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#2
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#3
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#4
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On Mar 31, 7:37*am, Peter Prick wrote:
In article fc01071e-9d47-4211-9502-35c7d45d9cd1 @y17g2000yqd.googlegroups.com, says... On Mar 31, 5:51*am, "Eisboch" wrote: You are correct, Prick *or whoever you are. LOL! sorry, sometimes it's hard to make no comment in a non-boating thread... In some respects I can understand your reaction, but that does not make your reaction the correct one. From reading your posts here you seem to be a gentleman, so I will take this opportunity to give you a brief background of my name. I hope it will make you think twice before mocking somebody's name, and if not, at least I tried. I see you are a Schnautz, so suspect you may be sensitive in this area. * In the long history of my family, all traceable in British genealogy and heraldry annals, lack of male descendants and marriage of the female descendant to another manor or principality led to a number of changes of the family name. This is a common occurrence in the long sweep of history. From Shaftcroft to Dickinson to Cockburn, then DePenis, LaBanane, and finally vonPrick - who was a Prussian Baron - when an arranged marriage took place joining him to the last of the Labanane line, Princess Donhava LaBanane. Today these names strike the modern person as similar in a certain way, but language itself is ever evolving, and simple chance plays its role. I don't mean to sound any way "superior" here with all this talk of heraldic names, because I'm certainly not. The family fortune waned long ago, and my work has mainly been clerking in various Sears Roebuck shoe departments, and a stint at Tom McCann. In my direct family line the vonPrick name was shortened to Prick by my great-great-grandfather when he left Stropfordshire in 1849 to seek his fortune in the California gold rush. He had no success there, and likewise failed in other endeavors, and so too the family left in Europe suffered a steep decline. Some of the European family still use the vonPrick name on formal occasions, but here in the U.S. it is mostly relegated to discussion of ancestry at various family functions. Birthdays, weddings, christenings, picnics, etc. I use the Prick family name here really to disguise my identity, as it is not easily traced, and I am a rather private person. I suppose it wouldn't hurt to use my given name, as it is also not easily traced. In 1933 my grandfather had a violent falling out with the European Pricks, and decided to abandon the name. He changed his name legally to Jones, and that is the name I was given. I'm happy with it, and consider myself lucky in that respect. My grandmother insisted that the family name become her maiden name if my grandfather were to abandon his family name. He adamantly refused and insisted on the Jones name, which was done. This deep disagreement simmered for another 4 years and led to divorce, which was relatively unusual in the 1930's. Her maiden name was Schmuck, and I sometimes ponder how my life may have been different if Jones had not won out in the battle between Prick and Schmuck. But family matters are boring to strangers, aren't they? *So I'll stop now. * Oh I have no cmplaints with your name and like mine, yes it's very Germanic. I meant no harm by my post, but when I read that line, I confess it did catch me a bit off guard. And even if Richard was serious (which he wasn't) , it wouldn't be near the insults or psudo degedations as what I'm sure you've witnessed here in rec.boats. |
#5
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On Mar 31, 7:37*am, Peter Prick wrote:
But family matters are boring to strangers, aren't they? *So I'll stop now. * Oh, not at all. Here's a listing of most of my ancesterial names: Schnautz, Weidner, McKinney, Sandschaefferr, Hahn, Gladstone, Wilkinson, Smythe, Price, Cordell, Pruitt, Pearson, Kruegmann, Knoppehler, Dhonau, Marmaduke (Not necessarily in that order.) My cousin has my family (Schnautz) traced back to the Black forrest region of Germany to about 1620. And my sister has my mothers side traced to the British Isles to the mid 1700's |
#6
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