Do You Have Scottish Genealogy? | Ancestral Findings Podcast

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  • Опубликовано: 2 окт 2024

Комментарии • 1,3 тыс.

  • @Ancestralfindings
    @Ancestralfindings  Год назад +62

    Thank you for listening to the podcast and subscribing... I really appreciate it.

    • @asifmuniruniverse7732
      @asifmuniruniverse7732 Год назад +2

      How can you say that about me ?

    • @JamesMcDowell-x6c
      @JamesMcDowell-x6c Год назад +2

      .......And then there's my name........ (meaning), Son of the dark stranger.

    • @GeneralPadron
      @GeneralPadron Год назад +2

      I think the question is, do the Scotts have Gaelic ancestry?

    • @brucecollins641
      @brucecollins641 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@GeneralPadron no....most likely gallish origins.

    • @GeneralPadron
      @GeneralPadron 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@brucecollins641 , lol...

  • @CherokeeBird
    @CherokeeBird Год назад +102

    I was blown away at all my Scottish ancestors. I even found a painting of my gggggg grandmother in the 1500's, at Stirling castle ❤

    • @krisgreenwood5173
      @krisgreenwood5173 Год назад +7

      My 4x great and 3 time great grandfathers were the military governors od Stirling castle.

    • @cripplecreekqueen
      @cripplecreekqueen 10 месяцев назад +4

      Finding a painting from that long ago was a treasure for you! I hope there was a way to copy it for you. ☮️🙃

    • @krisgreenwood5173
      @krisgreenwood5173 10 месяцев назад +3

      That is a great find

    • @casstay4499
      @casstay4499 8 месяцев назад +2

      Amazing!

    • @annedavis6090
      @annedavis6090 8 месяцев назад +3

      My maternal grandmother was a Stirling. Mom and grandma Peg (Margaret) always said
      "never forget who you are"🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

  • @anthonytroisi6682
    @anthonytroisi6682 Год назад +56

    Many people from Scotland in the 18th century fled to the Appalachian. Mountain area of Colonial America. There is a strong Scottish influence in the eastern oart of Canada.

    • @Rob-cm9jr
      @Rob-cm9jr 9 месяцев назад

      My family came to Crisfield MD in 1653. I can track both my parents to Adam through the Hebrews of the texts. My mother is Sterling and my father is Berlin.

    • @jamesfstump
      @jamesfstump 9 месяцев назад

      eastern kentucky

    • @Ancestralfindings
      @Ancestralfindings  9 месяцев назад +7

      Thank you for highlighting this important part of Scottish migration history. It's fascinating how many Scots settled in the Appalachian region of Colonial America during the 18th century, influencing the cultural and social fabric of the area. Their traditions and customs have had a lasting effect on the region, contributing to its unique heritage.
      Similarly, the strong Scottish presence in Eastern Canada reflects the wide impact of Scottish emigration. From traditions to music and dialects, the influence of Scottish settlers is evident in various cultural aspects. Exploring these connections and seeing how the Scottish diaspora has shaped cultural identities across North America is intriguing.
      Your comment adds a valuable perspective to the discussion of Scottish genealogy, reminding us of the Scottish people's extensive journey and influence far beyond their homeland. Learning about these historical movements and their lasting impacts is always enriching. Thanks again for your insightful contribution!

    • @kdugg
      @kdugg 8 месяцев назад +4

      I’m Scottish decent from West Virginia, Appalachians.

    • @annedavis6090
      @annedavis6090 7 месяцев назад

      @@Rob-cm9jr Rob... it's Stirling🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

  • @earthcat
    @earthcat 2 года назад +186

    My last name is Pattillo. Most folk think it is Hispanic...we always thought it was Italian. Turns out it's Scottish---shortened from Pattilloch (dweller by the lake).

    • @lucyshore8803
      @lucyshore8803 Год назад +26

      I'm a McDonald descendant myself with a history of Glencoe. MY McDonald ancestors who escaped from Glencoe spent some time in the Lowlands and sailed to Canada aboard The Young Norval in 1820 were amongst other Scottish families in the Paisley and Lochwinnoch areas families. Amongst these families was a Pattullo family's James Pattullo and Mary "Polly" Campbell who, together with some of the McDonalds, were amongst the first white settlers in the Caledon West area of Ontario...

    • @earthcat
      @earthcat Год назад +12

      @@lucyshore8803 How wonderful to run into you! You probably know more about me than I do. All I know, really, is that we are Clan McDonald.

    • @lucyshore8803
      @lucyshore8803 Год назад +8

      It's possible that there was a marriage there somewhere!

    • @jurgenjung4302
      @jurgenjung4302 Год назад

      RUclips:'YHVH DEUTSCHLAND' mit 'DEUTSCHE, RUSSEN, IREN, SCHOTTEN.' /// RUclips:ROBERT SEPHER

    • @pattyrainwater5095
      @pattyrainwater5095 Год назад +5

      Anyone know what McBee is

  • @trinidad2450
    @trinidad2450 Год назад +59

    Could I be adopted by a Scot? I tell you the truth, my skin gets the chills whenever I hear the pipes and drums. 😊❤

    • @debrastiens6216
      @debrastiens6216 Год назад +8

      I know that I have Scottish ancestors and have wanted to visit Scotland nearly all my life. It seems to call me home. Unfortunately, I am now 70 yo and still haven’t made it there. There still might be a chance, but not holding out much hope for it.

    • @margritpiepes8242
      @margritpiepes8242 Год назад +6

      You are not the only one 😁😁😁👍🏻

    • @coffee6783
      @coffee6783 Год назад +4

      Consider yourself adopted by a Scot, although I don't live there as it's too wet and cold!

    • @anthonymurphy2779
      @anthonymurphy2779 Год назад +3

      Me too

    • @debpratt52
      @debpratt52 11 месяцев назад +7

      @@debrastiens6216 Don't give up. I hope to go next year and I'll be 72. We're going to visit the home town and church of my 5X Great-Grandfather. We're blessed he left a written letter to his sons about his voyage to America and fortuitous events that shaped his life.

  • @monicacollins8289
    @monicacollins8289 Год назад +6

    My Grammy was from Kilbirnie, Scotland. She made my youth interesting. ❤

  • @debjohnson5822
    @debjohnson5822 Год назад +26

    I'm very proud of my Scottish heritage. Great grandpa was (one of many) Archibald Campbell.

    • @Bornagain7202
      @Bornagain7202 5 месяцев назад

      my great grandad was Carruthers

    • @CL-ok1zs
      @CL-ok1zs 3 месяца назад

      29x Great-Grand Archibald Campbell too 🙂👍🏼

    • @debjohnson5822
      @debjohnson5822 3 месяца назад +1

      @@CL-ok1zs I can't get past about 1835 as everyone must have had an Archibald.

    • @weejackrussell
      @weejackrussell 2 месяца назад

      If I had a penny for everyone who was called Archibald Campbell I would be a very rich person indeed!

  • @sirdukeusa3289
    @sirdukeusa3289 3 года назад +18

    My grandmother is of Scottish-Welsh descendent. Her sir name was Wyatt. There was a Wyatt that was a servant/lover of Queen Mary. "The family then moved to England and my so many great grandfathers back was the 1st gov of Virginia, Sir Francis Wyatt. My mothers maiden name is Little. But she also has German in her.

    • @cls6790
      @cls6790 2 года назад +1

      What about "ing" put on the ending of sir names when the man married and had a child.It was then placed on the end of the word originally used when the gent was single.?

    • @joannathesinger770
      @joannathesinger770 Год назад +2

      Surname, not sir name

  • @CatCmdr
    @CatCmdr Год назад +28

    Our Surname was made up by whomever was taking the names down. However, my genes are almost entirely Scottish. My paternal Grandmother was Scottish and my maternal Grandmother had the shawl that was worn by our Scottish ancestor when she came over by ship to marry. I know their surnames. 😊❤ 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 ❤

    • @standingbear998
      @standingbear998 Год назад +1

      hows that when the people theres ancestors all came from somewhere else?

