US Military Fatal Casualties of the Korean War for Home

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

US Military Fatal Casualties of the Korean War for Home U.S. Military Fatal Casualties of the Korean War for Home-State-of-Record: Iowa Name Service Rank / Birthdate Home of Record: Incident or Remains Rate (YYYYMMDD) City County Death Date Recovered (YYYYMMDD) ABBOTT CHARLES L ARMY PVT 19320000 UNKNOWN SCOTT 19500720 Y ADKISSON FORREST D ARMY CPL 19220000 UNKNOWN BLACK HAWK 19510205 Y AGAN ALFRED HIRAM MARINE CORPS CAPT 19190706 CENTERVILLE APPANOOSE 19510120 Y ALBAUGH PAUL ARMY PVT 19260000 UNKNOWN LINN 19510424 Y ALITZ CHARLIE R ARMY PFC 19300000 UNKNOWN CERRO GORDO 19511202 Y ALLIE RICHARD OMAR ARMY PFC 19290000 UNKNOWN POLK 19530201 N ALMONRODE CLIFTON MARINE CORPS CPL 19320329 ALBION MARSHALL 19511208 Y LEON ANDERSON DUANE WARD ARMY PFC 19310000 UNKNOWN POTTAWATTAM 19511106 N IE ANDRESEN JAMES R ARMY PFC 19290000 UNKNOWN CLINTON 19511016 Y ARCHER RONALD ROYCE MARINE CORPS PFC 19290411 COUNCIL POTTAWATTAM 19520528 Y BLUFFS IE ARVIDSON KEITH L ARMY PVT 19300000 UNKNOWN POWESHIEK 19500905 Y AUEN MONTE M ARMY PFC 19310000 UNKNOWN SAC 19500814 Y AUSTIN WAYNE DONALD ARMY PFC 19230000 UNKNOWN POWESHIEK 19510212 N BAAS HENRY R AIR FORCE 2NDLT 19280526 OSKALOOSA MAHASKA 19500715 Y BAILEY BERT G ARMY PVT 19340000 UNKNOWN POLK 19520621 Y BAILEY HENRY M ARMY PFC 19270000 UNKNOWN MONTGOMERY 19501102 Y Source of data: the Korean War Extract Data File, as of April 29, 2008, of the Defense Casualty Analysis System (DCAS) Files, part of Record Group 330: Records of the Office of the Secretary of Defense. You can view the full DCAS record for an individual named in the list via the Access to Archival Databases resource, or AAD. The link to the AAD main page is as follows: http://www.archives.gov/aad Page 1 of 34 U.S. Military Fatal Casualties of the Korean War for Home-State-of-Record: Iowa Name Service Rank / Birthdate Home of Record: Incident or Remains Rate (YYYYMMDD) City County Death Date Recovered (YYYYMMDD) BAKER CHARLES B ARMY PFC 19310000 UNKNOWN DES MOINES 19500920 Y BALLOU HOWARD L ARMY CPL 19280000 UNKNOWN AUDUBON 19530528 Y BANCROFT ARTHUR MARINE CORPS 1STLT 19200418 HILLSBORO HENRY 19500929 Y RICHARD BARKS FRANCIS B ARMY PVT 19270000 UNKNOWN WAPELLO 19510608 Y BARNES KEITH W ARMY PFC 19300000 UNKNOWN WAPELLO 19501202 Y BAUGHMAN DONALD E ARMY PFC 19300000 UNKNOWN WARREN 19520919 Y BAXTER DONALD ARMY CPL 19310000 UNKNOWN ALLAMAKEE 19501201 Y THOMAS BEAGLES JOHN DAVID NAVY CPO 19190316 CHARLES CITY FLOYD 19500926 Y BEAVERS HAROLD R ARMY CPT 19180000 UNKNOWN TAYLOR 19500921 Y BECHTEL DONALD K ARMY PFC 19300000 UNKNOWN BOONE 19500901 Y BECK ROBERT C ARMY PVT 19270000 UNKNOWN CLAYTON 19521116 Y BEEK ELDERT JOHN ARMY CPL 19300000 UNKNOWN OSCEOLA 19501201 N BEELMAN THOMAS LEE ARMY PFC 19310000 UNKNOWN LEE 19501212 N BEGGS JOHN E ARMY PFC 19290000 UNKNOWN EMMET 19500730 Y BELL THOMAS F ARMY PFC 19260000 UNKNOWN DES MOINES 19510518 Y BERNAL NATIBIDAD ARMY PVT 19310000 UNKNOWN SCOTT 19510518 Y Source of data: the Korean War Extract Data File, as of April 29, 2008, of the Defense Casualty Analysis System (DCAS) Files, part of Record Group 330: Records of the Office of the Secretary of Defense. You can view the full DCAS record