Orr is a surname of Scottish and Ulster-Scots origin. It is derived from the Gaelic Odhar meaning "dark, pale". In Scotland, Orr may be a sept of Clan Campbell.

Orr
Orr coat of arms
Origin
Language(s)Scottish Gaelic
Region of originScotland (Argyll, Renfrew, etc.)
Frequency Comparisons[1]

Etymology

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The primary origin is from the Gaelic odhar, meaning "dark", "dun".[2] Padraig Mac Giolla Domhnaigh, suggested that the Irish surname originates from an Anglicisation of Gaelic Mac Iomhaire. Mac Giolla Domhnaigh stated that this was an old name from Renfrewshire, and a sept of the Campbells; he stated that the name was earlier spelt Mac Ure.[3]

In Ireland the name is common particularly in Ulster, and mainly found in County Antrim, County Down, County Londonderry and County Tyrone. The first recorded evidence of the name in Ulster is of those who came from Scotland with Sir Hugh Montgomery in 1606 to settle in North Down on lands ceded by the O'Neill family. They were chiefly Presbyterian, with some Episcopalians, and a few Roman Catholics and Quakers. According to Bell, the earliest record of the name in Ireland is that of a family in County Tyrone in 1655.[4] However, according to Orr, the earliest record of the name in Ireland is of Richard Orr of Clontarf in 1563.[5]

In Scotland, the name is first known to have been recorded in Renfrewshire. Historian Edward MacLysaght suggests that the name in Scotland derives from the parish of Urr in Kirkcudbrightshire. Indeed, the River Urr flowed through the area. A tradition of some of the Orrs in Northern Ireland has it that they were descended from outlawed brothers whose original family name was McLean; they crossed this river and then made their way by boat to Donaghadee in County Down in the early 17th century. Having escaped persecution, they took river's name as their surname and settled in Newtownards.[6]

People

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Fictional characters

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See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Orr Surname at Forebears
  2. ^ "Learn about the family history of your surname". Ancestry.com. Retrieved 21 February 2010. This webpage cited: Dictionary of American Family Names. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-508137-4. for the surname "Ore".
  3. ^ "Orr". www.libraryireland.com. Retrieved 12 March 2010. This webpage cited: Mac Giolla-Domhnaigh, Padraig. Some Anglicised Surnames in Ireland.
  4. ^ Bell, Robert (1990) [1988]. The Book of Ulster Surnames. Dundonald, Belfast, UK: The Blackstaff Press. p. 211. ISBN 0-85640-405-5.
  5. ^ Orr, Brian J (2009). Orr-Some: Research Into the Orr Family. United Kingdom: Heritage Books Inc. p. 5. ISBN 978-0-7884-4266-7.
  6. ^ The Life and Times of the Rev. John Orr, M.A., of Portaferry delivered by James C. Rutherford in the Presbyterian school-room, Portaferry, 29 March 1912. Cited at [1] (Scribd) and [2] (Ancestry.com).

Further reading

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  • Ulster pedigrees: descendants, in many lines of James Orr and Janet McClement, who emigrated from Scotland to Northern Ireland ca. 1607 by Ray A. Jones
  • William Orr of Ireland, Pennsylvania, and Kentucky and his Descendants by Paul J. Ostendorf
  • The Book of Ulster Surnames by Robert Bell ISBN 0-85640-405-5
  • "Brief Sketch of the Genealogy of Captain Thomas Orr, Late of Franklin County, Pennsylvania, and his descendants" compiled by John G. Orr and Andrew M.F. Orr (1923)