Author Topic: Argyle: Surname Fisher about 1747  (Read 3630 times)

Offline RedMystic

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Argyle: Surname Fisher about 1747
« on: Friday 28 January 11 18:13 GMT (UK) »
This is a long shot and I'm new to this forum and genealogy, but hope some of you may be able to tell me if I'm way off base.

I have a Timothy Fisher, born 1748 on board a ship from Scotland to Connecticut or Massachusetts This information comes from a letter written about 150 years after Timothy's birth. He died about 1800 in Napinee Mills, Ontario, Canada a few months after leaving the United States as a United Empire Loyalist. (He fought on the side of the king during the War of Independence.)

I have no idea who his parents may have been & don't think that is possible to discern. However, I'd like to track down the region of Scotland from which the family may have hailed.

Argyle seemed to have had a Fisher cluster in the lands from Inveraray to Loch Awe. There were also some in Dunbartonshire but this was where the Argyle folks heading for Glasgow settled (the western suburbs?) The other substantial cluster away from the cities was along Loch Tay in Perthshire.

What is striking is that the latter is about as far from the sea as you can get in Scotland. The other notable thing is that the coastal lowland counties where one would have expected to find the Fisher name have pretty well no records of any Fishers. They were equally scarce in Edinburgh but had moved into Glasgow more than a single generation before according to the 1881 Census.

So, the thought is that the Fishers came from either end of Glenorchy. Does this sound plausible?

Also, it appears that Fisher was as sept of Clan Campbell. I know that the clan was a fairly fierce group, and were involved in the Battle of Culloden in 1746 (along with the Fisher sept). Was there anything else happening about that time that may have caused the family to leave Scotland? (In the event it is relevant, Timothy Fisher married into a strongly Puritan family on his second and his wife's third marriage.)
MACDONALD of Benbecula, Scotland, Earlswood/Wapella Sask
BAIN of Aberdeenshire, Trafford district, Red Jacket and Moosomin, Sask
CHEYNE of Aberdeenshire & Trafford district, Sask
FISHER of Yorkshire, Ontario & Saskatchewan
INKSTER of Shetland, Edinburgh, Sask and BC
GAUNT of Yorkshire, Kent, BC & Australia
KINCH of Ireland, PEI, Ab, Sask
CORCORAN of Ireland, PEI & Sask
GOTZ / GOETZ of Soufflenheim, Alsace & Ont
MITTELHAUSSER of Soufflenheim, Alsace
MULLER or MILLER of Drusenheim, Alsace & Ont

Offline Bobmacn

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Re: Argyle: Surname Fisher about 1747
« Reply #1 on: Monday 03 March 25 22:42 GMT (UK) »
My ancestor Archibald McNair was a tacksman for the Clan MacLachlan.  He died in 1706 in Kilmorie in Strathlachlan.

His wife was Margrat Fisher and in his will there was a 14 year old son called John McNair.

Regards,
Bob McNair

Offline Forfarian

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Re: Argyle: Surname Fisher about 1747
« Reply #2 on: Tuesday 04 March 25 09:51 GMT (UK) »
Also, it appears that Fisher was as sept of Clan Campbell.
Please don't get hung up on clans. All this 'if your surname is xxx you belong to Clan yyy' was dreamed up by the Brigadoon industry in the 19th and 20th centuries.

Fisher is an occupational name. It derives ultimately from Old English, and occurs as Fischer in German, Pecheur in French and so on. A moment's thought will tell you that it must have evolved as a surname all over Britain, and therefore not all Fishers are connected to any clan, Campbell or otherwise.

Don't forget that many fishermen would have fished on inland lochs and rivers, not only in the sea. So it isn't especially odd that there were Fishers in the lands of Clan Campbell.

From G F Black's The Surnames of Scotland, the surname first appears in Perth in 1292, 1338 and 1344, in Atholl in 1455, Lanark in 1488, Carstairs in 1513, and Edinburgh in 1603.

He also says that in Perthshire the name is used as an Englishing of MacInesker, from Gaelic Mac an Iasgair, which means 'son of the fisherman'. This surname occurs from 1494 in Perthshire, Argyll and Aberdeenshire.

Out of sheer curiosity, I looked at the distribution of baptisms of Fisher and phonetically similar names by county from the earlest records until 1750.

The largest number in any county was Perthshire with 561 occurrences
Then Lanarkshire 309
Midlothian 304
Ayr 141
Angus 125
Stirling 97
Argyll 88
Roxburgh 76
Fife 71
West Lothian 41
Dunbarton 40
Kinross and Kincardine 24 each
Renfrew 23
Dumfries 18
Clackmannan 14
Peebles 13
Kirkcudbright 10
Berwick 8
Selkirk 4
Moray and Banff 3 each
Aberdeen, Orkney and East Lothian 2 each
There were none in Bute, Caithness, Inverness, Nairn, Ross and Cromarty, Shetland, Sutherland or Wigtown

Of course this is a very crude analysis, because it takes no account of the total size of the population of each county. Nor does it allow for the many gaps in the surviving records at that time.

So while it's fine to note where there might have been clusters of Fishers in the early 18th century,  you're on very shaky ground if you extrapolate to say that because that's where the largest clusters of Fishers were, that's where your Timothy's parents must have come from.

Interestingly, Timothy is a very uncommon given name in Scotland. He occurs only 43 times in the surviving Scottish church records before 1750 (compared with, for example, 40,880 occurrences of John).

As for anything else happening around that time, it was soon after Culloden, but also at the start of the Highland Clearances.

And as for his wife's religion, if his family were fleeing after Culloden, they might have been Episcopalian or Roman Catholic, but if they were among the early clearances, they could also have been Presbyterian. I doubt if the fact that she was Puritan would be very helpful in tracing his antecedents.
Never trust anything you find online (especially submitted trees and transcriptions on Ancestry, MyHeritage, FindMyPast and other commercial web sites) unless it's an image of an original document - and even then be wary because errors can and do occur.