    • @ronaldwinfield307
      @ronaldwinfield307 Год назад +7

      A lot of my ancestry comes from Colonial America. I have a certain amount of difficulty distinguishing English & Scottish ancestry apart.
      I also have curiosity on the Dutch issue. I can assure you there is not a single Dutch surname in my geneology. That does not however mean I don't have Dutch ancestry..

    • @Revfar10
      @Revfar10 Год назад +3

      Same here!

    • @margotprince7247
      @margotprince7247 Год назад +4

      My last name was Bookless ,I was told that originally it was Buckles . My maternal grandmother’s middle name was Fowlds. My father’s middle name was Haisty ( not sure of spelling). I think that we could find all our ancestors names this way by finding out everyone’s middle names. Yes I was born in Scotland but came to Canada when I was 9.

    • @Ancestralfindings
      @Ancestralfindings  9 месяцев назад +2

      Thank you for sharing such an interesting aspect of your family history! The story about your surname being created by someone recording names highlights how family identities can evolve in unique ways. It's fascinating to hear about your strong Scottish roots, especially through your grandmothers. The detail about the shawl worn by your ancestor during her journey by ship adds a personal and tangible element to your family's story. Such items often become cherished symbols of our heritage. Knowing the surnames of your Scottish ancestors can be a gateway to further exploring your lineage and understanding the lives they led. It's these personal stories and connections that make genealogical research so rewarding. Thanks again for listening and sharing your family's connection to Scotland!

  • @mspfinney
    @mspfinney Год назад +55

    My great grandfather was Donald McDonald. He named my grandmother Valeria. Her brothers were Vilas and Alexis. I’ve been to Scotland and made sure I left with a scarf of my family tartan.

    • @coffee6783
      @coffee6783 Год назад +7

      My great grandfather was a Highlander, Jock McDonald, his first language was Gaelic.

    • @maidaursuladawn44glasgow3
      @maidaursuladawn44glasgow3 Год назад +3

      My DNA says I am 61%Scots13% Irish the rest is made up of Welsh English and Scandinavian Maiden name Monteith one Gt grandmother Frazer another La Mont and many other females who married the Monteith men.

    • @katechurches
      @katechurches 8 месяцев назад +1

      I learned recently that tartans are bogus, and it’s all marketing from like the 1800s. Don’t feel bad. My dad had the family tartan on a tie. Oh well!

    • @SherryHill-k5y
      @SherryHill-k5y 2 месяца назад +1

      I have a McDonald ancestor, a Shepherd, a Graham ( of Montrose,) and a Cunningham.

    • @MrBulky992
      @MrBulky992 5 дней назад +1

      ​@@maidaursuladawn44glasgow3According to Ancestry, I am 41% Scots but my two sisters are 60% and 22%. Ancestry confirms we have the same parents. How reliable and useful are seemingly contradictory stats such as these? Not very, in my opinion.

  • @marthaperdew
    @marthaperdew Год назад +12

    My ancestors came from Scotland in the 1600s and settled in Jamestown, they came on a ship after the Mayflower

    • @plurbpb7175
      @plurbpb7175 10 дней назад

      Mine were on the 7th Mayflower, every one thinks there was only one, No, There were many Mayflowers. We settled the Territory of Missouri.

  • @anthonywallace4508
    @anthonywallace4508 2 года назад +6

    My name is Wallace WALLACE from Loch Lomond shy in Scotland my sister looked up our ancestry father to son father to son stands right back to the 14th century Anthony my chest is very proud God bless you all

    • @jdwallace6312
      @jdwallace6312 2 года назад +1

      I’ve read that Wallace was a word used to describe a “foreigner”, however, I’ve also read that Wallace meant “from Wales”. I was hoping this video provided some more info on it but he didn’t even mention it… hopefully it’ll be included in a future video??? 🤔

  • @janicerusso6068
    @janicerusso6068 Год назад +4

    My ancestors are McGrady & Wallace. My McGrady's were sent to Ireland and when they got the chance to escape the Irish, they went to America around the 1700's...

  • @brunoandthebee9587
    @brunoandthebee9587 2 года назад +27

    I love these educational videos. It’s fascinating to know things were so simple back then. I’m overwhelmed today though as my Scott surname of Mckenzie (Once Mac) is too common to figure out. The ancestors can be traced to the highlands but that’s as far as I can get. Will keep at it.

  • @davidjohnston7512
    @davidjohnston7512 3 месяца назад +5

    My father was from Glasgow, Scotland.I’m a first generation Australian but I have British citizenship by descent automatically.Citizenship automatically passes one generation but it doesn’t pass to my children.I have dual nationality.I have an extensive family history in Scotland.I have ancestors from all over Scotland from Ayrshire,Dumfries and Galloway,Wigtownshire,Kirkudbrightshire and also from Orkney.Cheers from down under.

  • @jennifermiller7139
    @jennifermiller7139 Год назад +2

    I love the Ancestral information. My Mother was from England. I love learning about everything.

  • @Jolene492
    @Jolene492 Год назад +17

    Im Scottish, 100% from both of my parents and grandparents, great grandparents 😊

    • @edwright480
      @edwright480 5 месяцев назад +1

      Got the DNA done and I am 98.5 Celt!

    • @Laraine3
      @Laraine3 Месяц назад +1

      Have you had your DNA done? You might find a few surprises.

    • @Jolene492
      @Jolene492 Месяц назад

      @@Laraine3 well funny you should say that… im intending to have it done. I have blonde wild curly hair and green eyes. My picture is a very very rare good hair day. We were laughing about it when I took the picture. Cut my ex out. 😂😂 but vikings did come to Scotland… so we’ll see 🫶🏼

    • @tinytitanicus
      @tinytitanicus 10 дней назад +1

      Yay!!!

  • @Iceland874
    @Iceland874 Год назад +2

    I already know the meanings. I go back to Kenneth MacAlpin. My paternal grandmother alone had over 50 Scottish surnames in the past 3 hundred years. Good informative video. Thanks.

  • @erinsullivan-qo4kx
    @erinsullivan-qo4kx Год назад +36

    My maiden surname was Laird. My fathers first name was Wallace. I had a great uncle whose first name was Angus. I understand that I’m of the McKenzie clan! Definitely Scottish heritage!

    • @derekmoore2779
      @derekmoore2779 Год назад +2

      My grandmother can go back 4 generation William Wallace , my grandmother was told she was welch ?

    • @hume6900
      @hume6900 Год назад +3

      @@derekmoore2779, 4 generations would only take your grandmother back roughly 100 years from the time of her birth, so assuming that she was born in the mid 1900’s it would take her and your ancestors back to about 1850. William Wallace was in the 1300’s another 500 years earlier. My maiden name is Monteith and the Earl of Menteith (old spelling) betrayed William Wallace to the English. We don’t know if the Earl was actually a Menteith/Monteith or a Stewart, but, the Menteiths certainly paid the price. The Earl was caught, hung drawn and quartered from the nearest bridge, name and all derivatives banned from Scotland and to add insult to injury the Loch of Menteith was anglicized to the Lake of Menteith. To this day you will find more of us outside of Scotland. Curiously, my dad grew was born and raised in Scotland, but, always knew he would leave his hometown as a labourer made more money than he would as a university grad. My sister and I actually found out the history of our name by hooking up with a tour of one of the Castles and my sister was acting as translator between the guide and a family of Texans. All of whom had very heavy accents not understood by the other party. Although, we were born and raised in Canada 🇨🇦, our grandma being older than most for kids our age spoke old Scottish with a very heavy brogue. When the guide noticed what my sister was doing he asked her where she was from and what her name was. When she replied with her whole name he screamed at her TRAITOR without explanation to the rest of the tour and we were left to ask daddy when we got back to the car.

