Crooke

Last updated

Crooke is a surname which can refer to the following people:

Contents

People

Places

See also

Related Research Articles

Foulkes, Ffoulkes or ffoulkes may refer to:

William Cooke or Bill Cooke may refer to:

Cooke is a surname of English and Irish origin derived from the occupation of cook and anglicisation of various Gaelic names. Variants include Cook and McCook.

Pearse is a surname. Notable people with the name include:

Neill is an Irish surname, and may refer to

Mellish is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

Mayes is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

Renshaw is an Old English locational surname for a village in the area of Prestbury, Cheshire that disappeared before the 17th Century. The suffix -shaw means "wood". The earliest variant spelling Renshae is dated 1561. Other variants include Ravenshaw and Rainshaw. Renshaw is uncommon as a given name.

Richmond is an English surname, and may refer to any one of the following:

Cubitt is a surname, and may refer to:

Burnett is a Scottish surname. It is derived from a nickname from the Old French burnete, brunette, which is a diminutive of brun meaning "brown", "dark brown". Another proposed origin of the name is from burnete, a high quality wool cloth originally dyed to a dark brown colour.

Peacock is an English surname. Notable people with the surname include:

John Crook may refer to:

Hale is a surname. Lords of Loddon-Hales, Hale or "De Halys" trace back to Lord Roger De Halys circa 1130; his descendant Lord Roger De Halys married Alice Scrogins circa 1275, and their daughter Alice Hale married Thomas of Brotherton, 1st Earl of Norfolk, the son of Edward I of England. Those who were the ancestors of William Hale who married Rose Bond of Kingswaldenbury, their grandson George Hale came to America on the ship "Supply" in 1620, where he lived with the governor Sir Francis Wyatt of Virginia. Other Hale descendants also use the noble title Earl of Tenterden, Viscount of Tinsdall and the Baronets Of Beakesbourne and Coventry. Many Armorial achievements have also been used by Hale descendants. It is said that the Hales were related to Saint Edmund, King of East Anglia in which the Hales get their Arrows pointing downward in their coat of arms.

William Crook may refer to:

John Crooke may refer to:

Crook is an Old Norse surname. Notable people with the surname include:

Gosling is an English surname. Notable people with the surname include:

Bury is an English, French, and Slavic, particularly Polish, surname. Notable people with the surname include:

Patten is an English and Scottish surname. Notable people with the surname include: