Thomas Ellison Patrick

Brief Life History of Thomas Ellison

When Thomas Ellison Patrick was born in 1886, in Gainsborough, Lincolnshire, England, United Kingdom, his father, Thomas Ellison Patrick, was 34 and his mother, Ann Elizabeth Brownlow, was 32. He lived in Gainsborough All Saints, Lincolnshire, England in 1891.

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Family Time Line

Thomas Ellison Patrick
1852–
Ann Elizabeth Brownlow
1854–
Lucy Ann Patrick
1847–1895
Alice Maud Patrick
1879–1882
Ethel Patrick
1881–
Mary Eleanor Patrick
1884–
Thomas Ellison Patrick
1886–
Charles Ernest Patrick
1888–
Bertha Patrick
1890–
Hilda Patrick
1892–
George Crosby Patrick
1895–1895
Lilian Maud Patrick
1896–

Sources (5)

  • Thomas E Patrick in household of Thomas E Patrick, "England and Wales Census, 1891"
  • Thomas Ellison Patrick, "England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975"
  • Thomas Ellison Patrick, "England, Lincolnshire, Parish Registers, 1538-1990"

World Events (8)

1904 · The Entente Cordiale

The Entente Cordiale was signed between Britain and France on April 8, 1904, to reconcile imperial interests and pave the way for future diplomatic cooperation. This ended hundreds of years of conflict between the two states.

1908

London, United Kingdom hosts Summer Olympic Games.

1918

WWI ends in November with armistice. The number of UK war dead runs to several hundred thousand.

Name Meaning

Irish, Scottish, and English (of Norman origin): from the Anglo-Norman French, Middle English, and Older Scots personal name Patrick (Old Irish Patraicc), derived from Latin Patricius ‘son of a noble father, member of the patrician class’. This was the name of a Christian saint, a 5th-century Romano-Briton who became the apostle and patron saint of Ireland, and it was largely as a result of his fame that the personal name was so popular from the Middle Ages onward. In Ireland the surname is usually Scottish in origin, from Scottish settlers in Ulster in the 17th century. See also Peden and McPadden , derived from pet forms of Old Irish Patraicc.

Scottish and Irish: shortened Anglicized form of Scottish and Irish Gaelic Mac Phádraig ‘son of Patrick’.

English: variant of Partridge .

Dictionary of American Family Names © Patrick Hanks 2003, 2006.

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