Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In the early days it was America was where England sent it's criminals
and thiefs where in many places they were absorbed into the population. When America became independent England then sent its scoundrels to Australia. America then accepted pretty much all comers from all countries that were not dominatedby criminal backgrounds ala Ellis Island When life became difficult in countries such as Ireland with the potato troubles with the English landlords was difficult and the mining industy, gold, lead coal etc in Wales petered out because of cheaper competition America had a need for miners and farmers so they piled in and spread about the plains of America where the predominantly English pursued a life of hunting and migrated over the lower states. It was around this time that the country was flooded by Germans such that the english language nearly was replaced by German with the saving grace of immigrants coming from China, the central European populace, Italians e.t.c chose the english language to learn because english was dominant in central business areas of the growing cities. So the possibility is, that you Roy have a criminal background and wandered into english hands where they received their just reward by being removal from the British Isles! Art Roy Lewallen wrote: Dave wrote: Roy Lewallen, W7EL Roy's surname is of Welsh origin. Queen Bodacia and her sisters prevented Romans who had conquered England in the BC era from conquering Wales. There is a statue of that defiant queen on the side of the River Thames opposite the House of Commons and the House of Lords( and Big Ben). Roy does not spell his name as in the traditional Welsh language. Probably those on Ellis Island misspelled it not understanding the lilting accent of a Welsh miner. Art LOL. Sounds like my own family history, with the great grandfather paying to change the spelling of the last name to correct it, and actually screwing it up. He couldn't read either, but somehow he got the idea that it was wrong, and went to the legal trouble of "straightening it out." Yeah, right. ![]() Thanks, I needed that this morning. My family was in this country long before the Ellis Island immigration center was established (and before the U.S. was created for that matter), and the spelling came about as I described, not as Art speculates. The origin of the name is almost certainly Welsh, and it has a number of different spellings there, too, among which are Llywelyn, Llewellyn, and others, probably for the same reason it has so many different spellings here. The "Ll" is pronounced more like "Cl", but not with a sound we have in English. But the Welsh pronunciation was surely gone long before anyone attempted to spell it. I have no idea whether the original immigrant was a miner as Art speculates, an indentured servant, or a common criminal. If I ever get a dog, its name will have to be Gelert. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|