for an individual named in the list via the Access to Archival Databases resource, or AAD. The link to the AAD main page is as follows: http://www.archives.gov/aad Page 2 of 34 U.S. Military Fatal Casualties of the Korean War for Home-State-of-Record: Iowa Name Service Rank / Birthdate Home of Record: Incident or Remains Rate (YYYYMMDD) City County Death Date Recovered (YYYYMMDD) BILLICK JOSEPH C ARMY CPL 19140000 UNKNOWN LINN 19510518 N BIRT WALTER LESTER MARINE CORPS PFC 19291005 COUNCIL POTTAWATTAM 19501202 N BLUFFS IE BLOODSWORTH ARMY PFC 19330000 UNKNOWN POLK 19530611 N CLARENCE BOLDEN GEORGE E ARMY PFC 19310000 UNKNOWN POLK 19501128 N BOODY CLEM ROBERT ARMY PFC 19260000 UNKNOWN BUCHANAN 19511102 Y BORUFF DONALD LEE MARINE CORPS PFC 19311228 CARSON POTTAWATTAM 19511004 Y IE BOTTS SIDNEY J ARMY SGT 19300000 UNKNOWN MONTGOMERY 19521015 Y BOUCHER JOHN G ARMY MSG 19230000 UNKNOWN JASPER 19510518 Y BRANT JAMES E ARMY PVT 19320000 UNKNOWN JASPER 19500903 Y BRICKER GEORGE ARMY SFC 19280000 UNKNOWN MONROE 19511013 Y BRISTOL RICHARD AIR FORCE 1STLT 19290708 CLINTON CLINTON 19520131 N GRAVES BRODIE JOHN WILLIAM MARINE CORPS PFC 19311224 LE MARS PLYMOUTH 19510527 Y BROWER WILLIAM J ARMY PFC 19310000 UNKNOWN LYON 19500727 Y BROWN NELSON MARION AIR FORCE MSGT 19170808 ELLSTON RINGGOLD 19520913 N BURMEISTER DUANE J ARMY CPL 19300000 UNKNOWN LINN 19530519 Y Source of data: the Korean War Extract Data File, as of April 29, 2008, of the Defense Casualty Analysis System (DCAS) Files, part of Record Group 330: Records of the Office of the Secretary of Defense. You can view the full DCAS record for an individual named in the list via the Access to Archival Databases resource, or AAD. The link to the AAD main page is as follows: http://www.archives.gov/aad Page 3 of 34 U.S. Military Fatal Casualties of the Korean War for Home-State-of-Record: Iowa Name Service Rank / Birthdate Home of Record: Incident or Remains Rate (YYYYMMDD) City County Death Date Recovered (YYYYMMDD) BURNAUGH THOMAS MARINE CORPS PFC 19291230 OTTUMWA WAPELLO 19510424 Y GENE BUTLER PAUL LEIGH ARMY PVT 19250000 UNKNOWN TAYLOR 19510125 Y CAHALAN DANIEL EMMIT ARMY CPL 19151027 UNKNOWN CERRO GORDO 19510212 N CALDWELL DONALD D ARMY CPL 19290000 UNKNOWN BUCHANAN 19501009 Y CALLAHAN JACK WAYNE ARMY PFC 19310000 UNKNOWN JOHNSON 19510907 N CALVIN HARVEY EARL ARMY PVT 19310000 UNKNOWN UNION 19501202 N CAMPBELL FORREST R ARMY CPL 19270000 UNKNOWN DELAWARE 19510519 Y CAPRON DONALD AIR FORCE SSGT 19200722 MANILLA CRAWFORD 19510913 Y VINCENT CARMAN LYLE HARVEY ARMY PFC 19290000 UNKNOWN CERRO GORDO 19500712 N CARMAN ROYAL G ARMY CPL 19170000 UNKNOWN WOODBURY 19500902 Y CARNAHAN HAROLD L ARMY PVT 19350000 UNKNOWN WAPELLO 19530622 Y CARNEY JAMES R ARMY CPL 19280000 UNKNOWN STORY 19511027 Y CARR PAUL E ARMY PFC 19290000 UNKNOWN POLK 19500927 Y CARSON VERNON C ARMY PVT 19320000 UNKNOWN HARRISON 19500815 Y CARSTENSEN ROBERT L ARMY PVT 19290000 UNKNOWN JONES 19501203 N CATALDO FRANK NICK NAVY FN 19310213 DES MOINES POLK 19530416 Y Source of data: the Korean War Extract Data File, as of April 29, 2008, of the Defense Casualty Analysis System (DCAS) Files, part of Record Group 330: Records of the Office of the Secretary of Defense. You can view the full DCAS record for an individual named in the list