUHL/MIHL],
MILNER,
MOOR/MOORE,
PLEASANTS,
QUICKEL,
REED,
REINECKE,
SCHNEBELE,
SLENTZ,
SPANGLER
[SPENGLER],
STAIR, SWOPE
[SCHWAB,
SWOOPE, SWOBE], TARLETON,TROXELL
[TRACHSEL], TRAUTHAGER,
WHITE,
WILLIAMSON,
WINSTON,
WOODSON,
ZIEGLER
Listed in order of Appearance in the New
World:
WOODSON
, John. [Jamestown 1619]
Listed as a Surgeon, he emmigrated 1619,
to Jamestown, VA on the "George". He was killed in the Indian massacre
of 1644 at Fleur de Hundred, Henrico County, VA. He is one of the first
citizens to have in his household persons of color, but they do not long
remain in his enumeration. In any scholarly discussion of the
history of Black Americans or the history of Black slavery, there is the
inevitable and rightful inclusion of the 20 first Black Americans [6 of
which are found in the Woodson household in 1623 ] Whether they were
slaves or indentured servants remains a matter of heated debate.
More can be read regarding him and those persons of color in the link here
provided.
WINSTON
, Sarah
present with her husband on 1624 census
for Jamestown. Will proved in Henrico County, VA January 17, 1659/60
FERRIS , Richard
Present Prince George Co. VA ca 1630s
[Unknown date of emmigration. Richard Ferris
was presentPrince George Co., Va ca 1630s when dtr
Elizabeth
was born . He was born 1596, London, England
]
BATES,
Susannah
Born 1638 in Middletown, Bruton Parish,
York Co. VA; ascendancy under research.
FLEMING,
John
first appearance in the Records of
the Land Office in Richmond VA in 1653
TARLETON,
Stephen
Present in New Kent, Va 1661 when
daughter Susanna
was born [St. Peter's Parrish] . He was born 1637, probably in
England.
REED,
Charles
born about 1660 in Burlington NJ. Father
said to be Thomas of that place.
LARCOME, Rene
unknown date of emmigration, unknown spouse.
Daughter
Jane born 1638 in Curles, Henrico County, Virginia
PLEASANTS,
John
emigrated to Va ca 1665 ; settled Henrico
County
MILNER,
Anne
Unknown ascendancy. Present Virginia
1680s substantiated by birth of daughter Dorothy CARY there.
EMLEN,
George
to Philadelphia in 1682
CHILD,
Amy
Alone Bought 500 acres from Penn, came
to America between 1681-1686 it appears. Ascendancy under research.
GARRETT
, William
apparantly emmigrated to Darby , Penna.
sometime before 1694. Daughter Hannah married 1694 in Philadelphia
KIRK,
Ann
apparantly emmigrated to Darby , Penna.
sometime before 1694 with husband William Garrett. Daughter
Hannah married 1694 in Philadelphia. Ann's ascendancy is under research.
LOGAN,
James
Arrived Phily 1699.
James Logan, a poor Quaker, emmigratedas
William Pennís secretary and in company of same on Penn's second
and final voyage to his Colony. AsWilliam Pennís Secretary,
this entral and most prominent of Early Pennsylvania Citizens: agent, book-keeper,
steward, Surveyor and Receiver General, Councillor, and later Judge and
Governor, early, and largely due to his role as Surveyor, became 'the wealthiest
man in the colonies" and his book collection, the then largest in all the
colonies, wasoften accessed by a young Ben Franklin, and was by James Logan
presented to the city of Philadelphia. It is because of him, a remarkably
able diplomat on behalf of his employer with the native American
population, that the Mingo Chief James Logan took that name. He also is
credited with being the inventor of the Conestoga wagon, bringing worth
beyond now understood alliance with our other pioneering American
lines. Beyond being an avid reader, he was a writer in Scientific Journals,
a translator of texts from Latin, and , as a result of his guidance to
Linneaus in botanical knowledge, his close friend and correspondant,î
had named for him an order of herbs and shrubs ìLoganiaceaeî,
containing thirty genera in over three hundred and fifty species. He was
a close student of scientific phenomena and contributed a number of papers,
now in the Transactions of the American Philosophical Society, on the result
of his scientific observations " [John W Jordan, L.LD, Colonial & Revolutionary
Families of Pennsylvania; Geneological and Personal Memoires, Vol. I]
His line does not appear, as some will claim, to align directly with the
Logans of Restalrig in which line existed the 7th Laird of Restailrig,
dug from his grave and posthumously attainted being found guilty
of conspiracy to kidnap James VI of Scotland, later James I
, of England in the earliest years of the 17th century. That Logan line
rises directly to the the protective and intimate side of the Scots Kings
of the early14th century and misty, unsubstantiated
claims are made that Admiral Logan of the late 14th married a[Claimed ,
Unlikely and Unproven Wife andDaughter] Stewart Princess, dtr
of Robert II Scotland.
