Samuel Lund

Brief Life History of Samuel

When Samuel Lund was born on 9 July 1768, in Garsdale, Yorkshire, England, his father, Thomas Lund, was 29 and his mother, Alice Thistlethwaite, was 31.

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Family Time Line

Thomas Lund
1739–1783
Alice Thistlethwaite
1737–1795
Elizabeth Lund
1766–1848
Samuel Lund
1768–
Isabella Lund
1770–1827
James Lunt
1772–1857

Sources (3)

  • Samuel Lund in the England & Wales, quaker Birth, Marriage, and Death Registers, 1578-1847
  • Samuel Lund, "England and Wales Non-Conformist Record Indexes (RG4-8), 1588-1977"
  • Samuel Lund, "England and Wales Non-Conformist Record Indexes (RG4-8), 1588-1977"

World Events (3)

1770 · Boston Tea Party

Thousands of British troops were sent to Boston to enforce Britain's tax laws. Taxes were repealed on all imports to the American Colonies except tea. Americans, disguised as Native Americans, dumped chests of tea imported by the East India Company into the Boston Harbor in protest. This escalated tensions between the American Colonies and the British government.

1775 · The Shot Heard Around the World

"On April 18, 1775, a shot known as the ""shot heard around the world"" was fired between American colonists and British troops in Lexington, Massachusetts. This began the American War for Independence. Fifteen months later, Thomas Jefferson penned the Declaration of Independence. The Treaty of Paris was signed in September 1783 which ended the war. The colonies were no longer under British rule. Many who fought for the British fled to Canada, the West Indies, and some to England."

1787 · English Convicts Sail to Australia

The first fleet of convicts sailed from England to Australia on May 13, 1787. By 1868, over 150,000 felons had been exiled to New South Wales, Van Diemen's Land, and Western Australia.

Name Meaning

Some characteristic forenames: Scandinavian Erik, Anders, Lars, Nils, Thor, Iver, Nels, Obert, Berger, Einer, Knute, Morten.

Scandinavian, German, and English: topographic name for someone who lived by a grove, Old Norse lundr; the word was adopted into northern dialects of Middle English and also into Anglo-Norman French. There are a number of places in England named with this word, as for example Lund in Lancashire, East Yorkshire, and North Yorkshire, Lunt in Merseyside, and Lound in Lincolnshire, Nottinghamshire, and Suffolk, and the surname may derive from any of these. As a Swedish surname it is probably most often ornamental.

German: habitational name from any of the places called Lund or Lunden in Schleswig-Holstein.

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

Possible Related Names

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