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why are irish surnames not more common in america?

  • 15-05-2012 10:09pm
    #1
    Closed Accounts Posts: 1,214 ✭✭✭


    It is the second biggest reported ancestry in the USA, and everyone knows about the huge irish influence in america, but according to the us census the highest entry that is at least uniquely irish (moore and colllins are ahead of it) is murphy at 58.

    now to me that just doesnt add up :confused: its not like iceland for example that had huge female imports but not male.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_most_common_surnames_in_North_America


    I suppose the fact that slave owners were mostly english and german and thus took their names has a lot to do with it, but still, 58?


«1

Comments

  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 1,325 ✭✭✭true


    wonton wrote: »
    and everyone knows about the huge irish influence in america,

    not as huge as our propaganda would sometimes have us believe.

    However did you know 7 or 8 Presidents of the USA came from the island of Ireland. ( from N of Ireland mostly ).
    And Henry Ford, arguably the most famous car-maker in the western world, came from Cork.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,511 ✭✭✭dave2pvd


    I agree. Irish media has overhyped the Irish imprint on the US and world for as long as I can remember.

    From that great font of truth, Wikipedia:

    "The majority of the 300 million people currently living in the United States are descended from European immigrants who have arrived in the past 400 years. Most Latin American immigrants are from Mexico and Central America of which about half are descended from indigenous peoples of those regions and Spaniards (mestizo). African American people, most of whom are descended from Africa and the slavery era, form the next-largest ethnic groups. American Indians now form a small minority in the population.

    Major components of the European segment of the United States population are descended from immigrants from Germany (19.2%), Ireland (10.8%), England (7.7%), Scotland (5.8%), Italy (5.6%), Scandinavia (3.7%) and Poland (3.2%) with many immigrants also coming from other Slavic countries"


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,652 ✭✭✭fasttalkerchat


    wonton wrote: »
    I suppose the fact that slave owners were mostly english and german and thus took their names has a lot to do with it, but still, 58?

    That's what I would have put it down to. Cant find a source but I believe that the country with the most claims of decendancy in America is Germany.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,511 ✭✭✭dave2pvd


    Also keep in mind that the figures are somewhat skewed. For whatever reason, so many people in the US claim Irish ancestry, often despite having family names on both parents' sides that are not remotely Irish.

    Second reason: many Americans of African origin have English surnames.

    Third: lots of non-English speaking European stock in the US Anglicized their names.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,386 ✭✭✭Killer Wench


    How many of the Irish that emigrated during the peak periods were literate?


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 78,577 ✭✭✭✭Victor


    One reason is bigotry and discrimination. Whether on arrival at the immigration or later, many immigrants of all nationalities changed their names so they could fit in better. Other had their names changed for them on official documents.

    There are something like 85 different English spellings for my mother's Irish maiden name (Lenihan, an Irish name), but only four for my father's maybe-Irish, maybe-English name (Moore, looks English, but most likely Irish). That would put Moore well ahead of Lenihan in the rankings.
    dave2pvd wrote: »
    Also keep in mind that the figures are somewhat skewed. For whatever reason, so many people in the US claim Irish ancestry, often despite having family names on both parents' sides that are not remotely Irish.
    Simply because the Anglicized / Englishised name was adopted before their parent's time. Cultural marriage and reproduction patterns aside, there is a pattern that minority names are lost over generations.

    Also , they might have English names, but Irish ancestry. Their ancestors might have never had Irish names - many of the early Irish in North America were protestants, who might have had English or Scottish ancestry perhaps 100-300 years previously.

    205113.PNG
    Second reason: many Americans of African origin have English surnames.
    Agreed.
    Third: lots of non-English speaking European stock in the US Anglicized their names.
    Agreed, however, that doesn't necessarily mean they adopted English names - they may have simply gone for a shorter version of their own name. As above, some had English names imposed on them.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 267 ✭✭dmcronin


    wonton wrote: »
    It is the second biggest reported ancestry in the USA, and everyone knows about the huge irish influence in america, but according to the us census the highest entry that is at least uniquely irish (moore and colllins are ahead of it) is murphy at 58.

    now to me that just doesnt add up :confused: its not like iceland for example that had huge female imports but not male.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_most_common_surnames_in_North_America


    I suppose the fact that slave owners were mostly english and german and thus took their names has a lot to do with it, but still, 58?