James Logan does, however, rise through
his maternal heritage into the Peerage of Scotland and some of its most
notable names, including DUNDAS, DOUGLAS, HAMILTON , FRASER, De HAYA, HOME
etc.
CARY,
Robert
ìof Nansemond County, Vaî,
and apparantly to America before 1700
HEATH,
Robert
came from Staffordshire, England, about
1701.
HERR,
Hans [Mennonite Bishop] and wife KUNDIG,
Barbel
arrived 1709/10 settling south side of
Pequa Creek, Lancaster, PA [then the western frontier] where he and
other Palatines purchased 10,000 acres of land .This famous Bishop among
mennonites is abundantly studied in history and geneology. He led his beleaguered
people , with their painful history of abuse, toruture , exile, imprisonment
and killings, first to England, and then to the new world, and settled
them on the far reaches of the frontier.The home , now a museaum, bearingthe
Herr name in Lancaster County in fact was built by his son, also a bishop,
in 1719, and it was used as a house of worship as well. This home is the
oldest remaining mennonite church in America, despite the precense of other
Mennonites earlier on in Germantown.
BAR,
Anna arrived 1717
[with her husband Abraham Herr, son of
Bishop Hans Herr] to Penna
BRENNEMAN
Melchior [BROENNIMANN/]
arrived 24 Aug 1717 Via The Port
Of Philadelphia, Pa. , died New Danville, Lancaster, Penna
Despite this Ship record and year, some
say ìOne of the oldest settlers in Lancaster Co., Pa., and is mentioned
as early as 1709. ì did he cross twice? He was Mennonite,
and strongly allied with the Herr family. Several mennnites made the crossing
more than once in order to bring others of their faith to their new world.
LEIN
, John [LINE/LYNE] .
Naturalized October 14, 1729. John Line
was Elder of the earliest Reformed Church, which at first was called The
Hill Church and later Hellers, now officially called Salem. Heller's Church
had its origin in the year 1725.
SWOPE,Yost
[Schwab]
emmigrated 1720 with his wife and
children, one of whom was Johannes Swope, and longregarded as the first
of any Swope on American soil. This family settled in Lancaster County.His
daughter, Anna Elisabetha Schwab Riehm (Ream) had emmigrated with
her husband Johann Eberhard Riehm in 1717, and although she had given up
her Surname, this truly first Swope no doubt contributed to her parent's
decision to relocate here.
WOLFHARDT, Anna Katharine [if this is Yostís wife as Identified in Swope Book of Remembrance] arrived with her husband in 1720.
DOTTERER,
Michael and his wife:
FISHER, Maria
. Present BY 1726 [no anscendancy known for her]
This husband and wife team came from Germany
to Penna. A child was born In philadelphia in 1726.
McCURDY, James
and his wife:
COOKE, Polly
Arrived in Va from Ireland as early as
1720. They resided in Salisbury Township, York County in 1731. The boat
on which they came was headed for Penna, but winds and fortune took them
first to Va. His Grandfather had been forced to flee the Isle of Bute,
Scotland, with his brothers in 1666 and amidst a blinding snowstorm on
an open boat, due to the persecution of the Presbyterians and a failed
uprising by them. This grandfather, Petheric "of the Cairn" McCurdy, married
Margaret STEWART whose own family had escaped the Isle of Bute the generation
before. Margaret STEWART is the 7th Great Granddaughter of Robert II Stewart,
King of Scotland, and it is through her that our royal lines are gained.
ZIEGLER,
Judith
the future wife of Hans Kasper [
Spengler] , she arrived in sept 1727 with her parents. Whether she met
him in Germany or on the ship is unknown, but they married soon after arrival
SPANGLER [Spengler] Hans Kasper [ Spengler] arrived on William and Sarah from Rotterdam to Phily in Sept 1727. He and his new wife Judithforged into the wilderness west of the Penna's Susquehanna.
HOKE,
Johann Jacob [Hock] and his wife,
Anna
Margaretha (possibly last name MUELLER),
arrived on the Mortonhouse into Philadelphia
from Rotterdam 24 August 1728, settling first Lancaster City, Penna where
he was a weaver and Minister.
