Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Random Searching

Of the four names of the grands, Berniers have alot of hits during random serching on the internets, and seem to have been really important in Canada. There's mention of Algonquin marriages and relatives, so maybe that myth is actually truth? I can't seem to find any names that I know, but I've only got a few generations to work on, and no money to buy info off the pay sites just now...

Holcombs are all over New England, and seem to have drifted westward fairly recently; my grandpa is from Missouri, and there's a good portion of hits there, but none of the few names I know. Lots of Native American connections in this part of the family, too, so that's cool. Maybe we're more NA than we thought?

Bouza: Galician: habitational name from any of various places in Galicia named Bouza, from bouza‘fenced plantation of trees’ or ‘infertile land’.

It seems all Holcombs come down from William the Conquerer: "Jan: You can buy the Holcombs, Nation Builders at Barnes Surname Facts
Barnes Surname Board

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Noble Surname Board

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','Related Resources',null,null,200,750,300);" onmouseout="TGN.Util.HoverTip.startHideHoverTipTimer();" id="kwl2885022A" style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0); text-decoration: none; border-bottom-style: double; border-bottom-width: 1px; border-bottom-color: rgb(175, 188, 34); ">Noble. It is 1300 pages and around $150 but I think it is worth it. There are a lot of Holcomb Surname Facts
Holcomb Surname Board

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','Related Resources',null,null,200,750,300);" onmouseout="TGN.Util.HoverTip.startHideHoverTipTimer();" id="kwl2885022E" style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0); text-decoration: none; border-bottom-style: double; border-bottom-width: 1px; border-bottom-color: rgb(175, 188, 34); ">Holcomb'(e) s in it all the way back to William the Conqueror Surname Facts
Conqueror Surname Board

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','Related Resources',null,null,200,750,300);" onmouseout="TGN.Util.HoverTip.startHideHoverTipTimer();" id="kwl2885022C" style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0); text-decoration: none; border-bottom-style: double; border-bottom-width: 1px; border-bottom-color: rgb(175, 188, 34); ">Conqueror, granddaddy of all Holcombs. You can order it on the internet. Good luck. Dave H. from Georgia State Board

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Variations on GAIN:
(Mac) GEANEY (O) GEANEY, Gaine


The prefix 0 has been almost complete dropped from (O) Geane. the Gaelic-Irish form of is Ó Geibheannaigh ( Keaveney): this Geaney has been found mainly in counties Cork and Kerry, where the abbreviated variant Geane or Gaine is found. Early anglicized forms of the name were O'Giany etc. - Father Roger O'Giana was captured by the English in 1599 and thrown into Cork prison from where he managed to escape. The Mac prefix has been usually retained. MacGeany, much less numerous than (0) Geany, and distinct from it, belongs today to south Ulster.

Also, Ancestry.com taunts me by having good-looking info that I can't access until I can pony up 20$ a month for it. Jeeze.

What's in a name? Boza

BERNIER
  1. French: from the personal name Bernier, from a Germanic personal name composed of the elements bern ‘bear’ + hari ‘army’.
  2. German (from Slavic): habitational name from a place so named in Mecklenburg.

Place of
Origin
Bernier Immigrants
France11
Germany10
Canada4
Mecklenburg4
Hamburg3
Italy2
Compiled by Ancestry.com from the New York Passenger Lists.

What's in a name? Holcomb

HOLCOMB
English: habitational name from any of various places, for example in Devon, Dorset, Gloucestershire, Greater Manchester, Oxfordshire, and Somerset, so named from Old English hol ‘hollow’, ‘sunken’, ‘deep’ + cumb ‘valley’.

Place of
Origin
Holcomb Immigrants
England6
Germany2
Switzerland1
Norway1
London1
Compiled by Ancestry.com from the New York Passenger Lists.

What's in a name? Boza

  1. BOZA
  2. Hispanicized spelling of Galician Bouza.
  3. Hungarian: from the old secular personal name Boza or Bozás; possibly also a metonymic occupational name from boza ‘beer’.

Place of
Origin
Boza Immigrants
Cuba11
England3
Austria3
Spain3
Great Britain2
Preußen;Germany2
Compiled by Ancestry.com from the New York Passenger Lists.

What's in a name? Gain

GAIN
English: variant of Gaines.

Place of
Origin
Gain Immigrants
Ireland26
England17
Germany14
Great Britain5
Mexico4
France2
Compiled by Ancestry.com from the New York Passenger Lists.

---> GAINES
  1. English (of Norman origin): nickname for a crafty or ingenious person, from a reduced form of Old French engaine ‘ingenuity’, ‘trickery’ (Latin ingenium ‘native wit’). The word was also used in a concrete sense of a stratagem or device, particularly a trap.
  2. This surname has also assimilated reduced variants of Welsh Gurganus.

op Places of Origin for Gaines
Place of
Origin
Gaines Immigrants
Ireland24
England13
Scotland8
Great Britain5
Germany3
Denmark1
Compiled by Ancestry.com from the New York Passenger Lists.

New Site!

I found this site that links to dozens upon dozens of other sites: Cyndi's List. It's pretty awesome. I haven't figured out how exactly to use it and it's various indexes, but I've already found some info that might be useful, and the Main Index goes by country, so when we get around to searching through the Irish side of the family, there we are! They don't have Cuba, though, so that's a little disappointing. Maybe we can send on the links and get the list biggerfied.