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Hoyt Genealogy and Hoyt Family History Information

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Profiles

  • 1st wife of Walter Hoyt (c.1620 - bef.1652)
    Not the daughter of Mathias ‘the chandler’ Sension, Sr. Biography Updated 3 June 2024 Disputed origins NOTE: There is no record of a daughter Susanna or Elizabeth St. John who some have cla...
  • Abigail Royce (1660 - bef.1720)
    David Hoyt's widow endured all the horrors of captivity and returned to Deerfield. She afterwards married Dea. Nathaniel Rice and moved to Wallingford, Ct.=======================Abigail Cook was born a...
  • Abigail Jessup (1745 - 1796)
    Updated from MyHeritage Match by SmartCopy : Sep 18 2014, 4:10:39 UTC * Updated from MyHeritage Match by SmartCopy : Sep 18 2014, 5:03:08 UTC
  • Abigail Hoyt (1682 - 1732)
    Updated from MyHeritage Match via son John Hoyt by SmartCopy : Sep 18 2014, 4:25:28 UTC
  • Abigail Knapp (1703 - d.)

About the Hoyt surname

origin

HOYT - Recorded in many spellings as shown below, this is an English medieval surname. It is topographical for a person who lived at the top of the hill or on a piece of raised ground, originating from the Olde English pre 7th century word hiehthu, from "heah", meaning high.

Topographical surnames were among the earliest created, since both natural and man made features in the landscape provided easily recognisable distinguishing names. The surname development since 1275 (see below) includes the following: Robert atte Heyte of Oxfordshire in 1279, Jana Hayght of Yorkshire in 1548, Elizabeth Haight of London in 1602, and Martin Hoyte who married Tripossa Witford at St Georges Chapel, Mayfair, on April 1st 1751.

The modern surname spellings include Hate, Height, Hight, Hite, Hoyt, Hoyte, Hyght and others.

The first recorded spelling of the family name is shown to be that of Henry de la Heyt. This was dated 1275, in the Hundred Rolls of Derbyshire, during the reign of King Edward 1st of England, known as "The Hammer of the Scots", 1272 - 1307.

Surnames became necessary when governments introduced personal taxation. In England this was sometimes known as the Poll Tax.

Throughout the centuries, surnames in every country have continued to "develop" often leading to astonishing variants of the original spelling.

other versions of this surname

sources