EICHELBERGER
Johann Phillip Friederich and his wife,
Anna
Barbara DOEMERS or Doerners,
arrived on Ship Albany from Rotterdam via
Cowes 1 sept 1729. She died Lancaster County, he in York County.
BENTZ,
Johannes
Arrived 1732 to Phila Resided Manchester
Twp. , now West Manchester Township, York County, Penna
TROXELL, Peter [Trachsel] and his wife:
TRAUTHAGER, Juliana Catharina
They Arrived Phily 1733 and
Settled Littlestown, [now Adams County]
QUICKEL,
Johann Michael
arriving Perth-Amboy, 19 October 1736,
in company of his two brothers. He died in York County.
BENDER, Jacob
[Penter]
appears to have arrived in Philadelphia
in 1738.
SCHNEIDER, Catharine/Anna, Jacob Benderís wife, is said to have been born in Penna date unknown but ca 1726.
MEALS
, Johann Samuel [MUHL]
arrived Sept.26,1741 on the ship
St. Mark. He died in what is now Adams County, Penna [Bendersville area.
His wife:
GYLOY, Maria Charlottha [wife of Johann Samuel MUHLis said to have accompanied him
HUMICKHAUSEN/
HUMRICKHOUSE, John
Arrived 1748 on SHip Judith to Penna. Initially
residing in and around York county, Penna., John Humrickhouse moved
his family to Germantown, Pa., in 1771. Two sons and one son in law fought
in the Revolution.
CREIGHTON,
William .
unknown date of arrival, but before 1752.
An ad for an escaped indentured servant was posted by him in Leacock Township,
Lancaster, PA. in 1752
COFIELD
, John born North Carolina in 1766. His Ascendancy is under research, but
may pertain to the Cofields of Virginia.
GRAY , Frances of Washington County, Ga, born ca 1760s
HOWARD ,
David P
Born Va 1780-1790. Resided in Powhatan
County with wife. Ascendancy under research. Likely an Old
line of Virginia and possibly Maryland, his ascendancy is as yet elusive.
The P may befor Patterson, and a Patterson female may help uncover
this line. Patterson is a middle name present in the direct line sons for
three generations following him.
MOOR/MOORE
, Martha , born Md 1787
[this grandmother to Judge Samuel McCurdy
Swope, was born circa 1787 in Maryland according to Census. Her family
is under research. I suspect her to be part of the Scotch Irish Settlement
in the southern portion of Adams, in lands disputed by the mason dixon
survey, and closely associated with the Manor of Maske . She was married
at Piney Creek, near Emmitsburg, Md. to James McCurdy, grandson of the
James McCurdy immigrant. He inherited his portion of the McCurdyfarm
that is out Route 15 near marsh creek and in southern Adams County, Penna.
The church was further south and over the Penna/Md border.
BAUGHMAN,
Christian Arrived 1791 and
He was born 1755 Baden Baden, died 1802
in Adams county, Penna.
SCHNEBELE,
Elizabeth [wife to Christian Baughman]
born about 1762 Germany, she died 1861
at 99 years in Adams County, Penna and is buried in Evergreen Cemetery.
SLENTZ, John
Born 1792 in Penna. Settted Gettysburg
and built first home there, on site of present courthouse. Despite this
importance in the history of Gettysburg, his ascendancy is elusive to the
extreme.
STAIR, Henry Born3 Jan 1830, presumably in Penna. This ancestor is frustratingly hard to get hold of. He died to young to be head of household for any census, and no Stair family yields him. His name may be an Americanized form of the German STOEHR, or STARR, but conversely he may be of British Isle ancestry.
FOWLER , James
born South Carolina in 1806, emmigrated
to Texas by 1850. Ascendancy Unknown.
McGEHEE
, Jabus Everett
born 1838 in Georgia [Hawkinsville, Pulaski
County most probable) ; Ascendancy under research and may ascend
into the McGehee, McGregor and McDonald lines of Va in the early quarter
of the 18th century. This CSA soldier, an artist , lost his arm in the
battle of 7 pines, and was forced to photography as a result. He had a
studio in Opelika, Alabama.
WHITE , Eleanor
born Houston County, Ga. 1820. Ascendancy
under research.
REINECKE Otto
Charles Louis
Arrived Baltimore from Germany 1868 .
WILLIAMSON,
Sarah
Arrived 1917 to Ellis Island, and raised
her children with her husband, in Manhattan, although they lived for some
years in New Jersey when the children were very young.