Hearn family
{{unreliable sources|date=February 2019}}
The Hearn family is a family of Anglo-Norman origin.{{sfn|Hearne|1907|p=9}} The name's original spelling in the 11th century was Heron or Heroun. As early as the 17th century, the spellings Hearn, Hearne, and Harn would also appear in England and the United States.
The Hearn family has sometimes been incorrectly linked with the Irish ancestral name Hearn.
Origin
{{See also|Clan Heron}}
The surname Hearn is thought to be derived from Hairun, a settlement near Rouen, Normandy.{{sfn|Hearne|1907|p=9}} The name can be traced back to the English settlement after the Norman Conquest.{{sfn|Hearne|1907|p=9}} The Clan Heron, a border-raiding clan along the Anglo-Scottish border, would settle at Chipchase Castle in the 17th century.
History
=In England=
After the name's establishment in England from its Norman origin of Hairun in the eleventh century, numerous variations in the name's spelling would develop, including Heiron, Heron, and Herne.{{sfn|Hearne|1907|p=9}} Alternate uses of the word occur in Old English as hyrne, meaning a nook or a corner of land or in a bend.{{cite book|title=A Dictionary of English Surnames|publisher=Psychology Press|year=1991|page=1585|last1=Reaney|first1=Percy Hide|last2=Wilson|first2=Richard Middlewood|isbn=9780415057370|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5sVq7VQlNwcC&q=harn+surname+hyrne}} In a glossary originating from Newcastle upon Tyne in 1825, both Hearn and Harn were used interchangeably to refer to a "coarse linen cloth" among the citizens of Newcastle.{{sfn|Brockett|1825|p=93}}
The variant spelling Heron has incorrectly led the name to be confused with the Irish name O'Heron (of which later variations would also include Heron and Hearn), an Anglicized form of the Gaelic Ó hUidhrín.{{cite book|title=Dictionary of American Family Names|volume=3|page=169|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=2003|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vG7MZ9J6dAgC&q=anglicized+form+of+Gaelic+Ó+hUidhr%C3%ADn|isbn=978-0-195-08137-4}} The names, however, are of different origin.
=Heron baronets=
{{Main|Heron baronets}}
The Heron Baronetcy, of Chipchase,The Baronetage of England, Containing a Genealogical and Historical Account of all the Baronetcies now existing Vol 2. Edward Kimber and Richard Johnson (1771), p. 275. Google Books was created on 20 November 1662 in the Baronetage of England by Charles II for Cuthbert Heron of Chipchase Castle, Northumberland in recognition of the loyalty shown to the King's father Charles I.
Arrival in the United States
=William Hearne (1627–91)=
The Hearn family's arrival in the United States was a result of William Hearne,{{cite web|url=http://www.hearnweb.com/charts/wm_hearne_desc.html|work=Hearnweb.com|title=William (immigrant) and Mary Hearn, Partial List of Descendants: Seven Generations|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161108174359/http://www.hearnweb.com/charts/wm_hearne_desc.html|archive-date=8 November 2016|author=Hearne, Lerma E.|date=30 June 2008}} born in 1627 in London, son of baron Jordan Heron.{{citation needed|date=February 2019}} Hearne was a Captain in Oliver Cromwell's army,{{sfn|Hearne|1907|p=25}} and would later maintain a successful business enterprise in London selling Muscovado sugar from the West Indies between 1680 and 1688.{{sfn|Hearne|1907|pages=26–7}} Around 1688, William immigrated to America with his wife, Mary (née Cuthbert), settling on the border of contemporary Maryland and Delaware in Somerset County, United States, where he died in 1691.{{sfn|Hearne|1907|p=26}}
After his death, the Hearne estate in Maryland, nicknamed "St. Kitts" after Saint Kitts and Nevis, was occupied by his descendants for nearly two-hundred years.{{sfn|Hearne|1907|p=32}} Variations and alternate spellings of the family name would occur onward from the seventeenth and eighteenth-centuries in both England and the United States, including Hearne and Harn.{{cite book|title=Library of Congress Subject Headings|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SuHDi6ObIVkC&q=hearne+harn&pg=PA3561|publisher=Library of Congress|year=2011|page=3561}}
Armigerous Hearns
The coat of arms granted to Daniel James Hearn, of Correa, co. Westmeath, the use of which being restricted to his descendants,The General Armory of England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales, Bernard Burke, Harrison & Sons, 1884, p. cviii are canting arms, bearing three heron, which have been closely associated with the name.{{cite book|title=Lafcadio Hearn|url=https://archive.org/details/lafcadiohearn00kenn|page=[https://archive.org/details/lafcadiohearn00kenn/page/3 3]|author=Kennard, Nina H.|year=1912|publisher=D. Appleton and Company}}
Sir Nicholas Hearn (1540–1608), who was knighted in Drogheda, Ireland by Sir Henry Sidney in 1566,{{sfn|Hearne|1907|p=12}} used as his motto the phrase 'Leges, juraque servat'- 'He maintains the laws and his rights.'{{sfn|Hearne|1907|p=25}}
See also
- Heron (surname), a variant spelling of the Hearn family name
- List of people with the surname Hearn
Notes
{{noteslist}}
References
{{reflist|30em}}
Works cited
{{refbegin}}
- {{cite book|last=Brockett|first=John Trotter|title= A Glossary of North Country Words, in Use: From an Original Manuscript, in the Library of John George Lambton, Esq., M. P., with Considerable Additions|publisher=E. Charney|year=1825|url=https://archive.org/details/glossaryofnorthc00brocuoft|quote=hearne harn name.}}
- {{cite book|last=Hearne|first=William Thomas|title=Brief history and Genealogy of the Hearne Family from A. D. 1066, when they went from Normandy with William the Conqueror over to England, down to 1680, when William Hearne the London merchant came to America, and on down to A. D. 1907|url=https://archive.org/details/briefhistorygene01hear|publisher=Press of Examiner Printing Co.|location=Independence, Missouri|year=1907}} {{open access}}
- {{cite book |title=The Norman People and Their Existing Descendants in the British Dominions and the United States of America|publisher=Henry S. King & Co.|year=1874|location=London|url=https://archive.org/stream/normanpeopleand00unkngoog#page/n5/mode/2up|ref={{SfnRef|Henry S. King & Co.|1874}}}}
{{refend}}
Further reading
- {{cite book|last1=Hanks|first1=Patrick|last2=Coates|first2=Richard|last3=McClure|first3=Peter|title=The Oxford Dictionary of Family Names in Britain and Ireland|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-192-52747-9|year=2016}}
- {{cite book|last=Hearne|first=William Thomas|title=Brief history and Genealogy of the Hearne Family from A. D. 1066, when they went from Normandy with William the Conqueror over to England, down to 1680, when William Hearne the London merchant came to America, and on down to A. D. 1907|url=https://archive.org/details/briefhistorygene01hear|publisher=Press of Examiner Printing Co.|location=Independence, Missouri|year=1907|ref=none}} {{open access}}
Category:Anglo-Norman families