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Samuel
Merrill, 1928, reprint 1983
Merrill:
the Name and Its Variations - Chapter II,
pp17-27
Numerical
Strength
It
would be interesting to know how many persons in the United
States today bear the name Merrill, or some of its variations,
but it would be very difficult to make even a good estimate
of the number. In general terms, the numerical strength
of a family in a given city is indicated by the number
of persons bearing the family name listed in the city
directory. If the number of persons in a city bearing
the name Merrill, or some of its variants, bears the same
ratio to the entire population of the city that the number
of Merrills (Merrells, etc.,) who are listed in the directory
bears to the total number of names given in the book,
it is easy to estimate the numerical strength of the family
in that city. If, again, we select certain cities, representing
both the sections where the family is numerically strong
and those where its numbers are relatively few, we may
obtain certain figures which, compared with the census
figures for the entire country, will give a rough estimate
of the number of persons, now living in the United States,
who have inherited Nathaniel Merrills family name.
For
this purpose I have assumed that Boston, Philadelphia,
Cincinnati and San Francisco represent, in the aggregate,
the average for the country with respect to distribution
of the family name. If this assumption is correct, the
number of persons now living in the country bearing the
family name is about 25,000, or a little more than one
in every 4000. (*) But these ifs
leave much to be desired by one who wishes to be accurate
in matters where statistical data are concerned. The number,
large as it is, is very samll, however, when compared
with the entire number of those, bearing many family names,
who, by reason of intermarriages, have inherited the blood
of Nathaniel Merrill of Newbury.
Merrills
now in England
The
London Postoffice Directory for 1917, a book of more than
2500 pages, includes only commercial and professional
entries. Many classes of individuals, whose names would
be included in an American directory, but who are of minor
importance from a business standpoint, are omitted. In
this directory Merrill appears 5 times, Merrell
twice and Merralls once. Four of the five Merrills
are marble masons. Merle is found twice in this
directory, Morrall 3 times, Morrell 35 times,
Morrill 4 times and Murrell 20 times.
Henry
Brougham Guppy, in Homes of Family Names in Great
Britain (London, 1890), mentions Merrell
as a family name represented by 18 individuals in every
10,000 among the farmers of Worcestershire, and Merrills
as represented by 16 in every 10,000 in Kottinghamshire.
In the other counties of Great Britain Mr. Guppy found
the relative frequency of these or similar names to be
less than 8 in every 10,000 of the farmers in the respective
counties. Merrill is not given in his list, and
hence presumably fell below the ratio of 8 in 10,000.
* My
own impression is that this estimate is a little too high.
Perhaps sufficient notice is not taken of the fact that
the name is relatively infrequent in the South; and the
large families of children in certain non-Anglosaxon races
are represented in census figures without equal representationin
the directories of the cities.
Chapter
III
If
you have further information on the book, "A Merrill
Memorial" and would like to share it with others,
please contact
me.
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