Hey Skm,
Mills
Usage: English
Extra: Statistics
Originally given to one who lived near a mill or who worked in a mill. 1
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You can research your family surname from, Mills, from you back one person at a time, which is the best way. It is not always possible, and some people do not need all the evidence, they just want to know. So, there are sites listed below that do this sort of thing. Also, here is what could be take from my favorite of them:
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ENGLISH:
Spelling variations of this family name include: Mills, Mylles, Meiles and others.
First found in Hampshire where they were seated from very early times and were granted lands by Duke William of Normandy, their liege Lord, for their distinguished assistance at the Battle of Hastings in 1066 A.D.
Some of the first settlers of this family name or some of its variants were: Cornelius Mill settled in Virginia in 1652; along with Edward in 1654; James in 1741; John in 1637; Lewis in 1642; Mary in 1704; Thomas in 1635; William in 1663. They also settled in the Barbados, Philadelphia, Charletown.
SCOTTISH:
Spelling variations of this family name include: Mills, Mylles, Meiles and others.
First found in Hampshire where they were seated from very early times and were granted lands by Duke William of Normandy, their liege Lord, for their distinguished assistance at the Battle of Hastings in 1066 A.D.
Some of the first settlers of this family name or some of its variants were: Cornelius Mill, who settled in Virginia in 1652; along with Edward in 1654; James in 1741; John in 1637; Lewis in 1642; Mary in 1704; Thomas in 1635; William in 1663. They also settled in the Barbados, Philadelphia, Charletown.
The two seem to have merged in the Scottish and English Settlers section.
2007-01-08 05:34:35
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answer #1
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answered by BuyTheSeaProperty 7
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Mills
This name is a medieval English or Scottish topographical surname,
given originally to someone who lived near a mill, and is derived
from the Middle English "mille, milne", mill, a development of the
Olde English pre 7th Century "mylen(e)", itself from the Latin
"molina", a derivative of "molere", to grind. The final "s"
indicates a patronymic, i.e., "son of". The surname gradually came
to be used as an occupational name for a worker at a mill, and
indeed sometimes for the miller himself, a respected and important
position in medieval communities, where the mill was a central part
of the settlement. It was powered by water wind, or, sometimes,
animals, and usually operated by an agent of the local landowner.
The villagers were compelled to bring their corn to the miller to
be ground into flour, and to pay for the service with a proportion
of their grain.
The modern surname can be found as Mill, Mills, Millis, Mille,
Milne(s), Millman and Mullen. One Richard Mille appeared in the
Hundred Rolls of Cambridgeshire in 1279. An interesting namebearer
was George Mills (1808 - 1881), a builder of iron steam ships who
became a journalist and started the "Glasgow Advertiser and
Shipping Gazette" in 1857. The first recorded spelling of the
family name is shown to be that of
Richard de la Melle which was dated
1200, in the "Curia Regis Rolls of Sussex", during the reign of
King John.
2007-01-09 23:31:38
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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mill1 (mĭl) pronunciation
n.
1.
1. A building equipped with machinery for grinding grain into flour or meal.
2. A device or mechanism that grinds grain.
2. A machine or device that reduces a solid or coarse substance into pulp or minute grains by crushing, grinding, or pressing: a pepper mill.
3. A machine that releases the juice of fruits and vegetables by pressing or grinding: a cider mill.
4.
1. A machine, such as one for stamping coins, that produces something by the repetition of a simple process.
2. A steel roller bearing a raised design, used for making a die or a printing plate by pressure.
3. Any of various machines for shaping, cutting, polishing, or dressing metal surfaces.
5.
1. A building or group of buildings equipped with machinery for processing raw materials into finished or industrial products: a textile mill; a steel mill.
2. A building or collection of buildings that has machinery for manufacture; a factory.
6. A process, agency, or institution that operates in a routine way or turns out products in the manner of a factory: The college was nothing more than a diploma mill.
7. A slow or laborious process: It took three years to get the bill through the legislative mill.
2007-01-08 03:56:18
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answer #3
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answered by Smiddy 5
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A BYB is only a domestic dog mill on a smaller scale. both attempt to reveal canines breeding right into a money-making organization while any strong breeder or someone with 0.5 an ethical experience is conscious that respected breeding isn't about money. the really actual massive difference except length is that BYBs do frequently look after their canines to some quantity. They typically furnish vet care and food while the canines in domestic dog turbines stay in disgusting circumstances with inadequate food and water, no vet care, no human interaction or affection. they many times beaten and ought to live to tell the tale in small cages that are in no way wiped clean out so that they stay of their own waste. BYBs are frequently merely ignorant as to what actual breeding must be. A domestic dog mill is going previous that. Any moron is conscious that starving your canines is inaccurate yet domestic dog turbines do starve their animals and far worse. it truly is more suitable than merely being uneducated - it truly is organic evil. you may replace lack of expertise with education yet you may in no way ever replace someone who's stressed to be evil sufficient to be knowingly in touch with the perpetuation of domestic dog turbines.
2016-12-02 00:17:13
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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You can search the internet but in my opinion it will be an excesise in futility for one thing that what are you going to accomplish after all? A lot of surnames are often misspelled words and nothing more.
2007-01-08 03:59:58
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Try searching the web and reading books.
2007-01-08 04:00:53
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answer #6
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answered by BookWorm 1
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