Kind(er):
Hormead, Great (St. Nicholas) HORMEAD, GREAT (St. Nicholas), a parish, in the union of Buntingford, hundred of Edwinstree, county of Hertford, 3 miles (E.) from Buntingford; containing 595 inhabitants. The parish was inclosed in 1823, and comprises by admeasurement 1705 acres, about 1480 of which are arable, 150 pasture, and 75 woodland; the soil is chiefly clay and marl, and the surface is hilly. Sandstone and granite are found, and large quantities of amygdaloid; also a great variety of fossils, comprising shells, bones, &c. There are two small pleasure-fairs. The living is a discharged vicarage, valued in the king's books at £6. 3. 9.; net income, £121; patrons, the Master and Fellows of St. John's College, Cambridge; impropriators, the families of Stables and Eyre. The tithes were commuted for land and a money payment in 1814. From: 'Horbury - Horndean', A Topographical Dictionary of England (1848), pp. 547-50. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=51044. Date accessed: 30 September 2007.
it seems likely that the DELLOW name first appeared in England in about 1500 around the village of Great Hormead in Hertfordshire. At that time it was normally spelt in the Parish records as Dellow or Dellowe. From there the name spread throughout Hertfordshire as well as into Essex and Cambridgeshire transforming into Deller in western parts of Hertfordshire and Dellar in Cambridgeshire. Smaller populations settled in Berkshire and Bedfordshire before a major migration into London took place in the 19th century by which time people were much more commonly able to write, and the names became fixed. SOURCE www.dellerfamily.com (David Blackman)
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