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Searle Origin and Immigration
Top Places of Origin for Searle
You can find out where the majority of Searle families were living before they immigrated to the U.S. You can learn where to focus your search for foreign records.
Ports of Departure for Searle
You can pinpoint where the majority of Searle families booked passage to the US. You can find out where to start searching for Searle records.
Searle Immigration to the US by Year
You can find out when most of the Searle families immigrated to the United States. You can focus your search to immigration records dating from that era.
Name History and Origin for Searle Naming patterns can help you learn more about your family’s cultural and ethnic background. You might find alternate name spellings which are helpful when searching for family records.
Searle Surname Distribution
Helpful, as you can decide where to start searching for Searle records. You can also find out where the majority of Searle families were living during the 19th century.
Origin: My uncle, William Henry Searles (1837-1921) wrote of the Searles name: 'The origin of the line - Searle - in England is Norman, and the earliest mention of the name is SERL, a monk of Tewkesbury, who afterward became Chaplain to William the Conqueror and was appointed Chaplain to the King, then Abbott of Gloucester in the year AD 1084. King William 'kept his Christmas' with SERL in the monastery of Tewkesbury. 'The 'Hundred Rolls' for various counties of England, and the State Papers of Great Britain make mention of Searle families resident in the various counties, as Dignitaries of the Church of England, and occupants of the Manor Lands, Officers in the Military, Naval and Civil Services, and yeomen farming the Church and Manor lands, all in the 11th Century, and down to the present. 'The crest suggests our branch belonged to the church and not to the military.' I do not know the source of his information. Many of my ancestors were Methodist Episcopal ministers in the 1830-1900 period.
Surnames: Searle, Searles
Submitted by: N. Paulson
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