via the Access to Archival Databases resource, or AAD. The link to the AAD main page is as follows: http://www.archives.gov/aad Page 4 of 34 U.S. Military Fatal Casualties of the Korean War for Home-State-of-Record: Iowa Name Service Rank / Birthdate Home of Record: Incident or Remains Rate (YYYYMMDD) City County Death Date Recovered (YYYYMMDD) CAVIL JOHN C ARMY PFC 19320000 UNKNOWN POLK 19501128 N CHAPMAN RAYMOND B ARMY CPL 19280000 UNKNOWN LOUISA 19510215 Y CHAPMAN RAYMOND NAVY HN 19300302 CEDAR RAPIDS LINN 19521007 Y CURTIS CHERRY ROBERT LIONEL AIR FORCE CAPT 19250507 OTTUMWA WAPELLO 19520723 N CHIDESTER GILBERT L ARMY PFC 19240000 UNKNOWN JASPER 19510214 Y CHRISTIANSEN DONALD MARINE CORPS CPL 19260813 OSKALOOSA MAHASKA 19510912 Y RICHARD CLAPPER FRANCIS I ARMY PFC 19270000 UNKNOWN FREMONT 19500926 Y CLARK ARTHUR LEROY MARINE CORPS CPL 19290111 WATERLOO BLACK HAWK 19500924 Y CLARK JAMES R ARMY CPL 19310000 UNKNOWN JASPER 19501128 Y CLARK LARRY LEROY MARINE CORPS SSGT 19290428 MARSHALLTOW MARSHALL 19530727 N N CLARK ROBERT LEROY MARINE CORPS PFC 19270611 LOGAN HARRISON 19520608 Y CLARK VIRGIL D ARMY PFC 19310000 UNKNOWN CERRO GORDO 19501102 Y CLAUS CARL J ARMY CPL 19280000 UNKNOWN CERRO GORDO 19520605 Y CLINE HAROLD H ARMY PVT 19300000 UNKNOWN POWESHIEK 19520612 Y CLYMER MERLE DELMAR MARINE CORPS PFC 19301212 LYTTON MULTIPLE 19521006 N COFFMAN ROBERT M ARMY MSG 19170000 UNKNOWN WEBSTER 19501130 Y Source of data: the Korean War Extract Data File, as of April 29, 2008, of the Defense Casualty Analysis System (DCAS) Files, part of Record Group 330: Records of the Office of the Secretary of Defense. You can view the full DCAS record for an individual named in the list via the Access to Archival Databases resource, or AAD. The link to the AAD main page is as follows: http://www.archives.gov/aad Page 5 of 34 U.S. Military Fatal Casualties of the Korean War for Home-State-of-Record: Iowa Name Service Rank / Birthdate Home of Record: Incident or Remains Rate (YYYYMMDD) City County Death Date Recovered (YYYYMMDD) COLLINS CHARLES E ARMY PFC 19300000 UNKNOWN MARSHALL 19520522 Y COLLINS MAX HARVEY AIR FORCE 2NDLT 19290126 NEVADA STORY 19530504 Y CONGER JACK G ARMY CPL 19290000 UNKNOWN APPANOOSE 19511129 Y CONNELL JOHN M ARMY CPL 19290000 UNKNOWN CLAYTON 19520503 Y CONNETT DONALD C ARMY PVT 19340000 UNKNOWN POLK 19520112 N CONNOLLY GERALD JOHN MARINE CORPS CPL 19290726 COUNCIL POTTAWATTAM 19501103 Y BLUFFS IE COOK CHARLES J ARMY PVT 19320000 UNKNOWN CRAWFORD 19500909 Y COOK MAURICE E ARMY PVT 19290000 UNKNOWN BLACK HAWK 19501204 Y COOPER BILLY GENE NAVY PO1 19281001 CORNING ADAMS 19510914 Y CORY ROBERT R ARMY CPL 19300000 UNKNOWN WOODBURY 19501206 N COULTER PHILLIP W ARMY PFC 19280000 UNKNOWN CARROLL 19510917 Y CRAIN DAVID R ARMY PFC 19280000 UNKNOWN JOHNSON 19510917 Y CRANDALL FRANKLIN MARINE CORPS CPL 19310309 IOWA CITY JOHNSON 19501128 Y LAVON CRANE ROBERT L ARMY PVT 19260000 UNKNOWN POTTAWATTAM 19500706 Y IE CRAWFORD HAROLD E ARMY PFC 19310000 UNKNOWN JEFFERSON 19500727 N CREAGAN PATRICK H ARMY PFC 19330000 UNKNOWN APPANOOSE 19501203 N Source of data: the Korean War Extract Data File, as of April 29, 2008, of the Defense Casualty Analysis System (DCAS) Files, part of Record Group 330: Records of the Office of the Secretary of Defense.
