This is a list of surnames in which the categories include TTC stations.
CastleEnglish From Middle English castel meaning "castle", from Late Latin castellum, originally indicating a person who lived near a castle.
ChesterEnglish From the name of a city in England, derived from Latin castrum "camp, fortress".
DaleEnglish From Old English dæl meaning "valley", originally indicating a person who lived there.
DavisEnglish, Scottish Means "son of David". This was the surname of the revolutionary jazz trumpet player Miles Davis (1926-1991).
DupontFrench Means "from the bridge", from French pont "bridge".
FinchEnglish, Literature From the name of the bird, from Old English finc. It was used by Harper Lee for the surname of lawyer Atticus Finch and his children in her novel To Kill a Mockingbird (1960).
GreenwoodEnglish Topographic name for someone who lived in or near a lush forest, from Old English grene "green" and wudu "wood".
HillEnglish Originally given to a person who lived on or near a hill, derived from Old English hyll.
KennedyIrish From the Irish name Ó Cinnéidigh meaning "descendant of Cennétig". This surname was borne by assassinated American president John F. Kennedy (1917-1963).
KingEnglish From Old English cyning"king", originally a nickname for someone who either acted in a kingly manner or who worked for or was otherwise associated with a king. A famous bearer was the American civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. (1929-1968).
KiplingEnglish From the name of a town in Yorkshire, of Old English origin meaning "Cyppel's people", from a given name Cyppel of unknown meaning. A famous bearer of this name was the author Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936).
LawrenceEnglish Derived from the given name Laurence 1. Famous bearers include revolutionary T. E. Lawrence (1888-1935) and author D. H. Lawrence (1885-1930).
LeslieScottish From a Scottish clan name, earlier Lesselyn, derived from a place name in Aberdeenshire, itself probably from Gaelic leas celyn meaning "garden of holly".
MillsEnglish Originally given to one who lived near a mill or who worked in a mill, from Middle English mille.
NorthEnglish Name for a person who lived to the north.
QueenEnglish From a given name that was derived from Old English cwen meaning "queen, woman". In some occurrences it may have been a nickname.
Rose 1English, French, German, Jewish Means "rose" from Middle English, Old French and Middle High German rose, all from Latin rosa. All denote a person of a rosy complexion or a person who lived in an area abundant with roses. As a Jewish surname it is ornamental, from Yiddish רויז (roiz).
StreetEnglish Habitational name for a person who lived in a place called Street, for example in Somerset. It is derived from Old English stræt meaning "Roman road", from Latin strata.
VaughanWelsh From Welsh bychan (mutated to fychan) meaning "little". It was a descriptive name to distinguish father from son.
WestEnglish, German Denoted a person who lived to the west of something, or who came from the west.
WilsonEnglish Means "son of Will". A famous bearer was the American president Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924).
WoodEnglish, Scottish Originally denoted one who lived in or worked in a forest, derived from Old English wudu"wood".
YorkEnglish From the name of the English city of York, which was originally called Eburacon (Latinized as Eboracum), meaning "yew" in Brythonic. In the Anglo-Saxon period it was corrupted to Eoforwic, based on Old English eofor "boar" and wic "village". This was rendered as Jórvík by the Vikings and eventually reduced to York.