Surname Origins, Their Source and Significations (1875)
Last | Contents | Nextof waste wood. Compounds may be found in our Huntroyds,' that is, the clearing for the chase; 'Holroyds,' that is, the holly-clearing; and 'Acroyds,'thatis, the oak-clearing, the term ' acorn,'that is, ' oak-corn,' and such local names as 'Acton ' or 'AcIand,' reminding us of this the older spelling; ' Ormerod,' again, is but Ormes-clearing — Orme being, as we havealready shown, a common Saxon personal name. Our 'Greaves' and 'Graves' and 'Groves,'descendants ofthe ' de la Groves' and 'Atte Groves' of early rolls, not to mention the more personal 'Grover' and 'Graver,' convey the same idea. A ' Greave' was a woodland avenue, graved or cut out of the forest. Fairfax speaks of the
Wind in holts and shady greaves.
'Tis true we only ' grave' in stone now, but it was notalways so. Thus in the 'Legend of Good Women' mention is made of
A little herber that I haveThat benched was on turves fresh ygrave.
We still call the last resting-place of the dead in our churchyards a grave, though dug from the soil. 1 have already mentioned 'de la Graveshend' occurring as a surname. Our 'Hargreaves' hail from the grove where the hares are plentiful; our 'Congreves' representing the same in the coney. Our 'Greeves' we shall have occasion in another chapter to show belong to another and more occupative class of surnames.Our ' Thwaites,' too, belong to this category. Locally the term is confined to Cumberland and the north, where the Norwegians left it. It is exactly equivalent
LOCAL SURNAMES.
to ' field,' a felled place, or woodland clearing The compounds formed from it are too numerous to wade through. Amongst others, however, we have, as denotive of the substances ridded, 'Thornthwaite,'
Limethwaite,' 'Rownthwaite,' and 'Hawthornthwaite;' of peculiarity in position or shape, 'Brathwaite' (broad), and 'Micklethwaite;' of contents, Thistlethwaite,' 'Cornthwaite,' and 'Crossthwaite.' The very dress of the majority of these compounds testifies to the northern origin of the root-word.
Our 'Slade' represents the ' de la Slades' of the Hundred Rolls. A slade was a small strip of green plain within a woodland. One of the numberless rhymes concerning Robin Hood says
It had been better of William a Trent
To have been abed with: sorrowe,Than to be that day in the greenwood slade
To meet with Little John's arrowe.
Its nature is still more characterised in 'Robert de Greneslade,'that is, the green-slade; 'William de la Morslade,' the moorland-slade; 'Richard de Wytslade,' the white-slade; 'Michael de Ocslade,' the oak-slade, and 'William de Waldeslade,' 'the forestslade (weald); 'Sladen,' that is, slade-den, implies a woodland hollow. As a local term there is a little difference betwixt it and 'launde,'only the latter has no suspicion of indenture about it. A launde was a pretty and rich piece of grassy sward in the heart of a forest, what we should now call an open wood, in fact. Thus it is we term the space in our gardens
1 'William de Waldeslade' occurs in the 'Great Roll of the Pipe.'