    Wasn't there a 'tradition' that the girls were sent over to the US to go into domestic service and the like, being more reliable than males for sending any surplus income back home?


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 5,524 ✭✭✭owenc


    wonton wrote: »
    It is the second biggest reported ancestry in the USA, and everyone knows about the huge irish influence in america, but according to the us census the highest entry that is at least uniquely irish (moore and colllins are ahead of it) is murphy at 58.

    now to me that just doesnt add up :confused: its not like iceland for example that had huge female imports but not male.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_most_common_surnames_in_North_America


    I suppose the fact that slave owners were mostly english and german and thus took their names has a lot to do with it, but still, 58?

    Because of the Anglicisation of their names to english aswell as intermarriage. There are more germans and british people in america anyway.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 133 ✭✭cormacocomhrai


    dave2pvd wrote: »
    Also keep in mind that the figures are somewhat skewed. For whatever reason, so many people in the US claim Irish ancestry, often despite having family names on both parents' sides that are not remotely Irish.

    Even in Ireland names that look Anglo are often Gaelic in origin. Mistranslation by state officials etc. or a desire to appear more respectable led to the origins of a lot of names obscuring. This happened all over the country.
    In Galway Judge is the same name as Brehony. In Tipperary Greene is the same name as Fahy. You also have names like Canavan became Whitehead, Gormally became Blueman, Maguire became Pinkman, McGowan became Smith. As far as I know a branch of the O'Neills became Johnsons, Ó Dorchaí became D'Arcy, Ó Coileáin became Collins. There are a hundred examples of that kind of thing.
    My own name Ó Comhraí has been anglicised as Corry (the version in my family) but also Curry, O'Curry and Corry. A couple of generations in America and people would be told categorically that their ancestry must have been Scottish with the name Corry.
    Is mise
    Cormac Ó Comhraí


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,108 ✭✭✭pedroeibar1


    Don’t get hung up on the surname. It is the ancestry that is referred to, so an Irish granny provides Irish ancestry, even if she was married to a German and her son/daughter married an Italian. Anyway, the top four names on the list - Smith, Brown, Lee & Wilson - would certainly contain Irish families (McGabhann, de Brun, Laoi and McWilliam). Added to the mix is an infusion of Irish descendants of English Planters of the same names so who knows?
    While surnames were known in Ireland before the Act of Edward V in 1483 (can’t remember which one, but he had very few, poor fellow) , they became more common from that date. Subsequently many Irish families took the English form of their name – e.g. Smith for McGabhann, and later again reverted to its Irish form, a bit like people again using the O’ prefix in the late 1800’s. Smith is possibly the most common name in the world, e.g. Schmidt in German, Ferrante/Ferrari in Italian, Kovacs in Slav, Kowalski in Polish, etc. A 19th c. Anglo-Irish General changed his name to Magowan from Smith – there are roads named after him in India.

    The anglicization I love of O’Cathain, which is Keane or Kane but Coen in Galway.

    Numerically in the US German names are far greater than Irish because they went there in big numbers from an earlier date (e.g. the huge Palatinate emigrations which accounts for the Pennsylvania Dutch/Deutsch). By the late 1700’s there were proposals in some states to have official papers also printed in German.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,324 ✭✭✭Cork boy 55


    The Top 100 list is too small a sample of surnames
    17.11% of Americans have a surname among the top 100
    You need to aquire a top 1,000 list at least if not more and then graph
    those names that are clearly Irish and then those than could
    be or have been altered and so on. and then add them all up

    I sure research has been done on this somewhere.

    African-American adopted surnames further complicate the question
    for example
    going by your wiki link
    46.72% of all williams are black not the desendents of English williams
    "Names such as Williams, Jackson, Robinson, Harris, Davis, Brown, and Jones are common among
    blacks"
    Many blacks and hispanics(how many USA films have a character called Rodriguez) have similar surnames which skews the top 100 list
    as does immigrants from Germany, sweden and so on changing their names to English verisons.

    If all the Irish-ameircans who declare themselves as such do not have Irish surnames
    then how do they know they are Irish???

    Need more data IMO

    Edit
    there is a top 1000 list here at link
    http://www.census.gov/genealogy/www/data/2000surnames/index.html
    click on File A
    enjoy
    file B contains all 151,671 names that occur 100 times or more


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,064 ✭✭✭Gurgle


    dave2pvd wrote: »
    "The majority of the 300 million people currently living in the United States are descended from European immigrants who have arrived in the past 400 years."

    "Major components of the European segment of the United States population are descended from immigrants from Germany (19.2%), Ireland (10.8%)..."
    10.8% from a population pool representing <1% of Europe?
    Second biggest group after Germany.
    That is a lot.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 6,708 Mod ✭✭✭✭pinkypinky


    true wrote: »
    not as huge as our propaganda would sometimes have us believe.

    However did you know 7 or 8 Presidents of the USA came from the island of Ireland. ( from N of Ireland mostly ).
    And Henry Ford, arguably the most famous car-maker in the western world, came from Cork.

    Actually, it's 20 US Presidents that have some level of Irish ancestry - 11 before 1900ish and then all since JFK excluding Gerald Ford.

    http://homepage.eircom.net/~seanjmurphy/dir/pres.htm

    Genealogy Forum Mod



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,511 ✭✭✭dave2pvd


    http://genealogy.about.com/od/surname_meaning/p/brown.htm
    Gurgle wrote: »
    10.8% from a population pool representing <1% of Europe?
    Second biggest group after Germany.
    That is a lot.

    Oh, I don't think anyone disagrees that as an immigrant group it's a lot. In relation to the 'sending country', it's staggering. But overall, it's not as much as perhaps some would think. Especially among Americans who claim to be Irish!
    Don’t get hung up on the surname. It is the ancestry that is referred to, so an Irish granny provides Irish ancestry, even if she was married to a German and her son/daughter married an Italian.

    Right. that's the point I was trying to make. Americans like to be Irish. Even today! ;)
    The Top 100 list is too small a sample of surnames
    17.11% of Americans have a surname among the top 100
    You need to aquire a top 1,000 list at least if not more and then graph
    those names that are clearly Irish and then those than could
    be or have been altered and so on. and then add them all up

    I sure research has been done on this somewhere.

    African-American adopted surnames further complicate the question
    for example
    going by your wiki link
    46.72% of all williams are black not the desendents of English williams
    "Names such as Williams, Jackson, Robinson, Harris, Davis, Brown, and Jones are common among
    blacks"
    Many blacks and hispanics(how many USA films have a character called Rodriguez) have similar surnames which skews the top 100 list
    as does immigrants from Germany, sweden and so on changing their names to English verisons.

    If all the Irish-ameircans who declare themselves as such do not have Irish surnames
    then how do they know they are Irish???

    Need more data IMO

    Edit
    there is a top 1000 list here at link
    http://www.census.gov/genealogy/www/data/2000surnames/index.html
    click on File A
    enjoy
    file B contains all 151,671 names that occur 100 times or more

    Excellent analysis.


    Consider just how many nationalities Anglicized their names. Brown from BROWNE, BRAUN, BROUN, BRUEN, BRUUN, BRUAN, BRUN, BRUENE, BROHN, etc. See here.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,511 ✭✭✭dave2pvd


    pinkypinky wrote: »
    Actually, it's 20 US Presidents that have some level of Irish ancestry - 11 before 1900ish and then all since JFK excluding Gerald Ford.

    http://homepage.eircom.net/~seanjmurphy/dir/pres.htm

    Of course ancestry and came from are 2 different things.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 133 ✭✭cormacocomhrai


    Anyway, the top four names on the list - Smith, Brown, Lee & Wilson - would certainly contain Irish families (McGabhann, de Brun, Laoi and McWilliam).

    That's the very point I was trying to make in the post immediately before yours.



    The anglicization I love of O’Cathain, which is Keane or Kane but Coen in Galway.

    I'm not sure about that one. I think Coen is actually Ó Cadhain which is the same name as Kyne, Coyne and Barnacle.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,324 ✭✭✭Cork boy 55


    here is a good website looks accuate
    it breaks down the surnames
    by number /frequnecy/rank

    and then ranks them in list's
    [FONT=Arial, Helvetica][FONT=arial, Helvetica]Rank: 1 - 1000 | 1001 - 2000 | 2001 - 5000 | 5001 - 8000
    8001 - 12000 | 12001 - 16000 | 16001 - 100000

