Hi! I'm new, I'm a Ballard, just finding my way....

+10 votes
227 views
in The Tree House by Veronica Frances G2G Crew (450 points)

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Nice to meet you!

 

If you want to ask a question about your family history, fire away!

Do you have a grandparent or great grandparent who you want to trace back further?
Thank you - it's good to be here!

3 Answers

+12 votes
Welcome to wikkitree Ballard, wikkitree is a wonderful place to be, the members are really amazing kind helpful in a very polite way.

There are always quiz help to get.

Hope you will be very happy here.
by Susan Laursen G2G Astronaut (3.1m points)
You're very kind. I'm looking forwrd to getting to know how things work here, and getting involved.
+7 votes
by Frank Gill G2G Astronaut (2.6m points)

There's a free surname site with 50,000 surnames, www.surnamedb.com 

Last name: Ballard

This unusual name is recorded in many spelling forms including Bullard, Ballard, Belward, Bellyard, Bil(l)yard, and Bellard. It is an example of that sizeable group of early surnames that were created from the habitual use of nicknames. These were usually given with reference to a variety of characteristics, such as physical attributes and moral characteristics, although habits of dress and occupation were also common. In this case, the surname originated as a medieval English nickname for a bald-headed man. The derivation is from the Middle English "bal(le)", used in the transferred sense of a hairless patch on the skull, with the addition of the Angl-Saxon suffix "ard", whose precise translation is uncertain. Early examples of the surname recordings include those of Alured Balard in Essex in 1273 and Geoffrey Bolhard of Warwick in 1275. Later recordings are those of Moyses Billiard, a witness at St Botolphs church, Bishopgate, London, on October 10th 1631, whilst on March 31st 1634, John Bilyard was christened at St Dunstans in the East, Stepney. On July 15th 1635, William Ballard, aged 32 yrs., together with his wife, Elizabeth, aged 26 yrs., and children, Hester and Jo, aged respectively one year and 2 yrs., embarked from London on the ship "James" bound for New England. They were among the earliest recorded namebearers to settle in America. A Coat of Arms granted to the Ballard family is black with a griffin segreant ermine, the Crest being a griffin's head erased ermine. The first recorded spelling of the family name is shown to be that of Peter Ballard, which was dated 1196, in the "Curia Regis Rolls of Northamptonshire", during the reign of King Richard 1st, known as "Richard the Lionheart", 1189 - 1199. Surnames became necessary when governments introduced personal taxation. In England this was known as Poll Tax. Throughout the centuries, surnames in every country have continued to "develop" often leading to astonishing variants of the original spelling.

© Copyright: Name Origin Research www.surnamedb.com 1980 - 2017



Read more: http://www.surnamedb.com/Surname/Ballard#ixzz4r9GLXmg6

Thank you - very interesting.
+7 votes
Hello and Welcome to WikiTree!
by John Noel G2G6 Pilot (755k points)
Thank you - it's good to be here!
Which country is your Ballard line in? There are researchers in almost every continent although most of their roots come back to England. I have over 300 Ballard family trees for the UK & dzens of contacts around the globe if you need any help.
Hello Paul, my line is in Wales and England for the most part, but I'm particularly intrigued by my 5th great grandfather (Mancetter-born Maxamillian Ballard 1723-1781) who spent 7 (or maybe 14) years in America after being transported for sheep-stealing (1761). There is evidence that he returned (a burial record at Cwmyoy, Monmouthshire) but I've always wondered what might have happened in the intervening years? Did he perhaps start another Ballard line in America? I have traced some distance back from Max with some 'possible' ancestors back to 1518 - but I'm treating them with a healthy dose of scepticism as (fairly naturally) my evidence gets flimsier the further back I go beyond his father and grandfather. So - if you've got anything either on this (definitely legitimate) line, or on the totally speculative possibility of a second, American line, I'd be very interested. I've a feeling we've been in contact before, several years ago, and it was you who pointed me to the source of information about the sheep-stealing in Peter Coldham's 'Complete Book of Emigrants'. If so, Hello again - and thanks. If I'm wrong - good to meet you.

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