digitS'
Garden Master
Spring and the wearing of the Green!
I have searched in vain for Celtic ancestors ... On one grandfather's Canadian death certificate, my oldest uncle wrote "Scottish." The births of his grandparents are in southern England and most of the surnames associated are the French ones often found there
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My father's mother was said to be from an Irish family but her mother had one of those same Norman English names from the south of England. It takes no effort to learn that grandmother's maiden name is one of the Anglo-Irish families - oh no! Do they even celebrate St. Patrick's Day?
And then, there is my Riley connection ... I thought that it was a cinch that this was a surname coming down through history, hand in hand with O'Reilly and O'Rily. Not so, there are evidently more Riley individuals in York and Lancashire than anyplace else in the British Isles! The name has to do with a meadow of rye. My ancestors from colonial times apparently were careful that it was Riley without any O'.
O' Well, recent genetic testing sure shows the great persistence of Celtic ancestry in just about all the English people. Yay! And today, everyone is Irish.
Steve
I have searched in vain for Celtic ancestors ... On one grandfather's Canadian death certificate, my oldest uncle wrote "Scottish." The births of his grandparents are in southern England and most of the surnames associated are the French ones often found there

My father's mother was said to be from an Irish family but her mother had one of those same Norman English names from the south of England. It takes no effort to learn that grandmother's maiden name is one of the Anglo-Irish families - oh no! Do they even celebrate St. Patrick's Day?
And then, there is my Riley connection ... I thought that it was a cinch that this was a surname coming down through history, hand in hand with O'Reilly and O'Rily. Not so, there are evidently more Riley individuals in York and Lancashire than anyplace else in the British Isles! The name has to do with a meadow of rye. My ancestors from colonial times apparently were careful that it was Riley without any O'.
O' Well, recent genetic testing sure shows the great persistence of Celtic ancestry in just about all the English people. Yay! And today, everyone is Irish.