    You can also filter by race,state and others


    http://names.mongabay.com/most_common_surnames.htm

    [/FONT]
    [/FONT][FONT=Arial, Helvetica][FONT=arial, Helvetica][FONT=arial, Helvetica]All data is derived from David L. Word, Charles D. Coleman, Robert Nunziata and Robert Kominski (2008). "Demographic Aspects of Surnames from Census 2000". U.S. Census Bureau.
    [/FONT]
    [/FONT]
    [/FONT]


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,214 ✭✭✭wonton


    interesting replies lads !

    ye so I think the biggest thing is the inconsistent spelling of irish names and different versions.

    probably influenced by the fact of low literacy rates with the immigrants and possibly the officials in america taking their names not being familiar (or maybe caring that much) and thus various spellins arouse, along with people themselves anglicising them.

    Just looking at the list above an example of this connor,donahue, mcginnis,shea,dougherty which are obviously come from the more common irish forms o'connor, o'donoghue , mcguinnes, o' shea and o 'doherty.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,085 ✭✭✭purplepanda


    A lot of those US supposed English names are very common in Wales. There's a dozen or more in the list.

    I know that many freed Black former slaves took Welsh names due to Welsh nonconformist support for the abolition of slavery & many early black minister & churches were influenced by Welsh christian denominations.

    Many names on that list are common enough in Ireland , King, Taylor, Moore, Martin, White, Harris, Clarke, Allen, Green, Hill, Campbell, Turner, Morris.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,284 ✭✭✭dubhthach


    Surnames can "daughter out" after all. Look at Mark Wahlberg he's more Irish then his swedish surname lets on. This is why he would be classed as Irish-American (Father is half swedish, half irish -- mother has some Irish ancestry). In his case his Irish surnames are all on female lines.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,511 ✭✭✭dave2pvd


    So just how many Americans that claim Irish descent are Scots-Irish? With names like Andrew Jackson. So many 'Irish' in the part of the US that I live in are this breed of Irish. Granted, some are O's or Mc's, but few and far between. Many of their ancestors came in the late 18th century and settled in the Appalachians. Many were Presbyterian. Back then, the majority of Irish immigration was Protestant.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 5,524 ✭✭✭owenc


    dave2pvd wrote: »
    So just how many Americans that claim Irish descent are Scots-Irish? With names like Andrew Jackson. So many 'Irish' in the part of the US that I live in are this breed of Irish. Granted, some are O's or Mc's, but few and far between. Many of their ancestors came in the late 18th century and settled in the Appalachians. Many were Presbyterian. Back then, the majority of Irish immigration was Protestant.

    Loads. Americans seem to take the irish side of things when it comes to this probably because they are a little ignorant of these things. I have 2nd cousins in america and they put themselves down as irish when they really aren't. I think they arrived in the 19th century though.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,511 ✭✭✭dave2pvd


    owenc wrote: »
    Americans seem to take the irish side of things when it comes to this probably because they are a little ignorant of these things.

    Why do you say that?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,214 ✭✭✭wonton


    dave2pvd wrote: »
    So just how many Americans that claim Irish descent are Scots-Irish? With names like Andrew Jackson. So many 'Irish' in the part of the US that I live in are this breed of Irish. Granted, some are O's or Mc's, but few and far between. Many of their ancestors came in the late 18th century and settled in the Appalachians. Many were Presbyterian. Back then, the majority of Irish immigration was Protestant.


    about 2% of the population report scots irish, but in states like georgia where american is the biggest reported ancestry a lot of them are scots irish but since they have been there so long dont identify with it


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,108 ✭✭✭pedroeibar1



    The anglicization I love of O’Cathain, which is Keane or Kane but Coen in Galway.

    I'm not sure about that one. I think Coen is actually Ó Cadhain which is the same name as Kyne, Coyne and Barnacle.

    Thanks for that CO'C, it makes more sense.
    P.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 133 ✭✭cormacocomhrai



    Thanks for that CO'C, it makes more sense.
    P.

    No worries. I'm not fully sure of it though. I'd have to check it out and I can't find my copy of de Bhuilbh's Sloinnte Gael is Gall.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 133 ✭✭cormacocomhrai


    dubhthach wrote: »
    Surnames can "daughter out" after all. Look at Mark Wahlberg he's more Irish then his swedish surname lets on. This is why he would be classed as Irish-American (Father is half swedish, half irish -- mother has some Irish ancestry). In his case his Irish surnames are all on female lines.

    at the risk of derailing the thread
    Bruce Springsteen is the same, a strong Irish influence through his father despite the name.
    Gregory Peck was very closely related to Thomas Ashe who died after force-feeding while on hunger strike in 1917.
    Martin Short the Canadian actor is of Crossmaglen stock.
    Robert de Niro is the same.
    Muhammed Ali is a Clareman and Che Guevara a Galwayman of course.