Recommended publications
  • Etymology of the Principal Gaelic National Names
    ^^t^Jf/-^ '^^ OUTLINES GAELIC ETYMOLOGY BY THE LATE ALEXANDER MACBAIN, M.A., LL.D. ENEAS MACKAY, Stirwng f ETYMOLOGY OF THK PRINCIPAL GAELIC NATIONAL NAMES PERSONAL NAMES AND SURNAMES |'( I WHICH IS ADDED A DISQUISITION ON PTOLEMY'S GEOGRAPHY OF SCOTLAND B V THE LATE ALEXANDER MACBAIN, M.A., LL.D. ENEAS MACKAY, STIRLING 1911 PRINTKD AT THE " NORTHERN OHRONIOLB " OFFICE, INYBRNESS PREFACE The following Etymology of the Principal Gaelic ISTational Names, Personal Names, and Surnames was originally, and still is, part of the Gaelic EtymologicaJ Dictionary by the late Dr MacBain. The Disquisition on Ptolemy's Geography of Scotland first appeared in the Transactions of the Gaelic Society of Inverness, and, later, as a pamphlet. The Publisher feels sure that the issue of these Treatises in their present foim will confer a boon on those who cannot have access to them as originally published. They contain a great deal of information on subjects which have for long years interested Gaelic students and the Gaelic public, although they have not always properly understood them. Indeed, hereto- fore they have been much obscured by fanciful fallacies, which Dr MacBain's study and exposition will go a long way to dispel. ETYMOLOGY OF THE PRINCIPAI, GAELIC NATIONAL NAMES PERSONAL NAMES AND SURNAMES ; NATIONAL NAMES Albion, Great Britain in the Greek writers, Gr. "AXfSiov, AX^iotv, Ptolemy's AXovlwv, Lat. Albion (Pliny), G. Alba, g. Albainn, * Scotland, Ir., E. Ir. Alba, Alban, W. Alban : Albion- (Stokes), " " white-land ; Lat. albus, white ; Gr. dA</)os, white leprosy, white (Hes.) ; 0. H. G. albiz, swan.
    [Show full text]
  • Scottish Naming Customs Craig L
    Scottish Naming Customs Craig L. Foster AG® [email protected] Origins of Scottish Surnames Surnames are said to have begun to be used by Scottish nobility at the direction of King Malcolm Ceannmor in about 1061. William L. Kirk, Jr. “Introduction to the Derivation of Scottish Surnames,” Clan Macrae (1992), http://www.clanmacrae.ca/documents/names.htm “In some Highland areas, though, fixed surnames did not become the norm until the 18th century, and in parts of the Northern Isles until the 19th century.” “Surnames,” ScotlandsPeople, https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/guides/surnames Types of Scottish Surnames Location-Based Surnames Some people were named for localities. For example, the surname “Murray from the lands of Moray, and Ogilvie, which, according to Black, derives from the barony of Ogilvie in the parish of Glamis, Angus. Tenants might in turn assume, or be given, the name of their landlord, despite having no kinship with him.” Sometimes surnames referred to a specific topographical feature of the landscape such as a river, a loch, a hill, etc. Some examples might include: Names that contain 'kirk' (as in Kirkland, or Selkirk) which means 'church' in Gaelic; 'Muir' or names that contain it (means 'moor' in Gaelic); A name which has 'Barr' in it (this means 'hilltop' in Gaelic). “Surnames,” ScotlandsPeople, https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/guides/surnames Occupational Surnames A significant amount of surnames come from occupations. So a smith became known as Smith or Gow (Gaelic for smith), a tailor became Tailor/Taylor, a baker was Baxter, a weaver was Webster, etc. “Surnames,”ScotlandsPeople, https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/guides/surnames Descriptive Surnames “Nicknames were 'descriptional' ie.
    [Show full text]
  • Gaelic – What Would Success Look Like?
