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testing
'''English/Welsh'''
{| class="wikitable"
|
|'''Double Given Names'''
|'''Locative'''
|'''Patronymic'''
|'''Other relationship'''
|'''Descriptive/'''


1880 Census -  Lynnville, Ogle, Illinois, United States
'''Occupational'''
{| class="wikitable"
|'''Dictus'''
|Daniel Countryman
|'''Double Bynames'''
|Self
|'''Order'''
|M
|65
|New York
|-
|Sally Countryman
|Wife
|F
|62
|New York
|-
|Jennie Countryman
|Daughter
|F
|19
|Illinois
|-
|Herman Wolgmuth
|Other
|M
|29
|New York
|}
{| class="wikitable"
|Name
| colspan="4" |W Longenecker
|-
|Event Place
| colspan="4" |Rochelle, Ogle, Illinois, United States
|-
|Age
| colspan="4" |25 (c. 1855 vs 1852?)
|-
|Marital Status
| colspan="4" |Single
|-
|-
|Race
|'''Old English'''
| colspan="4" |White
|No
|Phrase (''æt X'' or ''of'' X)
|Marked, unmarked
|
|Rare
|Yes; using ''Cognomento''
|
|given+byname
|-
|-
|Occupation
|'''Middle/Early Modern'''
| colspan="4" |Dry Goods Clerk
|}
Jennie Viola Countryman? b. 1862 in Illinois  Born on Apr 1863 to Daniel Countryman and Sally Phillips. Jennie Viola married Wesley M Longnecker in 1883 and had a child. (Ancestry.com)


<nowiki>http://www.ebooksread.com/authors-eng/alvin-countryman/countryman-genealogy-nuo/page-4-countryman-genealogy-nuo.shtml</nowiki>
'''English'''
|Late
|All forms: Phrase (de X, of X, atte Y, de la/del Y, etc.); unmarked, adjectival,


1881 Mason City map
inn sign (atte Z, of the Z)
|Marked, genitive alone, unmarked
|Matronymic, many others, marked and unmarked
|Yes, may use article ''the/le'' or omit it.
|Yes; marked
|Yes; all patterns late (these are generally unmarked)
|given+byname


Shows George Vermilya owning a big parcel including the “big house” and the future site of 718, and a lot of other property in the neighborhood, too.  Mostly to the south.
given+byname+loc


1883 Mason City Directory
given+pat+descr


Wesley Longnecker as carriage maker living at...
given+byname+byname
|-
|'''Anglicized Irish'''
|No
|
|Marked, multi-generation
|Clan names
|Rare
|
|Yes
|given+byname


March 1883 - Jennie’s father died (married Wesley in May)
given+pat+pat


1885 - “double” lot purchased by Jennie from Judge Vermilya per Walking Tour Guide
given+pat+clan
|-
|'''Welsh'''
|Late
|Phrase, unmarked
|Marked, unmarked,


1885 State Census - living at Washing & 10th, daughter Grace not born yet, Sally Countryman, widow, living with them (her mother)
multiple
|
|Yes
|
|Yes
|given+byname


1890 Federal Census partially destroyed in a fire, so reason why not finding people there.
given+pat+pat
 
|-
1890 - Longneckers move into first house built on State Street, #42 in Walking Tour Guide, sold in 1895
|'''Scots'''
 
|
August 1893 - Jennie’s mother died
|Phrase (as in English),


1894 - Longneckers move into second house on State Street, #41 in the Walking Tour Guide.
unmarked
|Marked (with ''Mac'' or as in English), unmarked
|As in English only
|Yes
|
|Yes
|given+pat+loc


1895 Atlas
given+pat+pat


Shows George Vermilya owning a big parcel including the “big house” and the future site of 718.  Jennie V. Longnecker is shown as owner of a double parcel to the west with a couple houses on it.
given+pat+descr
 
Cub Scout History Walk
 
At 718 E. State St., 10-year-old Adam Dettmer, wearing a black apron and a straw hat, portrayed early Mason City property owner Wesley E. Longnecker.  “I build carriages and I sell property,” he said. “Does anyone need a property around here?” [Interesting that they talk about Wesley, when Jennie was the primary owner in the abstract.]
 
<nowiki>http://globegazette.com/news/local/cub-scouts-take-history-walk/article_268f42de-0d01-11e2-9211-001a4bcf887a.html</nowiki>
 
1898 Mason City Directory
 
Wesley Longnecker as mattress company manager, living at 329 E State
 
December 1898 Cerro Gordo Republican newspaper, W Longnecker listed with delinquent taxes.
 
= 1900 Census Record =
 
= Wesley N. Longnecker - Mason City Township Mason City Ward 1, Cerro Gordo County, Iowa, United States =
Wesley Longnecker lived in Cerro Gordo County, Iowa in 1900. He was the head of the household, 48 years old, and identified as white. Wesley was born in Pennsylvania around 1852, and both of his parents were born in Pennsylvania as well. In 1900, Wesley was married to Jennie V. Longnecker.  Occupation:
{| class="wikitable"
|Wesley N Longnecker
|Head
|M
|48
|Pennsylvania
|-
|Jennie V Longnecker
|Wife
|F
|38
|Illinois
|}
|}
listed at 860 (!) East State Street, with neighbors at 804 (!) East State Street:
'''Notes''':
{| class="wikitable"
|George Vermilya
|Head
|M
|78
|New York
|-
|Grace Dilts
|Daughter
|F
|34
|Iowa
|-
|Guerdon M Vermilya
|Son
|M
|26
|Iowa
|-
|William H Dilts
|Roomer
|M
|40
|Illinois
|-
|Nellie Everson
|Servant
|F
|18
|Minnesota
|}
Judge George Vermilya - <nowiki>http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~iabiog/cerrogordo/h1910/h1910-v.htm#GEORGEVERMILYA</nowiki>
 
E.R. Bogardus’ mother was a Vermilyea.  (His sister married Captain Smith - <nowiki>http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~iabiog/cerrogordo/h1910/h1910-s.htm#Captain</nowiki> Henry Irving Smith )  Bogardus lived with G. Vermilya when he came to Mason City and probably worked for him in his lumberyard before he got into the building business.
 