    • @elainegoad9777
      @elainegoad9777 Год назад +2

      Laird means "Lord". Lord (Laird) Wallace. Must be from nobility. Maybe related to the famous Scot hero, William Wallace, who led the Scots in the fight against English rule and was brutally executed.

    • @kathybray2838
      @kathybray2838 Год назад +1

      Erin S. 😊 our family line from our 5x Great Grandmother was Isabelle Laird. Her son, William Laird Adam,’s eldest daughter, Margaret A. Adam married David Glenn Henderson. They came from the Calder, Monkland area, then came to the USA in 1848 and traveled by wagon train with several, sisters and brothers married to Easton brothers and Grant’s. They eventually went to Salt Lake, then on to San Bernardino, CA and Santa Maria, CA areas. So you may be related ! The Henderson’s of our Clan seem to have come from the Orkney Isles and Glen Coe. And were there when the Mac Donald’s came to Glen Coe from Isle of Skye. Both Clans were caught up in the Glen Coe massacre. The Adam’s and Laird’s seem to have come mainly from the South Eastern border area near N. England. No “s” on Adam is Scots. With the “s” is English. 😂

    • @kathybray2838
      @kathybray2838 Год назад

      Not Santa Maris. It is Santa Maria. Sorry.

  • @pamcaito7614
    @pamcaito7614 4 дня назад +1

    I’m 66% Scottish and 38% English. My Scottish ancestors came over to America in 1730. My mother was born in London, my father in Iowa. Crazy that my genes are so strongly Scottish even though my ancestors on my dad’s side have resided here for 300 years.

  • @elainegoad9777
    @elainegoad9777 2 года назад +11

    Huntley (Huntly Scotland Huntly Castle Gordon Clan (formerly Strathbogie Castle) located in Aberneenshire Scotland) Adam de Gordon, Normandy Knight from Gordon Normandy, fought with William the Conquer 1066 AD and was awarded lands and became a nobleman serving the new King William of Normandy. John Huntley arrived Lyme Conneticutt about 1635 and had a Cooper& Shipping business ( making barrels for shipping food and fish storage with another man) Descendants migrated to Virginia (farming) and onto Rutherford County NC to Henderson County NC.

    • @alysontaylor393
      @alysontaylor393 Год назад +1

      What a coincidence I have just been looking into this lineage this morning. My family's name is Montgomerie and went to Queensland Australia in the 1920s.

    • @WTPsychology
      @WTPsychology Год назад +1

      My grandmother is a Gordon!

    • @elainegoad9777
      @elainegoad9777 Год назад +1

      @@WTPsychology Adame du Gordun of Normandy (Province of France( named after the Norsemen/Norman's) and knight serving with William the Conquer 1066 AD) was first Gordun (Gordon) in England and awarded nobility and lands by King William of Normandy. William was great grandson of Robiert ,(Robert, 'his Christian name', 1st Duke of Normandy ( Rollo/Rolf the Viking/Norseman, who took sides with the king of France and married one of his daughters). I traced Adame du Gordun's ancestry way back to Turkey. Studying our personal history and our ancestry is so interesting .

  • @stephenhayden1618
    @stephenhayden1618 15 дней назад +1

    My mother’s mother was Anderson; my father’s mother was Buchanan; my father’s father was Irish and my mother’s father was Duncan…

  • @petermurdoch3001
    @petermurdoch3001 Год назад +4

    my Blood, Archibald Murdoch arrived in Canada in 1825, he had a 5 year Contract to work for the Hudson Bay Fur Company, 1830 he returned to UK, only to immigrate 1833 for good, NW of Montreal (Lachute)

  • @susangarvey9415
    @susangarvey9415 Год назад +17

    My mother had a lovely Scottish surname, Lockhart. Her grannies surname was Paterson, which we always thought was obviously Scottish, apparently its of viking origin.

    • @elainegoad9777
      @elainegoad9777 Год назад +4

      The Vikings came down into Scotland from the Orkney Islands (top of country) starting about 700-800 AD until bout 1000 AD and settled, intermarried and ruled Scotland. Names ending with "son" are from the Norsemen and means "son of". Paterson= Son of Pater. My niece is Anderson= Son/daughter of Ander. We get our fair complexion, red hair/auburn hair, freckles, green/blue eyes from the Viking ancestry. the Scots and Irish get their brogue accent and many words from Viking influence. The Scandanavian peoples migrated to Sweden, Norway, Denmark areas , about 10,000 years ago from the area that is now Germany today.

    • @susangarvey9415
      @susangarvey9415 Год назад +3

      @@elainegoad9777 my sister had a DNA test done, my paternal grandfater came from Sussex (land of the South Saxons) his family was easily traced to way back, my mother was Scottish, she had a Norwegian grandfather. Our DNA was something like 48% Scandinavian/German, only 23% British Isles, the rest was a right old mix up of Eastern European, Iberian peninsula, North Africa and Nigeria, my paternal grandmother was Spanish, I suspect that's where the North African DNA came from. My sister has red hair mine is dark red and I have the blue eyes and pale skin. Everybody is a mixture of all kinds of people and cultures, my children's father came from Ireland, my daughter had really fair skin and hair, both my boys have dark hair but red beards, and my present husband has Native American in his mix.

    • @elainegoad9777
      @elainegoad9777 Год назад +2

      @@susangarvey9415 Yes, I have the green eyes and had light brown hair, fair skin, like my mother's Huntley Scot side, and my sister had dark brown eyes, dark brunette hair and more olive skin like my father.

  • @charleneevans5848
    @charleneevans5848 Год назад +11

    my maternal grandfather is of Scot heritage. Find it hard to trace the family tree back too far. Gets frustrating. They originated near Aberdeen. One relative is listed at the base of Sir Walter Scott outside Edinburgh train station. Fell in love with Scotland when I was there. Such a beautiful country.

    • @WarrioroftheAges
      @WarrioroftheAges 7 месяцев назад

      Have you tried My Heritage App? I’ve used many genealogical apps and websites throughout the years.
      MyHeritage is a bit pricey, but it’s easy to navigate and I’ve gotten back to Crusades in some places.

  • @barbaraadams8347
    @barbaraadams8347 Год назад +1

    Yup. And according to Ancestry, I am 41% Scottish. Can't wait to visit there this Fall.

  • @haraldtheyounger5504
    @haraldtheyounger5504 Год назад +13

    MacDougall's & MacDonald's are both from the sons of Somhairlidh, otherwise known as Somerled. Two very in-depth books The Sea Kings, and The Kingdom of The Isles, both by R. Andrew McDonald, give the full history.

    • @Sabhail_ar_Alba
      @Sabhail_ar_Alba Год назад

      Mac Allister was his 3rd son.

    • @haraldtheyounger5504
      @haraldtheyounger5504 Год назад

      @@Sabhail_ar_Alba They are from Donald, Somhairlidh's 2nd son.

    • @Doktracy
      @Doktracy Год назад

      My next door neighbor is a McDougald.

  • @redwoods7370
    @redwoods7370 Год назад +2

    I am American. My grandmother’s maiden name is McGlennon. I love that I have Scottish heritage.

  • @JimmyOgilvie52
    @JimmyOgilvie52 Год назад +6

    Although I'm a native of New York City, it's my familial understanding that my 5th great-grandfather Ogilvy, who came to the colonies, was the son of one of the earlier Earls of Airlie. That spells Scottish to me. lol

  • @deborahjesser2028
    @deborahjesser2028 10 дней назад +1

    My Stuart ancestor was a Jacobite, by family tradition a cousin of James III of Scotland who fled to Ireland and his son, another James Stewart who had been pressed into service by the English Navy jumped ship in the Bahamas and joined the American fleet. His oldest son was born on a flat boat going down the Ohio River.

  • @debfincher1741
    @debfincher1741 Год назад +3

    Mackenzie and MacKay ancestors, met on the boat to Victoria, Australia in 1854 and married 1855. I have been to far north of Scotland where they originated.