    Alba 2030: Gaelic – what would success look like? Programme 09:00 Registration, tea and coffee 10:00 Welcome/opening remarks: Rt Hon Ken Macintosh MSP, Presiding Officer and Futures Forum Chair 10:05 Keynote contribution: Professor Wilson McLeod, University of Edinburgh 10:25 The Future for Gaelic: Panel discussion with Wilson McLeod, Mary Ann Kennedy and Tadhg Ó hIfearnáin. 11.10 Coffee break 11.25 Workshops 12.45 Feedback 12.55 Thanks/closing remarks 13:00 Networking lunch 14.00 Event finishes Speaker biographies Professor Wilson McLeod is Professor of Gaelic at the University of Edinburgh. He acts as director of research on Celtic and Scottish Studies, with research interests including language policy and planning issues in Scotland; language legislation and language rights; and the cultural politics of Scottish and Irish Gaelic literature. Wilson is a regular media commentator on the role of the Gaelic language in Scotland. Mary Ann Kennedy is a Scottish musician, writer, composer, broadcaster and music producer. She was born and brought up in Glasgow in a Gaelic- speaking household at the heart of the city’s language activism and development in the 1970s and 80s: her mother Dr Kenna Campbell MBE is a prominent cultural tradition-bearer and educator, and her father Alasdair was the documentary voice in print of the city’s traditional Gaelic and Highland communities. She is co-director of her own creative business, Watercolour Music, in the West Highlands, and has a particular passion for new writing and non-traditional forms of Gaelic-language music. She previously spent several years in BBC News, ultimately running the Gaelic-language news service.
    [Show full text]
  • Introduction a Celtic Dirk at Scotland’S Back? the Lordship of the Isles in Mainstream Scottish Historiography Since 1828
    Introduction A Celtic Dirk at Scotland’s Back? The Lordship of the Isles in Mainstream Scottish Historiography since 1828 Richard D. Oram This volume of essays has its origin in a chance conversation in 1993 in which it emerged that no event had been organised to mark the five hundredth anni- versary of the forfeiture of the Lordship of the Isles by King James IV of Scotland. The result was a small academic conference the following year based at Ballygrant on Islay, close to the former symbolic centre of the Lordship at Finlaggan, and plans to bring the papers from that conference together as a published collection. That plan never matured and the conference papers which represented the contribution of different disciplines to the study of the MacDonald Lordship mainly found homes in academic journals or were incor- porated into larger research publications. Individually, none came close to offering the chronological depth or disciplinary breadth that the multi-author collection had promised and, while in the last two decades there has been a renaissance of research into the Late Medieval period in the Western Highlands and Islands of Scotland – focussed especially on the Church – a comprehen- sive modern overview of the MacDonald lordship in the fourteenth and fif- teenth centuries has remained a conspicuous absentee on the publications horizon. The essays in this volume, amongst which are two substantially revised and developed papers from that original 1994 conference, are not claimed to con- stitute such a comprehensive overview; they focus on key themes that illus- trate the culture(s) and identity/ identities of the territories encompassed by the MacDonald Lordship at its peak, from portable personal artefacts to ships, buildings and the visual signifiers of heraldry; episodes critical in the develop- ment, downfall and disintegration of the MacDonalds’ imperium; and institu- tions that gave form and substance to MacDonald power.
    [Show full text]
  • Last Name First Name Middle Name Taken Test Registered License
    As of 12:00 am on Thursday, December 14, 2017 Last Name First Name Middle Name Taken Test Registered License Richter Sara May Yes Yes Silver Matthew A Yes Yes Griffiths Stacy M Yes Yes Archer Haylee Nichole Yes Yes Begay Delores A Yes Yes Gray Heather E Yes Yes Pearson Brianna Lee Yes Yes Conlon Tyler Scott Yes Yes Ma Shuang Yes Yes Ott Briana Nichole Yes Yes Liang Guopeng No Yes Jung Chang Gyo Yes Yes Carns Katie M Yes Yes Brooks Alana Marie Yes Yes Richardson Andrew Yes Yes Livingston Derek B Yes Yes Benson Brightstar Yes Yes Gowanlock Michael Yes Yes Denny Racheal N No Yes Crane Beverly A No Yes Paramo Saucedo Jovanny Yes Yes Bringham Darren R Yes Yes Torresdal Jack D Yes Yes Chenoweth Gregory Lee Yes Yes Bolton Isabella Yes Yes Miller Austin W Yes Yes Enriquez Jennifer Benise Yes Yes Jeplawy Joann Rose Yes Yes