NameMary Elizabeth HANSON1
Birth1849, Woodhouse, Leeds, Yorkshire, England
Death1924, Leeds, Yorkshire, England
FatherEdward HANSON (~1811-1893)
MotherSarah (HANSON) (~1815-)
Spouses
Birth1848, Leeds, Yorkshire, England
Death1910, Leeds, Yorkshire, England
FatherWilliam CAUKWELL (1815-1873)
MotherHannah Maria WADE (1824-1864)
Marriage1869, Leeds, Yorkshire, England
ChildrenJohn Edward (1869-)
 James William (1871-1909)
 Sushannah (1872-1879)
 Sarah (1874-1970)
 Violet (1875-1879)
 Florence (1877-1879)
 John William (1879-1942)
 Mary Elizabeth (1879-1881)
 Herbert (1881-)
 Wilfred (1883-)
 Beatrice (1887-)
 Charles Henry (1888-1959)
 Harry (1897-1959)
Notes for Mary Elizabeth HANSON
Surname: Hanson
This name can be either a patronymic or a metronymic, meaning it may be derived from the name of the first bearer's father or mother. As apatronymic, it derives from "Han(n)", a Flemish form of John from the Hebrew "Yochanan" meaning "Jehovah has favoured (me with a son)". "Hann(e)"was a very popular christian name in 13th Century Yorkshire, appearing frequently in the 1274 - 1297 Court Rolls of the Manor of Wakefield. Thesurname from this source is first recorded in Yorkshire in the early 14th Century (see below). As a metronymic, the surname derives from themedieval female given name "Hann", a short form of Hannah from the Hebrew "Chana" meaning "God has favoured me". One Robertus Hanson appears in the1379, Poll Tax Returns Records of Yorkshire. On April 29th 1541, Richard, son of Richard Hanson, was christened at Dewsbury, Yorkshire. A family bythe name of Hanson were established in America by John Hanson, one of four brothers sent there by Queen Christina of Sweden in 1642. They weregrandsons of an Englishman who had married into the Swedish royal family. The first recorded spelling of the family name is shown to be that ofWilliam Hanneson, which was dated 1331, in the "Patent Rolls of Yorkshire", during the reign of King Edward 111, known as "The Father of the Navy",1327 - 1377. Surnames became necessary when governments introduced personal taxation. In England this was known as Poll Tax. Throughout thecenturies, surnames in every country have continued to "develop" often leading to astonishing variants of the original spelling.
Last Modified NewCreated 8 Sep 2009 using Reunion for Macintosh