  • @SaltyMinorcan
    @SaltyMinorcan Год назад +4

    The first Armstrong was named in a field of battle when Sven Bairn drug the chieftain to safety with one arm while fighting off the enemy(sword in hand) with the other

  • @helenoffell2360
    @helenoffell2360 Год назад +4

    I suppose I´m 50% Scott on my Mum´s side, she was from Irvine, Ayrshire. My grand parents sur names were Fairbairn (Clann Armstrong) and Cummings, which comes from the old name Comyn. I have distant family in Canada, Australia and I live in Ecuador.

  • @tracyparker129
    @tracyparker129 Год назад +2

    Yes, my great grandfather was a Scot and so were my ancestors on mum’s side

  • @anthonymurphy2779
    @anthonymurphy2779 Год назад +4

    Scots Gaelic and Gaeilge (Irish) are two different Celtic languages though very similar.

    • @pauladuarte781
      @pauladuarte781 3 месяца назад

      Once upon a time, the Irish came to raid Scotland. While not exactly alike, Irish and Scottish are both Q Celtic languages.

  • @williamadams8353
    @williamadams8353 Год назад +15

    Yes I do. My aunt traced our family back to the Massachusetts colony in the 1600s. I did the research and found Adams to be a border Scots clan. My Scottish ancestor from Massachusetts had a son who must have gone south and married into the Choctaw tribe. My dad Adams Sr. is. 1 of 13 kids from a Choctaw father and a Cherokee mother. My grandfather is on the Dawes rolls, but my grandmother is not.

    • @annevuolo3302
      @annevuolo3302 Год назад +2

      My daughter is Adams family Westbrook field

    • @annevuolo3302
      @annevuolo3302 Год назад +2

      Her great grandmother was Mcnanney by marriage

  • @jeankorte3556
    @jeankorte3556 Год назад +9

    My maiden name was Armstrong, it's lovely hearing how the names originated, my mothers parents were also Scottish, would love to have heard how Dawson originated

  • @kathyw3466
    @kathyw3466 4 года назад +45

    My DNA test shows I am 68% a Scot . Not bad for an Indigenous and Jewish Australian. Obviously there was a bit of Scottish too. My Father immigrated from Kilmarnock Scotland with family names of Craig Stuart and MacDonald.

    • @cam553
      @cam553 3 года назад +6

      Very interesting. I’m 5-6th gen european kiwi, but mums DNA test is showing 64% Scottish. Dad refuses DNA testing but his surname is Scottish anyways. Mums maiden name is MacNeill.

    • @hackermanofficial1098
      @hackermanofficial1098 3 года назад +8

      That’s interesting Australian here and turns out I’m 52 percent Scottish, my surname is Williamson.

    • @KristiContemplates
      @KristiContemplates 2 года назад +4

      Proud to share three ancient lineages with you 👍

    • @jeremytart639
      @jeremytart639 2 года назад +5

      Kathy W I've got Stuart on my mother's side. Hell of a family to come from

    • @mikem668
      @mikem668 2 года назад +1

      @@cam553 I love your comment and Kathy's above. I've lived in Sydney and visited NZ, including the Bay of Island and Waitangi (where the treaty was signed for those who don't know).
      *
      Living in Australia, I felt immediately at home. Even more than when I worked in London. Somehow my Scots-Irish Protestant background and our common British cultural origins meant that as an American I've felt at home with most of the Canadians, Aussies, and Kiwis I've known. I knew about the number of Canadians who'd emigrated to the US, often parents of my friends in mixed marriages, but not the Jewish or Maori Scots connection. Thanks.

  • @gordonmelrose2514
    @gordonmelrose2514 3 года назад +8

    Hello from scotland :)

  • @tamasmarcuis4455
    @tamasmarcuis4455 2 года назад +10

    There was no English language in Scotland at that time. Scots is an Anglic language decended from Northumbrian and Norse. At the time it extended into Scotland's lowlands English as a language did not exist. The Old Scots that these names came from was a combination of Northumbrian, Flemish, Danish Norse, Medieval French, Welsh and Gaelic. Gaelic and French continued to strongly influence Scots to the modern day. Words like !smashing" coming from S'math a sinne in the 1940's. "Hoot" coming from "zut alors" in the 18th 19th century.

  • @lucyflorey9152
    @lucyflorey9152 Год назад +10

    My ancestry DNA shows my maternal side was Scottish and Welsh. But the surname is untraceable. The name Cohea could be a derivation of Cohee. But it hasn't been proven.
    But our ancestors on that side were very talented carpenters. Some of the very old carpenter's tools are still in the family.
    My brother, older sister and I have bright red hair.

  • @sarawoods7874
    @sarawoods7874 Год назад +8

    I was always told I was more Irish as my dad's family has the last names of Carey and Hanrahan. But my DNA says Scottish and Welsh and my mom's family is Burns and Stalnaker.

  • @RobertTaylor-vo4rz
    @RobertTaylor-vo4rz Год назад +9

    My mother 's maiden name was Chalmers ,she was the first Australian born child of a couple from Dundee. The family is of Clan Cameron. My father was a Taylor from Birmingham England.The Taylor family in Scotland belongs to Clan Cameron.
    Taylor apparently originated from the Normans. This might account for the fact that of myself and my 5 siblings there are 2 redheads and 4 blondes. Additionally my son has haemochromatosis which occurs in predominantly Celtic /Northern European descent.
    To close the circle my wife is Thiai and our daughter has married a Macleod

  • @beachplumb
    @beachplumb 7 месяцев назад +1

    My last name is McCormack (and every other variation of that spelling you can imagine when you go back in time). My family came to the US from the Dumfries and Galloway area (southwest Scotland) in the 1880’s. While on our honeymoon in August of 2000, my wife and I visited the area and located ancestral headstones in the Kirkmabreck Cemetery in Creetown, another small church yard in Twynholm and another in Kirkcudbright dating back to the mid-1700’s. We were guided by “research”(mostly her memories) put together by my great aunt who was born in the 1890’s. I had the opportunity to meet her when she was in her 90’s and I was a high school kid at a huge family reunion she planned and pulled together in New Hampshire back in the early 80’s.
    While in Creetown, we stopped in at a local historical society office, and the woman there said there were still some McCormacks in the area, and she encouraged us to try and meet with them, but I didn’t want to intrude on anyone! But she also said it wasn’t a very common name in the area and suggested my family originally came from Ireland. My great aunt’s research didn’t go back far enough to reveal that, but I suspect it’s true.

    • @Ancestralfindings
      @Ancestralfindings  7 месяцев назад +1

      What an incredible journey you've had tracing your McCormack lineage, especially visiting ancestral sites in Dumfries and Galloway on such a special occasion as your honeymoon! Discovering headstones dating back to the mid-1700s must have been a profound connection to your past. Your great aunt's efforts in compiling family memories into research played a pivotal role, and it's wonderful that you could build on her legacy. The suggestion that the McCormack family might have Irish origins before settling in Scotland adds another fascinating layer to your family's story. It's not uncommon for families to move across borders, making genealogy even more intriguing. Perhaps one day, if you feel comfortable, reaching out to the McCormacks still in the area could uncover more about your shared heritage. Thanks for sharing such a personal and inspiring genealogy journey with us. Happy Searching!

  • @baskervillebee6097
    @baskervillebee6097 Год назад +3

    Stupendous Beard

  • @tamasmarcuis4455
    @tamasmarcuis4455 2 года назад +16

    There are also a lot of French names changed to Scottish versions. Grant (Le Grand) Sinclair (Saint Claire) Mullville etc.

    • @davidjohnston9169
      @davidjohnston9169 2 года назад +2

      The year 1066 was the beginning of that William the conquer, Norman of Danish descent got land my family is Norman Gail,

    • @savanahmclary4465
      @savanahmclary4465 2 года назад

      Do you know Sur names belongs to distinct, families. Do you have their explicit permission, to be researching them and exploiting their Families Lives to the public? They came to North America for a reason. They were buried in the woods and forest for a reason. Family resting places are just that.

