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Gardner Genealogy and Gardner Family History Information

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Profiles

  • 1st wife of Thomas Gardner (1589 - c.1636)
    NOT Margaret Fryer.The first wife of Thomas Gardner (1591-1674) of Salem was born c 1600 probably in England; and died, probably in childbirth 1636 and before 1639, probably in Salem, Essex, Massachuse...
  • Lt. Abel Gardner (1673 - 1739)
    Gardner-6724 created 12 Jun 2016 | Last modified 10 Sep 2021 Abel Gardner Sr. (abt. 1673 - abt. 1739) Abel Gardner Sr. Born about 1 Sep 1673 in Salem, Essex, Massachusetts Bay Son of Samuel Gardn...
  • Abigail Gardner (c.1666 - 1709)
    Abigail Coffin d. 15 March 1709 Father* James Coffin b. 1640, d. 28 Jul 1720 Mother* Mary Severance b. 5 Aug 1645, d. 1724 Her married name was Gardner. Abigail Coffin married Nathaniel Gardne...
  • Abigail Palmer (1744 - c.1798)
    HISTORY OF THE TOWN OF STONINGTON, County of New London, Connecticut, from its first settlement in 1649 to 1900, by Richard Anson Wheeler, New London, CT, 1900, p. 357, 516, 520

About the Gardner surname

origin

From an unidentified source:

This interesting surname recorded as Garden and Gardyne, both metonymics for a gardner, and Gardener, Gardenner, Gardiner, Gardinor, Gairdnar, Gairner and Gardner, is of French origins. Recorded widely in England, Ireland, and Scotland, it is both a status and an occupational name, and relates to the head gardner of a noble or even royal house. Derived from the Northern French word "gardin" and introduced into the British Isles after the Norman Invasion of 1066, it is itself a diminutive of the pre 7th century Germanic word "gard", meaning an enclosure. The function of the "gardiniere" in medieval times was a very important one. He was responsible for the kitchen garden, which provided almost the only source of fresh food and herbs, and hence played a critical part in maintaining the health of the household. The use of the word "gardener" refers to one who tends ornamental lawns and flower beds, and is a later application. Interesting examples of early surname recordings include: William le Gardinier of the county of Rutland in 1199, William Gardin of Huntingdon in 1218, and John atte Gardyne of Sussex in the Subsidy Tax Rolls of that county in 1296. Later recordings include: Richard Gardiner, who was a seaman aboard the famous ship "Mayflower" which carried the Pilgrim Fathers to the New World in 1620, but it is understood that returned to England with the ship, and Peter Gardner actually emigrated to the Virginia Colony on the ship "Elizabeth of London" in 1635. The first recorded spelling of the family name is believed to be that of William del Gardin, in the charters of Oxford in 1183.

From an unidentified source:

Gardner is a surname. Some sources claim that it is an occupational surname that comes from the word gardener. Baby Name Gardner - Origin and Meaning of Gardner Other sources claim that it is derived from the Saxon words gar, meaning a weapon, and dyn meaning "sound or alarm", combined with the termination -er. Early variants included Gardyner, Gardener, Gardenar, Gardinier, Gardiner, and Gardner; the last two are the most common today.

from Balázs Déri

Some Gardner families may descend from Ar-Ga-Den-Na-Ha from the tribe of Man-Nesh-Sha-Ha having lived in the days of king Dayawa-De and having supported him together with Awa-De-War-Ga'el ,A-Waya-Za-Bada and others ,ancestors of goidel or gael tribe as well as of zawia badawi in Mauritania.

Jews and christians call them Aadnah,Manassheh,Dawid,Yedia'el and Yozabad.

See Normann,Schwed,Suhajda,Magyar,Hansen and others !

Balázs Déri

other versions of this surname