    More seriously the names Folan and Powell from Galway have become Foley and Power in Connemara after sojourns in the States.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,500 ✭✭✭tac foley


    More seriously the names Folan and Powell from Galway have become Foley and Power in Connemara after sojourns in the States.

    'Foley' is said to have been derived from the Old Irish 'foghláda/foghládha - 'raider' or 'plunderer' - a clear pointer to Viking/Norse/Danish inroaders.

    And of course, we must not overlook the present US president - Bairác Ó Bamheadhe. :)

    tac


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,324 ✭✭✭Cork boy 55


    How many people in the USA have an O'x in their surname?
    it seems to be very few, Although characters with o'x names do seem tp appear in many hollywood movies.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,284 ✭✭✭dubhthach


    tac foley wrote: »
    'Foley' is said to have been derived from the Old Irish 'foghláda/foghládha - 'raider' or 'plunderer' - a clear pointer to Viking/Norse/Danish inroaders.

    And of course, we must not overlook the present US president - Bairác Ó Bamheadhe. :)

    tac

    Foley can also be from Mac SEARRAIGH
    Mac SEARRAIGH—IV—M'Sharrie, MacSharry, MacSherry, Sharry, Sherry, and, by translation, Feley, Foley; 'son of Searrach' (foal, flighty); an old Breifney surname; found in the 16th century in Leitrim, Cavan and Sligo, where it is still common; now also in Armagh and Donegal. There was also a family of the name in Co. Down which cannot now be traced unless changed to Ó Searraigh (which see), which is not improbable. Searrach signifies a foal, hence the translated forms Feley (Filly) and Foley, the latter common about the town of Sligo.

    of course the only way to prove scandinavian origins would be to do a Y-Chromosome test. Generally there quite different proportions of Haplogroups (sub-groups of Y) in Scandinavia then in Ireland.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,284 ✭✭✭dubhthach


    How many people in the USA have an O'x in their surname?
    it seems to be very few, Although characters with o'x names do seem tp appear in many hollywood movies.

    Well alot of people in Ireland actually dropped the O' in the 19th century. Result of course is that often it was readopted in the early 20th century.

    Problem with this is there are several incidences where the wrong "prefix" was appended. For example in west of Ireland there is Ó Carthaigh (O'Carthy) which is generally just "Carthy" these days. However some of these changed their name to MacCarthy (Mac Carthaigh). They are seperate surnames.

    Some names generally have completely dropped the Ó/Mac in their english form. For example O'Duffy is very rare compared to Duffy (Ó Dubhthaigh) though not unknown.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,511 ✭✭✭dave2pvd


    wonton wrote: »
    about 2% of the population report scots irish, but in states like georgia where american is the biggest reported ancestry a lot of them are scots irish but since they have been there so long dont identify with it

    But they do.

    You'd be surprised how aware many Americans are of their ancestry. From what I have witnessed, this knowledge tends to travel down through generations. There is often a greater hunger to know where one is from. Perhaps because everyone came from somewhere else?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,500 ✭✭✭tac foley


    dubhthach wrote: »
    Foley can also be from Mac SEARRAIGH
    of course the only way to prove scandinavian origins would be to do a Y-Chromosome test. Generally there quite different proportions of Haplogroups (sub-groups of Y) in Scandinavia then in Ireland.

    Next time I have a look at my chromosomes I'll be sure to pay more attention.;)

    A little 'Y-shaped' thingy, you say?

    tac


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 133 ✭✭cormacocomhrai


    dubhthach wrote: »
    Well alot of people in Ireland actually dropped the O' in the 19th century. Result of course is that often it was readopted in the early 20th century.

    Problem with this is there are several incidences where the wrong "prefix" was appended. For example in west of Ireland there is Ó Carthaigh (O'Carthy) which is generally just "Carthy" these days. However some of these changed their name to MacCarthy (Mac Carthaigh). They are seperate surnames.