Harward Callie Ruth Yes Yes Saing Jasmine D Yes Yes Valasin Christopher N Yes Yes Roegge Alissa Beth Yes Yes Tiffany Briana Jekel Yes Yes Davis Hannah Marie Yes Yes Smith Amelia LesBeth Yes Yes Petersen Cameron M Yes Yes Chaplin Jeremiah Whittier Yes Yes Sabo Samantha Yes Yes Gipson Lindsey A Yes Yes Bath-Rosenfeld Robyn J Yes Yes Delgado Alonso No Yes Lackey Rick Howard Yes Yes Brockbank Taci Ann Yes Yes Thompson Kaitlyn Elizabeth No Yes Clarke Joshua Isaiah Yes Yes Montano Gabriel Alonzo Yes Yes England Kyle N Yes Yes Wiman Charlotte Louise Yes Yes Segay Marcinda L Yes Yes Wheeler Benjamin Harold Yes Yes George Robert N Yes Yes Wong Ann Jade Yes Yes Soder Adrienne B Yes Yes Bailey Lydia Noel Yes Yes Linner Tyler Dane Yes Yes
    [Show full text]
  • Identity in Gaelic Drama 1900-1949 Susan Ross University of Glasgow
    Identity in Gaelic Drama 1900-1949 Susan Ross University of Glasgow Michelle Macleod and Moray Watson have described drama and prose fiction as being ‘in the shadow of the bard’ in terms of their place in the canon of Gaelic literature. (2007) Analysis and review of the extant drama materials show, however, that the Gaelic playwright Tormod Calum Dòmhnallach (Norman Malcolm MacDonald), 1 was right in saying in 1986 that ‘Gaelic theatre […] has been in existence for longer than many of us suspect’. (MacDonald 1986: 147) It is believed that the first Gaelic play (fully in Gaelic, rather than bilingual English with Gaelic) was performed by the Edinburgh University Celtic Society in 1902 although it is no longer known which play or sketch was performed. (Macleod and Watson 2007: 280) In the first decade of the twentieth century, Còisir Chiùil Lunnainn (London Musical Choir) also performed plays at their annual concert in London.2 This article looks at the first half of the twentieth century, when stage drama in Gaelic was being created, to investigate how Gaelic playwrights represented Scottish Gaels and their culture in this new art form. In terms of their artistic merit, Gaelic plays between 1900 and the Second World War are not generally held in high esteem, having previously been described as ‘outstanding neither as to quantity or quality’. (MacLeod 1969: 146) Despite this, there is value in what they reveal about identity and attitudes of the writers, many of whom were prominent figures in the Gaelic movement. An overview of some of the principal themes and tropes of the drama of this period will be presented, considering in particular how the writers negotiate what it meant to be a Gael in the early twentieth century.
    [Show full text]
  • Given Name Alternatives for Irish Research
    Given Name Alternatives for Irish Research Name Abreviations Nicknames Synonyms Irish Latin Abigail Abig Ab, Abbie, Abby, Aby, Bina, Debbie, Gail, Abina, Deborah, Gobinet, Dora Abaigeal, Abaigh, Abigeal, Gobnata Gubbie, Gubby, Libby, Nabby, Webbie Gobnait Abraham Ab, Abm, Abr, Abe, Abby, Bram Abram Abraham Abrahame Abra, Abrm Adam Ad, Ade, Edie Adhamh Adamus Agnes Agn Aggie, Aggy, Ann, Annot, Assie, Inez, Nancy, Annais, Anneyce, Annis, Annys, Aigneis, Mor, Oonagh, Agna, Agneta, Agnetis, Agnus, Una Nanny, Nessa, Nessie, Senga, Taggett, Taggy Nancy, Una, Unity, Uny, Winifred Una Aidan Aedan, Edan, Mogue, Moses Aodh, Aodhan, Mogue Aedannus, Edanus, Maodhog Ailbhe Elli, Elly Ailbhe Aileen Allie, Eily, Ellie, Helen, Lena, Nel, Nellie, Nelly Eileen, Ellen, Eveleen, Evelyn Eibhilin, Eibhlin Helena Albert Alb, Albt A, Ab, Al, Albie, Albin, Alby, Alvy, Bert, Bertie, Bird,Elvis Ailbe, Ailbhe, Beirichtir Ailbertus, Alberti, Albertus Burt, Elbert Alberta Abertina, Albertine, Allie, Aubrey, Bert, Roberta Alberta Berta, Bertha, Bertie Alexander Aler, Alexr, Al, Ala, Alec, Ales, Alex, Alick, Allister, Andi, Alaster, Alistair, Sander Alasdair, Alastar, Alsander, Alexander Alr, Alx, Alxr Ec, Eleck, Ellick, Lex, Sandy, Xandra, Zander Alusdar, Alusdrann, Saunder Alfred Alf, Alfd Al, Alf, Alfie, Fred, Freddie, Freddy Albert, Alured, Alvery, Avery Ailfrid Alberedus, Alfredus, Aluredus Alice Alc Ailse, Aisley, Alcy, Alica, Alley, Allie, Allison, Alicia, Alyssa, Eileen, Ellen Ailis, Ailise, Aislinn, Alis, Alechea, Alecia, Alesia, Aleysia, Alicia, Alitia Ally,
    [Show full text]
  • The Origin of the Name Somhairle Donald M