    • @elainehodge9415
      @elainehodge9415 Год назад

      If you go back before the 1st King of Scotland you will get a lot of French Before them there were the Vikings. To go further I would have to have another look at what I have at my fingertips.

  • @Navigator2166
    @Navigator2166 Год назад +7

    Clan McNeil of Barra Island (1050 AD) spelled 1001 ways, but all the same folk. My branch is McNiel. Anyone with that spelling is related. GreatX5(?) grandfather George came to the Yadkin River Valley of North Carolina in 1720 from Glasgow University Seminary.
    My father was able to got to the Clan Gathering at Barra before he died. It was his greatest dream. Mine too! 🇺🇸❤🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

  • @Alex-bq2vs
    @Alex-bq2vs Год назад +3

    My surname is "Millar". This is not a trade name but a place name. It is from Millarstown , a town west of Glasgow. The city of Paisley has incorporated the town.

    • @cathmcguire1643
      @cathmcguire1643 11 месяцев назад

      My great grandmother was a Millar, she married a William Grant,

    • @hughmacfarlane9662
      @hughmacfarlane9662 3 месяца назад

      Millar, Miller and other variations are Septs of Clan McFarlane.

  • @dina113east
    @dina113east Год назад +4

    So my comment is different than any comment stated here. I am of Italian heritage and my DNA test also shows Scottish and Norwegian heritage. I have friends who are German and their ancestry research showed some Italian background. I know Europeans have a varied ethnic background, but it surprising how varied one's ethnicity can be. Anyway, I look forward to researching my family history.

  • @angrydemonproductions4361
    @angrydemonproductions4361 Год назад +14

    My mothers maiden name is Craig. I’ve done ancestry going all the way back to about the 1400’s Scotland. They came to America in the 1700’s and created the Traveling Church between Virginia/Kentucky/Tennessee borders. Setteling in western Kentucky where they help found Albany,KY and several other towns in Clinton County. A lot of the decendants helped defend the area during the Revolution. That whole area has very strong ties to the Craig name in some way.

    • @lilysandoval1975
      @lilysandoval1975 Год назад

      No More , OIL in the EYE

    • @lindamyers4980
      @lindamyers4980 Год назад

      @@lilysandoval1975 WHAT DOES THIS MEAN???

    • @DavidKcPrice
      @DavidKcPrice Год назад +1

      We're cousins in some way I believe, I have 2nd and 3rd cousins of the Craig last name all father and sons choose themselves Sr. And Jr's, and my tree follows your same highlights

    • @WCC-ps8jt
      @WCC-ps8jt Год назад

      It wasn’t by any chance through William A. Craig born in 1694 was it? He came to the US in 1729 to Philadelphia then they all settled in Orange County North Carolina???

    • @angrydemonproductions4361
      @angrydemonproductions4361 Год назад

      @@WCC-ps8jt No.. through Rev. Taliaferro Craig (1704-1795) who was born aboard the ship from Scotland to America... his sons (Elijah, Lewis, Tolliver, Joseph & I Believe William) started the Traveling Church... I'm descended through Joseph...

  • @tommmjohns2694
    @tommmjohns2694 2 года назад +10

    Hello. I'm Native American and my last name is Linklater. I googled the surname and found out its Scottish

    • @rinlo1424
      @rinlo1424 2 года назад +3

      It was common for Scottish immigrants to befriend and marry Native Americans. There's a (pretty good) theory for this that explains that there was a shared history of oppression, invasion and tribal/clan communities between Native Americans and Scottish people.
      I have mostly Scottish ancestry and several of those ancestors who came to America married people in the Choctaw tribe.

    • @sheilaroddick5853
      @sheilaroddick5853 2 года назад +2

      I have Linklaters in both my grandmother and grandfather's families.I think it is an Orkney name.

    • @Planet_Shel
      @Planet_Shel Год назад +2

      Checkout Mohawk tribes of Northern Scotland if you haven't yet.

    • @williamadams8353
      @williamadams8353 Год назад

      My aunt traced our family back to the Massachusetts colony in the 1600s, but my dad is 1 of 13 children and comes from a Choctaw father and a Cherokee mother. After researching it seems that a lot of Scottish names have an ancestor who married into one tribe or another. Both groups have clans within the larger tribal group and were from a highland type setting in Scotland and in the Appalachians in certain southern states. They were all marched west on the trail of tears, and fled Indian Territory as soon as possible. They landed in the Longview area and are still there today. They are best described as a clan of east Texas indian hill billys. Salt of the earth kind of folks. Now on my mother's side....

  • @anniesshenanigans3815
    @anniesshenanigans3815 4 года назад +14

    I want to go to scotland to see where my ancestors originated. The spelling!!! Its changed so many times its hard to tell where that will end up.

    • @keykeyloveshalloween1787
      @keykeyloveshalloween1787 3 года назад +1

      Yeah I found out I was mostly Scottish I though I was Irish but I think I was actually scotirish or olster Irish

  • @redmi9834
    @redmi9834 Год назад +8

    My great grand mother was a Halliday of Scottish descent. I read that the name back in history it was given to babies born on a holy day like Christmas and Easter etc. I was born on the sixth of August which is the feast of the Transfiguration in the Catholic Church. My maternal grandmother died on a Palm Sunday, my father on the feast of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary, 15 August, and my mother on the feast of the Epiphany. A bit strange I think.
    😂

  • @laterdudesaint
    @laterdudesaint 3 года назад +20

    What's the difference between a Scottish shepard and Mick Jagger?
    Mick Jagger yells " hey you get offa my cloud" and the Scottish shepard yells " hey McCloud get offa my ewe!"

    • @alwill1528
      @alwill1528 3 года назад

      Love it !

    • @fci1
      @fci1 2 года назад +1

      😃😃😃

    • @agbobier2657
      @agbobier2657 Год назад

      Brilliant!

    • @deedeskin2439
      @deedeskin2439 Год назад

      I always wondered why sheep have such goofy looking eyes...mystery solved, and I almost fell off the couch 🤣.Thanks!

  • @robertinglis4292
    @robertinglis4292 Год назад +13

    My name is Inglis. We're from Innerleithen. But my father looked Spanish. My mother said I'd have problems because of my name and she was right because people were unfamiliar with my name and couldn't pigeon hole me into an ethnicity that they were familiar with. In any case her name was Gervasini, so she must have known what she wax talking about. Best wishes!

    • @ladybearbaiter
      @ladybearbaiter Год назад +5

      Inglis is Anglo Saxon for Englishman ( and adapted by the Scots)

    • @feliciainglis4461
      @feliciainglis4461 Год назад

      I got married to an Inglis. His great grandfather was born in Scotland and settled in South Africa.

    • @donaldoutterson3071
      @donaldoutterson3071 Год назад

      Innerleithen is in the lowlands and used to be a part of an old middle kingdom (between England and Scotland) called Northumbria. There is only one county left in the Northern most part of England called County Northumberland. The Kingdom once ruled the lands north of the Humber River. I am a dark skinned burly person who was told I look like a Pict by the locals. You just might be a Pict too. Welcome to the party! You are not alone. See Bamburgh castle and read about Utred the Bold.

  • @LogoTimeClark
    @LogoTimeClark 2 месяца назад +1

    My maternal grandmother's maiden name was McCroskey. Ive never heard anyone with a first name of Croskey.

  • @jacintatate
    @jacintatate 2 года назад +18

    My Surname is Tate. According to google its an anglo-sottish surname and further back in time it is of Norse-Viking origin, deriving from the pre 7th century old norse word "teitr". Its amazing how far back ancestry goes!