    Some names generally have completely dropped the Ó/Mac in their english form. For example O'Duffy is very rare compared to Duffy (Ó Dubhthaigh) though not unknown.

    You have the surname Connor in Galway who aren't O'Connor at all but actually McConnor by rights.
    Another couple of unusual names that are probably Gaelic but mightn't look it Earner=Seery and Stiffe=Ó Roighin.
    You might know this Dubhthach. The Ryans of Tipp aren't Ryans at all but Mulryans. That true?

    Éamonn an Chnoic/ Ned of the Hill was Éamonn Ó Maolriain and not Ryan as he is often named.
    Is mise
    Cormac Ó Comhraí


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,284 ✭✭✭dubhthach


    Indeed well one of processes that often occur was the "attraction" of one surname to another. You would end up with an intermediate name in between. A good example is in Mayo:

    Ó DOITHE -> O'Diff (Dohie as well) -> Duffy (in reality Ó Dubhthaigh)

    The uncommon anglisced name O'Diff got "attracted" to the much more common Duffy (at least one sept of which in Roscommon).

    With regards to Ryan there are at least three seperate surnames (taken from Woulfe 1923)
    Ó RIAGHAIN, Ó RIAIN—I—O Rian, O'Ryan, Ryan: 'descendant of Riaghan,' or 'Rian'; the name of a Carlow family who were lords of Uí Dróna, the present barony of Idrone, and are now numerous through Leinster; to be distinguished from Ó Maoilriain of Munster and Ó Ruaidhín of Connacht, which are both now incorrectly anglicised O'Ryan or Ryan.
    Ó MAOILRIAGHAIN, Ó MAOILRIAIN—I—O Mulrigan, O Mulryan, O Mulrean, Mulryan, Mulroyan, Mulryne, Mulrine, Mulrain, O'Ryan, Ryan; 'descendant of Maolriain' (follower of Riaghan or Rian); the name of a family of Leinster origin who settled in the 13th or 14th century in Uaithne-tire and Uaithne-cliach, now the baronies of Owney, in Co. Tipperary, and Owneybeg, in the east of Co. Limerick, where they became very numerous and powerful. In 1610, William Ryan surrendered to the. king all his landed property and all his rights of or in the barony of Owney O Mulrian, and received them back by letters patent. The family property was, however, lost in the confiscations of the 17th century. There are many very respectable families of the name in Tipperary and Limerick, and the name itself is very common in these counties. It is to be distinguished from Ó Riain, which see.
    Ó RUAIDHÍN—I—O Ruyne, O Royn, O Roen, Rouine, Royan, Rowen, (Ruane, O'Ryan, Ryan); 'descendant of Ruaidhín' (diminutive of ruadh, red); the same as Ó Ruadháin, which see, both forms being used by the same family, and equally common in Connacht. Some of the name have been long settled in Leinster.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 133 ✭✭cormacocomhrai


    Ah de Bhuilbh. If I ever go on a cruise I'm going to bring itself, Dineen and Joyce's placenames with me in case I get shipwrecked.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,324 ✭✭✭Cork boy 55


    How many irish people (% wise) have an O' in their surname?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,246 ✭✭✭conor.hogan.2


    How many irish people (% wise) have an O' in their surname?

    Including surnames that in Irish have Ó? The vast majority. I have nothing to back that up, hence me adding the Irish names to be safe.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,724 ✭✭✭The Scientician


    Remember too that reported ancestry ebbs and flows like fashion. In 1980 far more Americans put down English as their primary ancestry than did so in 2000 or 2010. This could be for a number of reasons, perhaps the genealogy industry's development over time has revealed unknown ancestries to people who assumed they were English transplants to America. I suspect though it just became more fashionable to select the Irish or German part of one's heritage than the English.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,798 ✭✭✭goose2005


    How many irish people (% wise) have an O' in their surname?

    check the phone book!


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 484 ✭✭RGM


    Remember too that reported ancestry ebbs and flows like fashion. In 1980 far more Americans put down English as their primary ancestry than did so in 2000 or 2010. This could be for a number of reasons, perhaps the genealogy industry's development over time has revealed unknown ancestries to people who assumed they were English transplants to America. I suspect though it just became more fashionable to select the Irish or German part of one's heritage than the English.

    I think your last line nailed it. I don't know that there's a more popular heritage to have in the United States right now.

