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There is... another... Moomaw...
dvandorn
post May 5 2006, 09:29 PM
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Bruce, I was watching a special on modern China the other day and a China specialist was pontificating on several points. His name was Bill Moomaw.

Now, you're the first person I ever ran across with that last name, so I figure it can't be all *that* common. Is this fellow some relation of yours?

-the other Doug


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Guest_BruceMoomaw_*
post May 5 2006, 09:41 PM
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Not that I know of, but we're scattered around. It took us until 1983 to answer a question as elementary as what the ethnic origin of that weird name is.

It turns out that the Moomaws were originally Huguenot French who, being Protestant, decided to leave after the St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre and similar displays of rudeness from their Catholic neighbors and head on up to the Netherlands, which was famous as a refuge for Protestants. I presume it's there that the name picked up its current spelling, which does look Dutch -- I suspect before then it was "Mumma" (there are a few of those around too, including the first researcher to find methane in Mars' atmosphere). Anyway, a lot of them arrived in the eastern US and spread out like a plague from there. The most famous of our clan is probably the Rev. Don Moomaw, a former football player who used to be Ronald Reagan's "spiritual advisor" before he discovered, like so many holy men before him, the delights of hookers. If I had a nickel for every time I've been asked whether I know that guy...
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Phil Stooke
post May 5 2006, 11:48 PM
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My, those Huguenots got around, didn't they? My grandmother (on my father's side) was a La Trobe, and they had the same history. One in particular, Jean La Trobe, joined up with William of Orange and ended up in Ireland. After spawning such luminaries as Benjamin LaTrobe, architect of the US Capitol, and James LaTrobe, first Governor of the State of Victoria in Oz, the family's fortunes diminished, resulting in me.

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RNeuhaus
post May 5 2006, 11:55 PM
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QUOTE (BruceMoomaw @ May 5 2006, 04:41 PM) *
Anyway, a lot of them arrived in the eastern US and spread out like a plague from there.

They are alike as to you as a bad man? Nope. I hope it would be written as spread out as a mushrooms of families...

Rodolfo
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Guest_BruceMoomaw_*
post May 6 2006, 03:41 AM
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Actually, I did misspeak. It's just the NAME that's a plague...
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jamescanvin
post May 6 2006, 05:39 AM
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QUOTE (Phil Stooke @ May 6 2006, 09:48 AM) *
My, those Huguenots got around, didn't they?


Yup. Small world, the Canvins were Huguenots too. We headed of to England when things got ugly, but are now scattered all over the globe as well.

Canvin is thought to derive from the french "champs de vin" = "fields of wine", which I think explains a lot! smile.gif wink.gif

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elakdawalla
post May 6 2006, 01:58 PM
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I just have to jump in here to say that this is one of the funnier topic titles I've seen.

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remcook
post May 6 2006, 02:23 PM
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QUOTE
I presume it's there that the name picked up its current spelling, which does look Dutch


I'm afraid moomaw doesn't make any sense in Dutch either smile.gif
It's actually harder to pronounce in Dutch than it is in English
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Bill Harris
post May 6 2006, 04:24 PM
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>I'm afraid moomaw doesn't make any sense in Dutch either...

Sheesh, talk about double-meanings. biggrin.gif

I thought I was bad being Harris on the paternal side and Podobnikar on the maternal side...

What about Emily's name?

---Bill


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elakdawalla
post May 6 2006, 04:35 PM
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It's Indian (my husband's a Parsi). "walla" is a term for a seller of something, so you see all kinds of -wallas among his community; Motiwalla, Daruwalla, even, and I am completely serious about this, Sodawaterwalla. Stupid British; the Parsis didn't have surnames until the British came in and said "What! What! Of course you must have surnames." The Parsis made up surnames either from their cities of origin or their occupations (There are also lots of "Contractors" and "Engineers" among the Parsis). "Lakdawalla" is timber-merchant; the Parsis were majorly into shipbuilding. I have heard what may be urban legends about the surnames "Waysidepetrolstationwalla" and even "Sodawaterbottleopenerwalla". I can't vouch for the veracity of those but I have actually met a Sodawaterwalla.

--Emily


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dvandorn
post May 6 2006, 04:54 PM
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Wow -- I sure can't top that in terms of origins of names, Emily! However, in my own small way...

My last name (the patronymic) is Van Dorn. My mother's maiden name was Vangundy. Two more Dutch names you couldn't find... and yet, I'm only a quarter dutch. My mother is half-English (mother's maiden name was Liming) and half Dutch. My father is one-quarter Dutch and three-quarters German -- his father was half-Dutch and half German, and his mother was completely German (she didn't even speak English until she was about 12 years old, even though she was born in Illinois).

In terms of surnames, at my grandparents' level, we have Van Dorn, Dues (there should be an umlaut over the 'e', it's pronounced DOO-ess), Vangundy and Liming.

Put that all together, and I figure I'm about half German, a quarter Dutch, and a quarter English. And yet, the Dutch nomenclature prevails. When I was young, I always thought I looked rather English, but as I get older, I think the Dutch genome is more prominent... so all that German blood seems to have little actual impact on my genome.

-the other Doug


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helvick
post May 6 2006, 04:55 PM
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QUOTE (elakdawalla @ May 6 2006, 05:35 PM) *
I can't vouch for the veracity of those but I have actually met a Sodawaterwalla.

They're not that different from English surnames like Baker, Smith, Miller, Farmer, Painter, Fisher, Butcher and so on when you think about it.

Then there are the names like Bishop, Priest and Monk which might have had interesting stories behind them if they were originally catholic, certainly the surname Pope must have an interesting ancestral tale to go with it.
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djellison
post May 6 2006, 06:22 PM
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Well - unfortuately, I don't have a brother called Larry, nor a sister called Jennifer (google for both wink.gif )- but my great grandfather did install the lightning conductors on the Liver birds on top of the Liver Building in Liverpool smile.gif

Doug
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lyford
post May 6 2006, 06:33 PM
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QUOTE (elakdawalla @ May 6 2006, 09:35 AM) *
"walla" is a term for a seller of something

Thank goodness the English never encounted a realtor from this town.

Though "Lyford" is apparently a corruption of the Welsh for "Crossing Where The Flax Grows."
QUOTE
Bruce, I was watching a special on modern China the other day and a China specialist was pontificating on several points. His name was Bill Moomaw.

A Moomaw pontificating? What are the odds? biggrin.gif biggrin.gif biggrin.gif (I KID THE NICE PEOPLE!!!!)


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elakdawalla
post May 6 2006, 06:37 PM
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QUOTE (lyford @ May 6 2006, 11:33 AM) *
Thank goodness the English never encounted a realtor from this town.

In fact my Dad's family is from Walla Walla; I'm a frequent visitor! biggrin.gif My uncles have WAY too much fun saying my last name when I visit...sigh... Seriously, despite being the butt of many jokes, Walla Walla is a nice town.

--Emily


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