    The Origin of the Name Somhairle Donald M. Schlegel It usually has been stated in modern times that Somhairle's name was Norse Somerled or Sumarlidi, meaning Summer-leader, one who led viking expeditions in the summertime. The name presumaby was brought from Norse into Irish and became Somhairle, pronounced "Sorley." From this it has been inferred that Somhairle's mother, or perhaps his father, was Norse. However, the late Robert Livingston pointed out another possible source in the Irish name Suairleach. The name could have gone in the reverse direction, from Gaelic to Norse. Only three men are known to have borne the name Sumarlidi before the great Somhairle, King of Argyll; they all lived in Orkney and western Scotland and all are obscure. About two generations earlier was Sumarlidi Ospaksson, father of Thora who was wife of Erlend, Earl of Orkney. Erlend died about 1102. This Sumarlidi's ancestors over five or six generations had moved from Norway to Iceland and thence to Orkney. The next earlier Sumarlidi was a son of Sigurd the Stout, Earl of Orkney. This is the Sigurd who invaded Ireland and died at the battle of Clontarf in 1014. This Sumarlidi's mother is unknown; his grandmother was Edna, daughter of an Irish king named Cearbhall; his great-grandmother was Grelaud, daughter of Donnchadh, ruler of Caithness. The earliest Sumarlidi lived around the year 900. In the Laxdaela Saga, Hrapp who lived in Laxriverdale in Iceland was son of a man named Sumarlidi. This father, however, was not Norse; he was said to have been Scottish, while the mother was from the Sudreys (Hebrides).
    [Show full text]
  • Gaelic Names of Pibrochs a Concise Dictionary Edited by Roderick D
    February 2013 Gaelic names of Pibrochs A Concise Dictionary edited by Roderick D. Cannon Introduction Sources Text Bibliography February 2013 Introduction This is an alphabetical listing of the Gaelic names of pibrochs, taken from original sources. The great majority of sources are manuscript and printed collections of the tunes, in music notation appropriate for the bagpipe, that is, in staff notation or in canntaireachd. In addition, there are a few arranged for piano or fiddle, but only when the tunes correspond to known bagpipe versions. The main purpose of the work is to make available authentic versions of all authentic names, to explain apparent inconsistences and difficulties in translation, and to account for the forms of the names as we find them. The emphasis here is on the names, not the tunes as such. Many tunes have a variety of different names, but here the variants are only listed in the same entry when they are evidently related. Names which are semantically unrelated are placed in separate entries, even when linked by tradition such as Craig Ealachaidh and Cruinnneachdh nan Grandach. But in such cases they are linked by cross-references, and the traditions which explain the connection are mentioned in the discussions. Different names which merely sound similar are also cross-referenced, whether or not they apply to the same tune. Different names for the same tune, with no apparent connection, are not cross-referenced. Different tunes with the same name are given separate entries, though of course these appear consecutively in the list. In each entry the first name, in bold type, is presented in modern Gaelic spelling except that the acute accent is retained, e.g.
    [Show full text]
  • Somerled DNA Handout
    DNA says Manx King, Somerled, the Celebrated Founding Father of Scottish Clans, had a“Norse” Patrilinear Ancestry ! DNA-TRACKING SOMERLED, KING OF THE IST.E OF MAN AND THE HEBRIDES Remarkably,Somerled’s biogenetic impact on humanity has been studied beyond that of almost everyone else who has ever lived on this planet, and some of it has stirred up controversy in Scotland.Somerled’s biogenetic identity is even mentioned in aWikipedia entry, as follows: In 2005 astudy by Professor of Human Genetics Bryan Sykes of Oxford led to the conclusionthat Somerled has possibly 500,000 living descendants —making him the second most common currently-known ancestor after Genghis Khan. Sykes's research ledhim to conclude that Somerled was amember of the Y-DNA R1a1 Haplogroup, often considered the marker of Viking descent among men of deep British or Scottish ancestry. {Quoting from “Somerled” at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Somerled/ .)‘ As will be described below.Dr. Sykes also concluded that Somerled’s father was aNorse Viking, n^ aCeltic Scot. This news has upset many of Somerled’s living descendants !^ Thegenetic history of the Vikings Age, in general, has recently been the object of serious genetic science research.^ Indeed,Somerled’s progeny have much to appreciate about this research -but primarily they shouldbe appreciating God for His providencein procreatively making them, in everyexact biogeneticdetail, as exactly the unique human beings He made each of them to be! ^Ofcourse, this should not have been too shocking, because the name “Somerled” is merely a modifiedversion of the Old Norse name Sumarlidi, meaning “summer-traveler” (i.e., asummer sailor).