    And that has it's pros and cons. On one hand, it's great that so many people are embracing their family history. On the other hand, you have a lot of people running around in green, drinking Guinness, and talking up how Irish they are when really they're just Americans playing dress-up. I've always shied away from that. I'm proud of my Irish heritage because I love my grandparents, but I'm an American. Nothing wrong with that.

    The title of this thread caught me by surprise though. I grew up just outside Philadelphia and still live in the area, and Irish surnames are everywhere.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 133 ✭✭cormacocomhrai


    RGM wrote: »
    I think your last line nailed it. I don't know that there's a more popular heritage to have in the United States right now.

    And that has it's pros and cons. On one hand, it's great that so many people are embracing their family history. On the other hand, you have a lot of people running around in green, drinking Guinness, and talking up how Irish they are when really they're just Americans playing dress-up. I've always shied away from that. I'm proud of my Irish heritage because I love my grandparents, but I'm an American. Nothing wrong with that.

    The title of this thread caught me by surprise though. I grew up just outside Philadelphia and still live in the area, and Irish surnames are everywhere.

    To be fair Irish people delight in stories of the silly American looking for a leprechaun etc. and there are plenty of them but there are areas of London, Boston etc. that are very Irish and it's possible to come from those areas and basically be Irish. There's a tendency among some in Ireland to ignore that or to denigrate it. I've friends who are London-Irish and you couldn't describe them as English. One of them bascially only knew ethnically Irish or West Indian people growing up. When I was in college in Galway a lot of Irish-Americans used to come and spend a year there. I found a few of them a lot more knowledgeable about certain aspects of Irish culture than a lot of the native born people. A few of them had a good knowledge of the North, one of them knew his family tree inside out (to the extent of knowing the villages going back generations) another had a very good knowledge of folklore of his parents' part of southeast Galway. I remember him arguing one time with someone, a local, who was telling him that the Irish language died out in the part of E. Galway a thousand years ago and our boy knowing when the last native speakers died out.
    I've heard a great story about Newfoundland/ Nova Scotia from a couple of generations back about a young fella arriving into school and being asked for his home address and giving his home address as a certain townland in Wexford from which his ancestors emigrated four or five generations before. The accent from that part of Wexford is hilarious to anyone who knows the Wexford accent


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 484 ✭✭RGM


    To be fair Irish people delight in stories of the silly American looking for a leprechaun etc. and there are plenty of them but there are areas of London, Boston etc. that are very Irish and it's possible to come from those areas and basically be Irish. There's a tendency among some in Ireland to ignore that or to denigrate it. I've friends who are London-Irish and you couldn't describe them as English. One of them bascially only knew ethnically Irish or West Indian people growing up. When I was in college in Galway a lot of Irish-Americans used to come and spend a year there. I found a few of them a lot more knowledgeable about certain aspects of Irish culture than a lot of the native born people. A few of them had a good knowledge of the North, one of them knew his family tree inside out (to the extent of knowing the villages going back generations) another had a very good knowledge of folklore of his parents' part of southeast Galway. I remember him arguing one time with someone, a local, who was telling him that the Irish language died out in the part of E. Galway a thousand years ago and our boy knowing when the last native speakers died out.
    I've heard a great story about Newfoundland/ Nova Scotia from a couple of generations back about a young fella arriving into school and being asked for his home address and giving his home address as a certain townland in Wexford from which his ancestors emigrated four or five generations before. The accent from that part of Wexford is hilarious to anyone who knows the Wexford accent

    Sure, there are plenty of us that really care and put in the extra effort to learn about and appreciate Ireland. But we'll be sitting quietly in the background while the stereotypical tourists plow their way through the country giving us a bad name.

    ...and ordering "black and tans" in every pub. :rolleyes:


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 133 ✭✭cormacocomhrai


    I thought the Black and Tan was a Nike runner :)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,284 ✭✭✭dubhthach


    I thought the Black and Tan was a Nike runner :)

    Ben&Jerry's Ice-cream as well! ;)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 133 ✭✭cormacocomhrai


    dubhthach wrote: »
    Ben&Jerry's Ice-cream as well! ;)
    Do they make ice-cream? I thought they were hurlers. :) Sorry


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,284 ✭✭✭dubhthach


    Do they make ice-cream? I thought they were hurlers. :) Sorry

    That took me a minute, until I resorted to google/wiki:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ben_O'Connor
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerry_O%27Connor

