English New England names
This line is an old line in New England (Maine, Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, Connecticut, Massachussetts). Most can be traced back to England.Olmstead - English. "elm stead"?
Busecot - English.
Albee - "white"?
Westcott / Westcote - traces back to 1300's in England
de Littleton - from 1300's in England. "little town"?
Quartermain - from 1300's in England.
Grenville / Granville - from 1300's in England. "great town"?
Collacutt - from 1300's in England.
Stukely - from 1400's in England.
Downes - from 1400's in England.
Arscote - from 1500's in England.
Cottington - from 1500's in England.
Holliman - from 1500's
Oxston - from 1500's
Maplett - from 1500's
Sheldon - from 1700's in New England
Colvin - from 1700's in New Englandother names in line (in database): Stone, May, Barnes, Miller, Walker, Chamberlin, Hill, Young, England, Warner, Gorton, Gibbs, Berry, Smith, Newton
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I now have access to the Oxford University Press "American Family Name Origins"Olmstead - "English: habitational name from Olmstead Green in Cambridgeshire."Albee - "Variant spelling of English Alb(e)y, a habitational name from Alby in Norfolk or Ailby in Lincolnshire, both named with the Old Norse personal name Áli + Old Norse býr ‘farmstead’."Westcott - "English (Devon): habitational name from any of various minor places named with Old English west ‘west’ + cot ‘cottage’, ‘shelter’, for example Westcott in Surrey, Westcot in Berkshire, or Westcote in Gloucestershire, Hampshire, and Warwickshire."Littleton - "English: habitational name from any of various places, mostly in southwestern England, named in Old English as ‘small settlement’, from lȳtel ‘small’ + tūn ‘enclosure’, ‘settlement’."
Granville - "English (of Norman origin): habitational name from any of various places in northern France called Grainville, from the Germanic personal name Guarin (see Waring) + Old French ville ‘settlement’."Downes - "1. English: Topographic name for a downland dweller, from Old English dūn ‘down’, ‘low hill’. 2. English/Scottish/Irish: nickname for a man with dark hair or a swarthy complexion, from Middle English / Gaelic dunn ‘dark-colored, brown’. 3. Scottish: habitational name from Dun in Angus, named with Gaelic dùn ‘fort’. 4. Scottish: possibly a habitational name from Doune in Perthshire. 5. Irish (Counties Clare and Limerick): reduced Anglicized form of Irish Gaelic Ó Dubháin. ‘descendant of Dubhán’, meaning ‘the little black one’, a common name in the 16th century in southern Ireland, or Ó Damháin ‘descendant of Damhán’ meaning ‘fawn’, ‘little stag’, a rare Ulster name."Arscott - "English (mainly Devon): habitational name, perhaps from Arscott in Shropshire, which is named from an unexplained first element + Old English cot ‘hut’, ‘cottage’."Holliman - "English: nickname, perhaps ironic, from Middle English holy ‘holy’ + man ‘man’."

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