Daughter Grace (not in 1900 census)
 
1900 Mason City Directory
 
Wesley Longnecker as harness maker, living at 130 East State St.
 
1901 Mason City Directory
 
Wesley Longnecker in real estate, living on Madison.
 
No Longnecker in 1923 Mason City Directory, can’t find in 1910 Census either.  Ended up buried in Detroit, Michigan.
----Duncan Rule House National Register Application


The house was designed by E.R. Bogardus (1850-1927), a long-time resident and builder in Mason City. Bogardus came to Mason City as a child. He opened a contracting business in 1873. Although he apparently had no formal architectural training, he gradually began to design, as well as construct, houses, and after 1894 devoted all his time to architecture. During his long career, Bogardus was responsible for numerous buildings in Mason City. His works included the mission-style Calvary M.E. Church (1913); the Georgian/Federal Revival Verimlya (1894), (house next door, related to E.R. Bogardus’ mother)  Markley (c. 1902), and Keerl (c. 1894) houses; the City Park Hospital (1909), and the Queen Anne Longenecker house (1898), as well as assorted commercial buildings. He designed two houses using elements of the Shingle idiom: the Duncan Rule house and its precursor, the George Wilson house (1907). The latter is far more vernacular than the Rule house. It does, however, display features that Bogardus used to good effect on the Rule house: the high, dominating gable extended over a porch; the rounded corner projection, and the very large hipped dormer. The columns and protruding rafter ends of the porch roof were also repeated in the Rule house.
Old English: Patronymics take form of ''X sunu''/''sune'' or ''Xdohtor'' (X is father's name in genitive); they must match the given name's gender. Alternately, they may follow the Latinized patterns. Locatives use ''æt'' or ''of'' followed by the placename in dative form. See the introduction to Reaney and Wilson ''A Dictionary of English Surnames'' for more details.


<nowiki>http://focus.nps.gov/pdfhost/docs/NRHP/Text/79000886.pdf</nowiki>
Middle/Early Modern English: Marked patronymics may use ''Fitz X'' or ''Xson''; women may use these or use ''Xdaughter''. These forms may all use the father's name unmodified; ''Xson'' and ''Xdaughter'' may also use the possessive form. Alternately, they may follow the Latinized patterns. Late period family names tend to drop articles and prepositions. See the introduction to Reaney and Wilson ''A Dictionary of English Surnames'' for more details. Surnames from the second half of the 16th C and early 17th C may be used as given names; they are treated as any other 16th C given name [Alton of Grimfells, 04/2010, A-East].


E.R. Bogardus blueprints - <nowiki>http://www.mcpl.org/historyandgenealogy/archives/bogardusblueprints</nowiki>
Anglicized Irish: See Mari ingen Briain meic Donnchada, "Names Found in Anglicized Irish Documents"(<nowiki>http://medievalscotland.org/kmo/AnglicizedIrish/</nowiki>) for details of how patronymic bynames are marked.
----1900 Abstract - Jennie V. Longenecker & husb to May E. Kennedy, convey

Latest revision as of 09:46, 29 December 2024

English/Welsh

Double Given Names Locative Patronymic Other relationship Descriptive/

Occupational

Dictus Double Bynames Order
Old English No Phrase (æt X or of X) Marked, unmarked Rare Yes; using Cognomento given+byname
Middle/Early Modern

English

Late All forms: Phrase (de X, of X, atte Y, de la/del Y, etc.); unmarked, adjectival,

inn sign (atte Z, of the Z)

Marked, genitive alone, unmarked Matronymic, many others, marked and unmarked Yes, may use article the/le or omit it. Yes; marked Yes; all patterns late (these are generally unmarked) given+byname

given+byname+loc

given+pat+descr

given+byname+byname

Anglicized Irish No Marked, multi-generation Clan names Rare Yes given+byname

given+pat+pat

given+pat+clan

Welsh Late Phrase, unmarked Marked, unmarked,

multiple

Yes Yes given+byname

given+pat+pat

Scots Phrase (as in English),

unmarked

Marked (with Mac or as in English), unmarked As in English only Yes Yes given+pat+loc

given+pat+pat

given+pat+descr

Notes:

Old English: Patronymics take form of X sunu/sune or Xdohtor (X is father's name in genitive); they must match the given name's gender. Alternately, they may follow the Latinized patterns. Locatives use æt or of followed by the placename in dative form. See the introduction to Reaney and Wilson A Dictionary of English Surnames for more details.

Middle/Early Modern English: Marked patronymics may use Fitz X or Xson; women may use these or use Xdaughter. These forms may all use the father's name unmodified; Xson and Xdaughter may also use the possessive form. Alternately, they may follow the Latinized patterns. Late period family names tend to drop articles and prepositions. See the introduction to Reaney and Wilson A Dictionary of English Surnames for more details. Surnames from the second half of the 16th C and early 17th C may be used as given names; they are treated as any other 16th C given name [Alton of Grimfells, 04/2010, A-East].

Anglicized Irish: See Mari ingen Briain meic Donnchada, "Names Found in Anglicized Irish Documents"(http://medievalscotland.org/kmo/AnglicizedIrish/) for details of how patronymic bynames are marked.