Birkin is a surname, and may refer to several people from the same family of Birkin baronets:
The surname is also shared by the following unrelated individuals:
Dashwood is an English surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Muller is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Sir Henry Ralph Stanley Birkin, 3rd Baronet, known as Tim Birkin, was a British racing driver, one of the "Bentley Boys" of the 1920s.
Piers is an old English given name and surname, and has the same origins as Peter. Its meaning is 'rock, stone'.
Pryce may refer to:
Lewis is a surname in the English language. It has several independent origins.
Boyd is an ancient Scottish surname.
Dixon, as is common in England, or Dickson, is a patronymic surname, traditionally Scottish and thought to have originated upon the birth of the son of Richard Keith, son of Hervey de Keith, Earl Marischal of Scotland, and Margaret, daughter of the 3rd Lord of Douglas.
Grey is a surname. It may refer to:
Seton is the surname of a prominent Scottish Lowlands family, Clan Seton, and may refer to:
Wiggin is a surname, and may refer to
The Birkin Baronetcy, of Ruddington Grange in the parish of Ruddington in the County of Nottingham, is a title in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom. It was created on 25 July 1905 for the businessman Thomas Isaac Birkin. He was a lace manufacturer, director of the Great Northern Railway and the Mercantile Steamship Company. His grandson, the 3rd Baronet, was a racing driver. He died without male issue and was succeeded by his uncle, the fourth Baronet. his sons pre-deceased him and he was succeeded by his nephew, the fifth Baronet. As of 2007 the title is held by the latter's son, the sixth Baronet, who succeeded in 1985.
Crossley is a surname of Old English origin deriving from two locations called Crossley in West Yorkshire.
St John or St. John is a given name and surname. It can be pronounced or sometimes in some places, particularly if it is the first part of a hyphenated family name or a given name. Use of the full stop separator (period) is uncommon in some countries, especially those that use Commonwealth English.
Maxwell is a Scottish surname, a habitational name derived from a location near Melrose, in Roxburghshire, Scotland. This name was first recorded in 1144, as Mackeswell, meaning "Mack's spring ". The surname Maxwell is also common in Ulster, where it has, in some cases, been adopted as alternate form of the surname Miskell. The surname Maxwell is represented in Scottish Gaelic as MacSuail.
Hudson is an English surname. Notable people and characters with the surname include:
Pigot is an English surname.
Hartley is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Cargill is a surname of Scottish origin, a sept of Clan Drummond.
Proctor is an English occupational surname, originally meaning 'steward', derived from Latin procurare.