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2nd September 07, 03:43 PM
#1
slohairt,
I looked thourgh all 16 pages of posts and did not see Morgan or Miller.
My father was Harry Miller
My mother's father was John Cecil Morgan
Can you do these, THANK YOU
John Morgan Miller
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2nd September 07, 09:30 PM
#2
 Originally Posted by Shriner
slohairt,
I looked thourgh all 16 pages of posts and did not see Morgan or Miller.
My father was Harry Miller
My mother's father was John Cecil Morgan
Can you do these, THANK YOU
John Morgan Miller
Dia Dhuit, Shriner,
MILLER (also Millar): Miller is one of the top ten surnames of Scotland and enormously popular in England as well. Millar seems to be found in higher numbers in Scotland. The meaning is quite obvious: "one who mills." A Gaelic translation would be Mac an Muilleoir (pronounced MAC AN MWILL-YORE) meaning son of the miller.
MORGAN: Morgan is most often Welsh or Scottish. Either way, it is of Celtic origin and means "sea bright" (?) In Welsh, it was originally Ap Morgan meaning son of Morgan. (Ap corresponds to Gaelic mac.) In Scotland, the progenitor of Clan MacKay (Clann Mhic Aoidh) is Morgan, son of Magnus. The clan MacKay is known as Siol Mhorgain meaning the race of Morgan.
[B][COLOR="DarkGreen"]John Hart[/COLOR]
Owner/Kiltmaker - Keltoi
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2nd September 07, 10:21 PM
#3
An excellent read. Thanks for the thread.
My Paternal Grandmother was a Douglas, and proudly so.
My paternal Grandfather was Sheldon Kinney. We've always attributed it to a change from McKinney upon arrival in the new world in the 1600's, but have never found a link in the historical record to a clan or sept. Best guess was Mackenzie...
Cheers,
Kevin.
Institutio postulo novus informatio supersto
Proudly monkeying with tradition since 1967.
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3rd September 07, 12:10 PM
#4
 Originally Posted by kevinkinney
An excellent read. Thanks for the thread.
My Paternal Grandmother was a Douglas, and proudly so.
My paternal Grandfather was Sheldon Kinney. We've always attributed it to a change from McKinney upon arrival in the new world in the 1600's, but have never found a link in the historical record to a clan or sept. Best guess was Mackenzie...
Cheers,
Kevin.
Hoigh, Caoimhin Mac Coinnich!
DOUGLAS: Topographical in origin, from the Gaelic Dubhghlas meaning "dark green." Pronounced DOO-GLASS.
KINNEY: Kinney, or MacKinney is indeed the same name as Mackenzie. Both anglicisations were originally the Gaelic Mac Coinnich (pronounced MAC KINN-EE) meaning son of Coinneach. As you can see, the (Mac)Kinney rendering is closer to the original Gaelic pronunciation. Incidentally, Mackenzie is not supposed to be pronounced with a "z" sound. Originally, Lallans had a letter that looked a bit like a "z" but was pronounced more like "y." As Lallans gave way to English, this was written as a "z" and later mispronounced as one.
[B][COLOR="DarkGreen"]John Hart[/COLOR]
Owner/Kiltmaker - Keltoi
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9th December 07, 05:16 AM
#5
Thanks for the information. I had no idea we were that popular. By the way it should read MILLAR (also Miller) for some reason it's always the other way about. 
Cheers,
Jim
 Originally Posted by slohairt
MILLER (also Millar): Miller is one of the top ten surnames of Scotland and enormously popular in England as well. Millar seems to be found in higher numbers in Scotland. The meaning is quite obvious: "one who mills." A Gaelic translation would be Mac an Muilleoir (pronounced MAC AN MWILL-YORE) meaning son of the miller.
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