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Update Sept 8, 2007 |
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The Website is now up
and running properly!!
If there is any changes / additions/
problems you wish to be addressed please write us at:
Webmaster@eddyfamily.com
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| | | | | Publication Update The 2005 supplement finished and can be ordered from our "Sale Items". We have begun the work on our next publication. We are expecting it to take five years (2011). Join the EFA and receive our bulletin which will include an order form for Genealogical books and other Eddy materials. | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| WELCOME The Eddy Family Association is a historical and genealogical research association. Our primary focus is to research and preserve the history of those who have the Eddy surname. We have published a number of Genealogical and Historical books that give a detailed history of the descendents of William Eddye Vicar of the Cranbrook Church in England, during the late 1500's and early 1600's. There are others who have the Eddy last name who have not been connected to William or who are clearly not his descendents. These families' genealogies and histories are kept as well. The Eddy Family Association Inc. was organized at Eddyville, Massachusetts on September 15, 1920 and incorporated on October 29, 1923. 
The story of how our family formed an association was told by Ruth Story Eddy in the 1930 book "The Eddy Family in America".
The
origin of the name Eddy is an interesting subject for research and
speculation. Frank R. Holmes, in his "Directory of the Ancestral Heads of
New England Families, 1600-1700", suggests two possible origins; from the
Gaelic eddee, meaning instructor; and from the Saxon ed, backwards, and ea
water, - a whirlpool or eddy; thus making it a place-name. A much more
probable origin is the Saxon root ead, meaning success or prosperity. This
root occurs in several frequently used names, as Edgar, Edmund, Edward,
Edwin, and the obsolete Edwy. It is interesting to note that the earliest
record yet found of John Eddy of Taunton spells the name Eddway. Eddy might
be a diminutive of any one of these names. Robert Ferguson, in his work on
"English Surnames" suggests also that it is a place-name, from the
Anglo-Saxon Edingas, and Frisian Edde.
The earliest mention of the name is in the form Eddi or
Edde, Latinized into Eddius. The bearer assumed the name Stephanus on taking
orders. He went to Northumbria from Canterbury with Bishop Wilfrid (or
Wilfrith) in 699. His special work was the teaching of the Roman method of
chanting. In 709 he was an inmate of the monastery of Ripon, where he wrote
a life of Wilfrid in Latin, a work of considerable interest and value.
In the " Domesday Book" the name Eddeu occurs in a description of Little
Abington, Cambridgeshire, and in the time of Edward I persons named Ede,
Edde, and Edwy are mentioned as paying taxes in Worcestershire. In 1486 a
William Edy, Gent., is recorded in co. Herts. From 1545 the name was found
frequently in Gloucestershire under the forms Edie, Eddy, Eddye, Edy and
Edye. At Woodbridge, Suffolk, Eyde occurs as a surname between 1599 and 1610
and then vanishes, for a century at least.
In the records of the Archdeaconry Court of Cornwall
the name is found in various forms, Edy, Eady, Eedy, Ede, Edye, or Eddy, in
different parishes from 1570 on. In Bristol, the town where William Eddye,
the Vicar, was born, a number of wills have been discovered, dated about
1580, of persons bearing the names of Eddie, Eddye or Eddy. In Scotland the
names Ade, Adie, Addy, Eadie are frequently found. Some of these are thought
to be diminutives of Adam, a favorite name in that country. In 1672 a
coat-of-arms was granted to David
Eadie of Moneaght, Scotland, as noted in the paragraphs on heraldry.
With our present knowledge it is impossible to trace
these various names to their sources. It seems quite clear that they come,
at least in part, from different origins and have at times been interchanged
in inextricable confusion.
Most
North American Eddys trance their family line back to
William Eddye, born in Bristol and was a
vicar (Christian minister in the Church of England) in a town called
Cranbrook. There are two other large North American families who trace
their linage to John Eddy of Taunton
Mass. and John of Woodbridge, NJ.
There are a number of smaller families from immigrants who came from
Scotland, Ireland and Cornwall, England who also bear the Eddy last name.
Although William Eddye seems to have used two d's
consistently in the spelling of his name, his descendants in this country,
in the many variations found, frequently dropped one and also often doubled
the initial E. This would suggest that the name was pronounced Eedy. As a
matter of fact that pronunciation was largely, if not entirely, used in the
western part of Rhode Island in the early portion of the nineteenth century.
It is interesting to note that the names Edye and Edie, mentioned in the
paragraphs on the coat-of-arms,
suggest a like pronunciation.
Copyright © 2005 by The Eddy Family Association. All rights reserved. Last revised: August 05, 2006 Information may be linked to but not be copied in part or whole for publication without the written permission of the Eddy Family Association | | 
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