    • @gabrielimmanuel4989
      @gabrielimmanuel4989 2 года назад +1

      I would not trust goggle

    • @iaintait6232
      @iaintait6232 2 года назад +3

      King Tait of Scythia was the first use of the name Tait you can find it in the ancient Dowling's. King Tait family migrated through north Africa to Portugal and onto southern Ireland

    • @jacintatate
      @jacintatate 2 года назад +3

      @@gabrielimmanuel4989 you're probably right, but my DNA test and my tree do go back to Scotland predominantly just beyond that I can't tell haha. Immanuel is a unique last name, what's the origin?

    • @mustelidpeter
      @mustelidpeter 2 года назад +2

      Tait is a lowland Scottish name. Tate is a Northern English name most common in Yorkshire and Northumberland.

    • @rinlo1424
      @rinlo1424 2 года назад +1

      @@gabrielimmanuel4989 Google is a search engine, like a card catalogue in a library. Saying you don't "trust" Google is basically the same thing as saying "don't trust libraries."

  • @patriciadunmore9767
    @patriciadunmore9767 7 дней назад +1

    I’m from Dundee with the surname of Dye which is a Sept of the Davidson clan, I have a brother called David, an uncle and a cousin called David. I’ve often wondered what was the meaning of my surname.

  • @jeffwalker1322
    @jeffwalker1322 2 года назад +9

    William Walker born 1640, left Scotland in 1658 by ship to the “ New World “. We’ve been here since. No idea if I have family left there. Did a DNA test. 99.9% European and 68% North Western European

    • @AnnetteTurner-b2w
      @AnnetteTurner-b2w 6 месяцев назад

      My great great grand mother was a Walker she married a Gordon

  • @sidilicious11
    @sidilicious11 Год назад +2

    My great grandfather was “Scotty” Steven, a handsome guy with beautiful red hair. So I’m at least 1/8th Scottish.

  • @DevinSIDScott
    @DevinSIDScott 3 года назад +13

    aye, it's hard to get much more Scot, than Scott! ;)

  • @hostileactual7655
    @hostileactual7655 3 года назад +7

    My great grandfather's name was McCook. My grandfather dropped the Mc and just used Cook. I dont know if it's Scottish or Irish.

  • @sylviaesposito4757
    @sylviaesposito4757 Год назад +3

    100% Scottish. Born in Glasgow. Both sides go way way back.

  • @corm7538
    @corm7538 Год назад +8

    On, my dad's side of my family we can trace our family back to being part of Clan Campbell of the Argyll region of Scotland. Thanks to the research of one of my great uncles who was a 30-year vet of the US Navy and in that time he spent about 10 years stationed in Scotland in his time living there he was able to follow our family tree back to sometime in the late 1500s or early 1600s were the records stopped, he was told that more than likely the British burnt the records as a way to punish the people of Scotland for not following the laws that the British had imposed on them.

    • @theresachennaux1986
      @theresachennaux1986 11 месяцев назад

      Scotland was taken over by Irish in the 6thcentury Thus the Scots which mean irish men Gaelicised the Picts.

    • @brucecollins641
      @brucecollins641 6 месяцев назад

      @@theresachennaux1986.... rubbish. go and do some indepth research. a tale.

  • @NikiLivi5
    @NikiLivi5 Год назад +6

    Ok this explains why we are so drawn to the name Campbell. My best friend was a Campbell before she married. My sister married a Campbell and my uncle married a Campbell. All from different states and none supposedly related. I was a Livingston and my dads dads side is from Scotland. I guess we are attracted and drawn to our own kind. 😂

  • @brucelachniet8698
    @brucelachniet8698 Год назад +2

    Robert Ulysses Couturier
    1927-2004
    BIRTH 8 MAY 1927 • Lake Leelanau, Grand Traverse County, Michigan
    DEATH 02/02/2004 • Grand Rapids, Kent County, Michigan,
    father
    Capt. John Oliver
    1775-1841
    BIRTH 19 MAR 1775 • Southdean and Abbotrule, Roxburghshire, Scotland
    DEATH 1841 • Mishawaka, St Joseph, Indiana, United States
    3rd great-grandfather
    James Stewart
    1605-1679
    BIRTH 1605 • Fled, Scotland
    DEATH 30 JUL 1679 • Plymouth Colony, Massachusetts
    10th great-grandfather
    Mary Ann Douglas
    1530-1578
    BIRTH ABT 1530 • Moffatdale, Dumfries-shire, Scotland
    DEATH ABT 1578 • Moffatdale, Dumfries-shire, Scotland
    12th great-grandmother

  • @thomaskeene7327
    @thomaskeene7327 Год назад +5

    Stewart was my gandmothers maiden surname ..her grandfther was Stephen Stewart whose ancestors fought along side of William Wallace according to the records in Scotland... he fought in the US civil war in the Union cavalry and was still alive when my father was 6 yrs old and he never forgot his thick brogue that scared the other kids but not dad.. he died in 1927 born in 1830 in Scotland.

  • @jocelyngarvin188
    @jocelyngarvin188 Год назад +1

    Clan Graham of Montrose here in NH, USA. My ancestors weren't the nicest people. John Graham, Lord of Montrose, was the bad guy who made Rob Roy's life miserable. Another Graham was one of a bunch of Scots who killed Mary, Queen of Scots husband Lord Darnley. There was a Graham who betrayed William Wallace. I've been to Scotland, have seen the castle in Edinburgh, and would love to go back. Too old to travel now, so any chance to watch vids about Scotland, or bagpipes, I'm there. They always make me cry. 🇺🇸🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🦁🦄

  • @bayoulafourche
    @bayoulafourche Год назад +10

    My maternal grandparent's are scottish. He's a Stuart and she was a Douglas. I can't wait to have time to research the family tree. All I know is they were from Aberdeen

    • @jeannedouglas9912
      @jeannedouglas9912 8 месяцев назад +4

      Shout out to Scottish Douglas lineage.

    • @katechurches
      @katechurches 8 месяцев назад +3

      Also Douglas here. The Douglas clan actually originated near the town of… you guessed it! Douglas. Aberdeen is farther to the coast and quite a bit north of Douglas, which is south of Glasgow and Edinburgh. My grandfather “inherited” Douglas castle - there was a not-so-nice practice in the 60s to find a prosperous, distant American relative to take on the taxes of the ruined family castle. He declined. No idea if it’s true, but the family lore is that we’re descended from the Black Douglas.

    • @AnnetteTurner-b2w
      @AnnetteTurner-b2w 6 месяцев назад

      Stuart on my DNA

    • @bayoulafourche
      @bayoulafourche 6 месяцев назад

      @@katechurches eeeeew, silly Americans lol. My Welch connection is Henry VII. My Scottish on mom's side starts there when Margaret Tudor married the old Scottish king. That's my Stuart line. Then Margaret Tudor had children with Angus Douglas - think I got the first name right - so we have two branches coming from Margaret Tudor. My grandfather was an Osborne from Isle of Wight. I recently moved from New Orleans to NW Arkansas, in the ozarks. I knew about the Scottish gathering in North Carolina, but I recently learned there's one right across the border from me in Oklahoma. So many of the Highland Scots left NC and moved west and integrated with the American Indians that were there. I do remember my mother making comments about the Stuarts being lowlanders and that they have no family tartan lol. Us being catholic and all... but she favored the Osborne plaid which is a lovely blue with green and white stripes. Somehow I don't think it's Scottish though. Sorry for all the blather but I'm excited to go to the gathering in the fall and want to buy material but don't know what to buy yet. I sew everything myself.

    • @notdone1975
      @notdone1975 6 месяцев назад

      @@katechurches another black Douglas here in canada

  • @jessiejvlogs
    @jessiejvlogs Год назад +1

    My scottish family name is Scott, out of Selkirk my great grandmother's great grandfather on her father's side is of Scottish decent.