    :D


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 33 stretchtex


    I was raised in the McMullen, McGloin land grant area of south Texas. The Spanish recruited Irish Catholics to settle the area. My ancestors were McMorrows and Dolans from Leitrim. My last name is Gilmore...not sure how prevalent a surname that is in Ireland. Lots of folks in the US believe that if a name doesn't start with an O' or Mc it's not Irish.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,284 ✭✭✭dubhthach


    stretchtex wrote: »
    I was raised in the McMullen, McGloin land grant area of south Texas. The Spanish recruited Irish Catholics to settle the area. My ancestors were McMorrows and Dolans from Leitrim. My last name is Gilmore...not sure how prevalent a surname that is in Ireland. Lots of folks in the US believe that if a name doesn't start with an O' or Mc it's not Irish.

    Two seperate possible origins for Gilmore in Ireland
    Mac GIOLLA MHUIRE—IV—M'Gilleworry, M'Gilmurry, M'Gilmore, MacIlmurray, MacElmurray, MacKilmurray, MacMurray, Kilmurry, Kilmary, Kilmore, Gilmore, Gilmour, Gilmor, Gilmer, Murry, Murray; 'son of Giolla Mhuire' (servant of Mary); the name of a family in Co. Down who were chiefs of Ui Derca Cein, in the barony of Castlereagh. They are a branch of the family of O'Morna, formerly lords of Lecale, being descended from Giolla Mhuire Ó Morna, lord of Lecale, whose death is recorded in the Annals of the Four Masters at the year 1276. The name is also in use in Scotland, where it is anglicised Morrison (i.e., Muire's son).
    Mac GIOLLA MHIR—IV—M'Gilver, M'Gilmer, Gilmer, Gilmor; 'son of Giolla mear' (the merry, lively youth); the name of an old family of the Ui Fiachrach race in Co. Sligo, formerly seated in the townland of Finnure, in the barony of Tireragh.

    Lots of Irish names starting with "Gill" -- anglisced from irish word Giolla (Boy, Servant). The word actually found it's way into english (via Scots Gaidhlig) in the form of "Ghillie suit" (What Snipers wear to blend in)

    With regards to Leitrim there's a good chance then that your McMorrow ancestors are:
    Mac MUIREADHAIGH—IV—M'Murrey, M'Morrye, MacMurry, MacMorry, MacMorray, MacMurray, (MacMorrow), Murry, Murray, (Morrow); 'son of Muireadhach' (belonging to the sea, a mariner; also a lord); an old Breifney surname, still common in the district, but generally anglicised MacMorrow.

    (Kingdom of Bréifne included Leitrim and Cavan). Though another possibility is:
    Mac MURCHADHA—IV—M'Murroghowe, M'Moroghoe, M'Murphewe, MacMurrough, MacMurrow, Morrowson, Murrough, Morrough, Morrogh, Murrow, Morrow, Murphy; 'son of Murchadh' (sea-warrior, a very common Irish personal name); the name of three distinct families in Ireland, viz.: Mac Murchadha of Leinster, Mac Murchadha of Muinntear Birn in Ulster, and Mac Murchadha of Clann Tomaltaigh in Connacht. The MacMurroughs of Leinster derive their name and descent from Murchadh, the grandfather of Dermot MacMurrough, and were long the most powerful family in Leinster, and one of the most powerful in Ireland. From Domhnall Caomhánach, the son of Dermot MacMurrough, they took the surname of Caomhánach (which see), which is that by which they have been known for centuries. The Ulster family of Mac Murchadha was seated in Tyrone, and at the end of the 16th century was numerous in that county. Murphy appears to be the anglicised form, at least, in many instances; O'Donovan gives it as MacMurray, which I have failed to verify. The Connacht family of this name was seated in Co. Roscommon.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,324 ✭✭✭Cork boy 55


    stretchtex wrote: »
    I was raised in the McMullen, McGloin land grant area of south Texas. The Spanish recruited Irish Catholics to settle the area. My ancestors were McMorrows and Dolans from Leitrim. My last name is Gilmore...not sure how prevalent a surname that is in Ireland. Lots of folks in the US believe that if a name doesn't start with an O' or Mc it's not Irish.

    Our current 2-IC is a Gilmore
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eamon_Gilmore


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