    [Show full text]
  • Gaelic Names of Pibrochs: a Classification1
    Gaelic Names of Pibrochs: A Classification1 Roderick D. Cannon Hon. Fellow, School of Scottish Studies, University of Edinburgh CONTENTS 1 Introduction 3 2 Sources 2.1. Pipe Music Collections 4 2.2 Other Sources 5 3 A Classification of Piobaireachd Names 8 4 Conflict and Confusion? 10 5 Type I: Functional Names 5.1 Cumha 14 5.2 Fàilte 18 5.3 Cruinneachadh 19 5.4 "Rowing tunes" 21 5.5 Words meaning “March” 22 5.6 Words meaning “Battle” 24 6 English and Gaelic 25 7 Type II: Technical Names 7.1 Pìobaireachd 26 7.2 Port 26 7.3 Gleus 27 7.4 Cor/ Cuir 28 7.5 Caismeachd 30 7.6 Aon-tlachd 32 8 Conclusions 32 Acknowledgements NOTES SOURCES BIBLIOGRAPHY 1. Introduction The classical music of the Highland bagpipe, usually called piobaireachd, but perhaps more correctly ceol mòr, consists of a large number of extended compositions in the form of air with variations. They were written down from oral tradition, mainly in the first half of the nineteenth century. Although pibrochs have continued to be composed since that time, especially in the last few decades, it is the pre-1850 pieces which are generally accepted as the classical canon.2 It is safe to assume that all the pibroch players who noted the music in writing spoke Gaelic as their first language.3 Certainly the great majority of pieces have been recorded with Gaelic titles as well as English. There can be little doubt that the English titles are generally translations of the Gaelic rather than the other way round.
    [Show full text]
  • Mansfield Police Department Page: 1 Dispatch Log From: 08/01/2019 Thru: 08/22/2019 0000 - 2359 Printed: 08/24/2019
    Mansfield Police Department Page: 1 Dispatch Log From: 08/01/2019 Thru: 08/22/2019 0000 - 2359 Printed: 08/24/2019 For Date: 08/01/2019 - Thursday Call Number Time Call Reason Action Priority 19-15048 0054 Initiated - Motor Vehicle Stop Citation / Warning Issued 3 Call Taker: JAMES VIERA Location/Address: [MAS 425] 6 PARK ROW ID: Police Officer Michelle Bellevue Arvd-00:54:00 Clrd-01:05:05 ID: Police Officer Christopher D Sorge Disp-00:57:06 Arvd-00:57:09 Clrd-01:01:09 Vehicle: GRY 2003 PONT BONNEV Reg: PC MA 6HD787 VIN: 1G2HX52K934202184 Narrative: Citation issued. 19-15049 0103 911 - Alarm - Burglar Building Checked / Secured 1 Call Taker: JEFFREY KEEFE Location/Address: [MAS 331A] 255 EAST ST ID: Police Officer Christopher D Sorge Disp-01:04:57 Arvd-01:08:08 Clrd-01:15:27 ID: Police Officer Andrew J Kelley Disp-01:05:01 Clrd-01:05:21 ID: Police Officer Michelle Bellevue Disp-01:05:24 Arvd-01:08:19 Clrd-01:15:30 Narrative: COMMERCIAL ALARM REPORTED AS FRONT DOOR MOTION. Narrative: Ofc Sorge reports front of building checks secure. Narrative: Both units clear, all doors check tight. 19-15051 0123 Initiated - Building Check Building Checked / Secured 3 Call Taker: JAMES VIERA Location/Address: [MAS 2] 60 FORBES BLVD ID: Police Officer Andrew J Kelley Arvd-01:23:00 Clrd-01:29:30 19-15052 0129 Initiated - Suspicious Actv / Persn / Veh Spoken To 2 Call Taker: JAMES VIERA Location/Address: [MAS] BICENTENNIAL CT ID: Police Officer Christopher D Sorge Arvd-01:29:00 Clrd-01:35:42 ID: Police Officer Michelle Bellevue Disp-01:32:07 Arvd-01:32:10 Clrd-01:35:45 Vehicle: GRY 2015 SUBA WRX Reg: PC MA 4HT418 VIN: JF1VA1D64F9833818 Narrative: Checking on a vehicle.
    [Show full text]