  • @robertdawson4502
    @robertdawson4502 Год назад +36

    I'm an American and have all kinds of Scottish ancestry running in my veins. Robert The Bruce was my 20th great grandfather. And of course, all the Bruce lineage both before and after. I know this by way of extensive research that has been done by family members. I am also a 6th cousin to the late Queen Elizibeth II, and all her family lineage. But this is not surprising as I have many other royal family members in my past that are related to me. You may or may not know that they all traded their royal relatives between families all over Europe to keep the royal blood line royal.

    • @katmackie778207
      @katmackie778207 Год назад +2

      My family is supposed to be related also

    • @robertdawson4502
      @robertdawson4502 Год назад +5

      @@katmackie778207 Cool, I would venture to say that we are related in some way.

    • @kasyakyoubfgamindikisborat
      @kasyakyoubfgamindikisborat Год назад +3

      I have Tarim mummy ancestors, I can call you very very far cousin

    • @celesteeubanks5967
      @celesteeubanks5967 Год назад +4

      We are related. Used to tell people I was a princess when I was little because we have a family tree book that proves our relation to Robert the Bruce.

    • @catherinefrazier2478
      @catherinefrazier2478 Год назад +5

      The First Earl of Moray appears in my genealogy on my father’s side, along with other members of the Stewart/Stuart clan, as well as Douglas. (There’s also the First Earl of Derby back there as well…)

  • @GraemeCarse-q8x
    @GraemeCarse-q8x 12 дней назад +2

    My great grand father was born in killinchy Co down he was henry carse son of Henry carse also born in northern ireland

  • @jessiejames2155
    @jessiejames2155 2 года назад +3

    Bierded man :
    "...no more working on light sockets,
    while in the dark, for me ..."

  • @mondo2102
    @mondo2102 3 года назад +7

    My 6th great grandfathers surname was Anderson, he was from the Shetlands he had 2 sons of which was called Hugh,and from him I where I get my surname Hughson (son of Hugh).but iam still an Anderson,so could I change my surname to Anderson,my grandfather had Anderson as his middle name.

  • @jen7834
    @jen7834 Год назад +4

    Yes indeed I do , it’s Turnbull , I know all about the history of the name, it involves a bull, a strong man and Robert the Bruce. Also McRae .

  • @ritaparker936
    @ritaparker936 Год назад +2

    My Mother name was Helen Gordon, her mother was Margaret Brennan, married William Gordon.

    • @WTPsychology
      @WTPsychology Год назад

      My grandmother is Bettie Gordon. Her parents were Guy Prentice Gordon and Minnie B Austin

  • @darrellcampbell9229
    @darrellcampbell9229 Год назад +7

    Proud American with proud Scottish heritage. 🇺🇸🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿💪

    • @dragonwithagirltattoo598
      @dragonwithagirltattoo598 Год назад

      Why are you so proud to be American? America’s not so great. I’m not proud to be an american. What’s there to be proud of?! We don’t even look after our own here. The almighty dollar rules 🤬

    • @pjmoseley243
      @pjmoseley243 Год назад

      There is a Micheal Portillo he was born in Scotland and his ancestry in Spanish. and he lives in England and was a high ranking minister in the British government.

    • @pjmoseley243
      @pjmoseley243 Год назад

      it was cold thats why they women wore shawls.

  • @emilbordon1329
    @emilbordon1329 2 года назад +2

    Ach aye the noo! Yon laddie in the picture wi’ the curly beard looks like a pure MacFudd.

  • @jessiejames2155
    @jessiejames2155 2 года назад +3

    "..Me Mum bought me...
    this new Curling-Iron...."

  • @bettygreenhansen
    @bettygreenhansen Год назад +2

    Descendent of MacBean McBain or Bain
    [Anglicized]).
    Daniel Bain of North Carolina, Barnwell County, born 1800, is the first ancestor listed in my family Bible in America.
    Just fishing here but I heave exhausted other options so…
    If anyone could hook me up with the name of Daniel’s parents I would be extremely grateful.

  • @macdaiddavidson8051
    @macdaiddavidson8051 4 года назад +5

    My surname is Davidson. I’ve been to Scotland and got to stay in a castle once owned by Clan Davidson.

    • @macdaiddavidson8051
      @macdaiddavidson8051 4 года назад +2

      tomtolbert32 Have you been to any of the local (to you) Highland games? Up until Covid my son and I have been hosting a Clan Davidson tent at games in CT, MA, and NY. It’s been a lot of fun. When Covid is over look up some of the games in your area and find the Davidson tent. You’ll find us at most of the games.

    • @mattthebutcher3364
      @mattthebutcher3364 3 года назад +1

      Mine is also davidson.

  • @nooa69
    @nooa69 Год назад +2

    My parents are from Glasgow. We're Clan MacDonald on my maternal gran's side and Clan MacEwen on my paternal granny's side.

  • @jessiejames2155
    @jessiejames2155 2 года назад +25

    My Grand Father was from Ireland.
    He had red hair . My Uncle John is a Sergeant-Major, in the U.S. Marines.
    Dad is a 1st Master Sergeant in the U.S. Marines ...I make parts for stealth aircraft . 🙂

    • @LuLuBell
      @LuLuBell Год назад +1

      Thank you for serving!!!

    • @CC-cp5uf
      @CC-cp5uf 7 месяцев назад

      I've read..originally red hair comes from the vikings, who married Irish and Scottish people.

    • @edwright480
      @edwright480 5 месяцев назад

      @@CC-cp5uf Scotland has the most red heads in the world.

  • @debramoyer4104
    @debramoyer4104 Месяц назад +2

    My dad family are from Scotland. His family are Dockery. I traced the family back to 1700.s and found the first one to come.

  • @anitaglasgow8275
    @anitaglasgow8275 Год назад +5

    My name is Glasgow. Is that Scot enough?

  • @jillcampbell8019
    @jillcampbell8019 Год назад +2

    Anderson and Waddell in my family. Married a Campbell.

    • @amoasic2823
      @amoasic2823 Год назад

      I was hoping that someone would mention the name Waddell as my paternal grandmother was a Waddell. Her father came from Ireland, but I've wondered if it's origin was Scottish. Can you confirm for me, please?

  • @robertporter6507
    @robertporter6507 Год назад +3

    I've drank enough single malt, that I have be at least part Scottish 😊

  • @lauriescott6275
    @lauriescott6275 Год назад +2

    My grandfather on my Dad side of family was Donald powers Scott

  • @amathenderson7318
    @amathenderson7318 Год назад +18

    As an American and descendent of the Black Watch - *Henderson ... I was blessed in my youth to experience visiting the Edinburgh Castle and the amazing Tattoo...
    A must do...life experience !!!❤

    • @grandmajane2593
      @grandmajane2593 Год назад +1

      I saw the "Tattoo" on Public Broadcasting System several years ago! I really enjoyed it. We used to receive many very interesting programs on PBS but not so much anymore.

    • @k.patriciahutt2979
      @k.patriciahutt2979 Год назад +1

      ​@@grandmajane2593 Get in touch with your Congressional representatives - the G.O.P. are talking about removing all funding from PBS. Good Luck!!🚁🙏

    • @SaberToothGary
      @SaberToothGary Год назад

      Black Watch = Scot Traitors! These were to be "employed in disarming the Highlanders, preventing depredations, bringing criminals to justice, and hindering rebels and attainted persons from inhabiting that part of the (British) kingdom."

    • @Laraine3
      @Laraine3 Месяц назад

      Sounds like you have a bit of Viking in you too. Usually names with ‘son’ or ‘sen’ suffixes are Viking. Also, Henderson is a sept of Clan Gunn. You can look it up on the Clann Gunn website. It’s one of the oldest clans, a highland clan of Norse origins.

  • @oceansoul3694
    @oceansoul3694 3 года назад +12

    I am of the clan Montrose, a relation of the Earl, whose sarcophagus is the spitting image of my late father. I long to go to Scottland before I die. ThankYou for this!

    • @lyndsaycrawford
      @lyndsaycrawford 3 года назад +2

      The earl of Montrose features a lot in Rob Roy’s story. As far as I know Montrose got an earldom after the act of union.

    • @oceansoul3694
      @oceansoul3694 3 года назад +3

      @@lyndsaycrawford Thank you so much for this information! Our ancestors were amazing, so strong and so brave. I always try to live up to the name!

    • @lyndsaycrawford
      @lyndsaycrawford 3 года назад +2

      @@oceansoul3694 you’re welcome I do love my country 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 it’s nice to see so many ppl proud of their Scottish heritage.

    • @dennismccauley1914
      @dennismccauley1914 2 года назад +1

      My surname is Irish but have Scottish ancestors Bean and Robertson, both of Celtic origin.

    • @angelaadams427
      @angelaadams427 2 года назад +1

      I'm Australian descendants of the Graham clan, William of braco side. My nanna said our direct rellie was hung drawn and 1/4. They moved to Londonderry then Maryborough QLD Australia

  • @noraelliott7304
    @noraelliott7304 Год назад +8

    My family Scottish heritage name is Douglas. I know they were lowland Scots but I recently have found out that they were probably removed from Scotland and relocated to Ireland as border reivers. I still have not found when my family members came to Canada but I know it must have been sometime in the 1800's.

    • @maggietweddle1730
      @maggietweddle1730 Год назад +2

      The Border Reivers were from the English /Scottish border, not in Ireland. I am a Douglas in heritage. I am from Carlisle….about ten miles from the border on the English side .The reivers were on both sides of the border. Genetically I have more Scottish blood than English.

    • @noraelliott7304
      @noraelliott7304 Год назад +2

      @@maggietweddle1730 Agreed but after James Vl (Scotland) and I (England) to was on both thrones he dealt with the problem of the border revivers by helping with Elizabeth 1's attempts to 'settle' the Irish by removing some of the revivers to Northern Ireland. I also am descendant from Douglas family that immigrated to Canada..
      The Douglas Clan history is very complicated. The Black Douglas and the Red Douglas were descendant from #1 Earl William Douglas, who was a descendant of Sir William Douglas that fought with William Wallace. His two sons James (the Black to the English) the Good to the Scottish and Archibald had sons and from these men, the clan eventually split. The Earls of Angus were the Red Douglas line and the Black Douglas line.
      The Black Douglas line were mostly in the Dumfries and Lanarkshire area (South). The Red were mostly in the East, mostly in and around Edinburgh and Perthshire.
      The Shield that is recognized as the Douglas was originally given the James the Good by Robert the Bruce descendants and then were given to the Earls of Angus after some interesting and typical clan backstabbing.
      Since the Black Douglas Clan were in the south closer to the border and had mostly had their lands taken by one crown or another, this was the Douglases that were removed elsewhere.
      Since the Red Douglas Clan had mostly remained in favor with the English, I think they mostly remained in Scotland.

    • @noraelliott7304
      @noraelliott7304 Год назад +1

      Does not mean all the Douglas families from the south were removed. Just the troublesome ones. 😊

    • @hs-m6301
      @hs-m6301 Год назад

      Look up 'The Kings Daughters'.

    • @maggietweddle1730
      @maggietweddle1730 Год назад +1

      As I mentioned, I have some Border Douglas genes as well as Scandinavian ones. Those Vikings got everywhere ! All my genes otherwise are northern English or lowland Scots. We may well have been sent to boost protestant numbers in NI. The reivers were disliked by both north and south…..a bit on the wild side !!

  • @SophiaVienna123
    @SophiaVienna123 11 месяцев назад +1

    My grandfather from Scottland was named Ephraim Kilpatrick

  • @cherylgarrett4455
    @cherylgarrett4455 Год назад +4

    The idea that Anglo/Norman names made their way into Scotland sounds logical. Genealogical research shows primarily Anglo/Norman in my ancestors and that was researched back to Charlemagne. Yet, I have a great deal of Scottish, Welsh, & Irish DNA (equal to the NW European DNA). I have been somewhat pragmatic about DNA findings because all of the surnames in my lineage were Anglo/Norman, but this explains a great deal.

  • @magisterhpp
    @magisterhpp 8 месяцев назад +1

    My grandmother (fathers side) was a Shearp. The name came to the Netherlands around 1750, with some Scottish military men who came over in several ships to support the Nassau Orange family. The specific ship was under command of a military man named Munro.
    I heard Shearp is a very old name and an original sept of Stuart (of Bute).
    Perhaps someone knows more about this story ?

    • @Ancestralfindings
      @Ancestralfindings  8 месяцев назад

      Thank you for sharing this fascinating piece of your family history regarding the Shearp surname. It’s intriguing to hear about the Scottish military connection to the Netherlands and the Nassau Orange family, particularly with the involvement of a figure named Munro. The journey of the Shearp name, potentially an old sept of the Stuart (of Bute) clan, adds a captivating layer to your genealogical exploration.
      The migration of Scottish names and families due to military or other historical events is a common theme in genealogy, and it’s always interesting to trace these movements. While I don’t have specific information on the Shearp name, your story aligns with many historical accounts of Scottish clans and their septs.
      I encourage you and our listeners who may have similar queries to delve into historical records, join genealogical forums, or consult with experts in Scottish ancestry. These resources can often shed light on such intriguing family histories. If any listeners have more insights or information about the Shearp name and its connections to the Stuart clan, it would be great to hear from them. Thank you for listening and for bringing this exciting query to the community!

    • @magisterhpp
      @magisterhpp 8 месяцев назад

      @@Ancestralfindings Thank you for your appreciated comment. There is a book concerning the whereabouts of the Shearp family in the Netherlands. Interesting fact about genes: During WW2 one of the descendants flew a Bristol Blenheim bomber and later became commander of the Dutch Naval Air Service:
      _Bastiaan or Bas but also called Bob (by the nearest family) went to the Air branch of the Dutch Royal Navy (Naval Air Service) and became commander of the Navy Airforce Base in Valkenburg and lateron of the whole Dutch Naval Air Service (f). He served with distinction in the war in the Dutch East Indies and served from 1944 onwards in the RAF. Decorated twice with the Dutch DFC._
      The genealogy/history before the ships took off from Scotland around the year 1750 is alas not known here. The original Shearp stayed in the Netherlands and married in the 18th century in Brielle a (noble ?) lady/widow of independent means.

  • @andreajanota6258
    @andreajanota6258 Год назад +6

    My 3rd great grandmother’s surname was Wylie. I am still uncertain of the origin of this name other than it is of Scottish origin.

    • @dcneumann
      @dcneumann Год назад +3

      My maiden name is Wylie. I believe they are from the clan Gunn

    • @cubnation
      @cubnation Год назад +3

      ​@@dcneumann Wylie is a sept of the MacFarlane Clan. 😊

    • @andreajanota6258
      @andreajanota6258 Год назад

      @@dcneumann thank you

  • @janetprice85
    @janetprice85 2 месяца назад +2

    Scottish names like Duncan,McCall, Martin, Scott,Ross,Glenn are surnames on my family tree. Along with Welsh names like Price,Powell,and Evans,Robbins,and English like Hayes,and Walker.

  • @dianabinkowski3927
    @dianabinkowski3927 Год назад +5

    My mother's maiden name is Grant. My great-great grandfather's name was Leander Grant and fought in the American Civil War.

  • @jrandallgilmore8907
    @jrandallgilmore8907 8 месяцев назад +3

    Didn’t touch on the “Gil’s”. Gilmore, Gilchrist, Gilbraith…etc.

  • @jessiejames2155
    @jessiejames2155 2 года назад +5

    Bierded man's Mother :
    "...I just knew raising my son up with
    a flock Peacock's was a bad idea..."

  • @grimmmunro2279
    @grimmmunro2279 Год назад +1

    My great grandmother's maiden name was Hamilton.