Lovejoy Family Record
Welcome!
Hello, and welcome to the Lovejoy Family Record website! The site was created to preserve the Lovejoy Family History, Which begins with Johannes (John) Lovejoy (1460-1498) of Little Marlow, England.
I decided to do research on my family many years ago. I was able to trace my family orgins back to Rowland Lovejoy (1597-1650) of England, whose son John first came to the New World in about 1638. It was believed that he came aboard the ship Arabella, this however may not be true. In Fact some discussions that I have read on-line say that he actually came aboard the ship Confidence from Southhampton, England and arriving at Newbury, Massachusetts.
~David Josef Lovejoy, Ph.D.
Site Updates
This site was started on October 3rd, 2009, and is currently under construction. Please be patient as update are being made frequently.
Site last updated on: October 10, 2009
**Juanita Blanche Lovejoy-Bailey Dies at 101 on Oct 8th 2009** 10/10/09
**NEW Document PHOTOS ADDED** 10/8/09
The LOVEJOY Surname
This curious surname, having long associations with Buckinghamshire, is of Anglo-Saxon orgin, and is an interesting example of that sizable group of early European surnames that were gradually created from the habitual use of nicknames. These nicknames were given in first referance to occupation, or to a variety of personal characteristics, such as physical attributes or peculiarities, mental or moral characteristics, or habits of dress or behavior. The derivation, in this instance, is from the Old English pre-7th century "Lufu" (Middle English "lufe"), love, with the middle English and old French "joie", "joye", joy; hence "Lovejoy", used to denote someone who craved pleasure, or who particulaly loved life. Other nicknames in this catagory include "Lovelady" denoting a philanderer, or man particularly attentive to the desires of women, and Loveless, probably used in the sense "fancy free". The birth of William, son of Samuel Lovejoy, was registered at Little Marlow, Buckinghamshire, in 1530, and on July 1st 1556, Thomas Lovejoy and Johanna Thacher were married at Dorney, Buckinghamshire. The name also appears in English Church Registers under the variant spellings: Lovejoye, Lovioye, Lovjoy, Lovejay, and Lou(e)joy. A coat of arms granted the Lovejoy Family is a shield divided per gyronny of twelve red and gold, the Crest being arm from the elbow in armour, holding a galtrap. The first recorded spelling of the name is shown to be that of Johannes Lovejoy, which was dated July 6th, 1487, marriage to Margaret Brinkhurst, at Little Marlow, Buckinghamshire, England, during the reign of King Henry VII, known as "Henry Tudor", 1484-1501. Surnames became necessary when governments introduced personal taxation. In England this was known as the Poll Tax. Throughout the centuries, surnames in every country have continued to "develop" often leading to astonishing variants of the original spelling.
Additional Surnames in Family
The following is a list of additional surnames associated with the Lovejoys. These names are not listed in any particular order:
Bailey, Foy, Brinkhurst, Temple, Bromell, Neale, Osgood, Pritchard, Garry, Corneille, Pierce, Gallop, Kingsbury, Bunnell, Bradley, Dillmann, Morgan, Wilcox, Brist, Linville, Coules, Clanton, Morgan, Thacher, Johnson, Keyser, Boesmer, Scheu, Altermatt, Marsh, Davis, McClure, Walls...and more!
Contributers to this site:
Dr. David J. Lovejoy, Kathleen Young, W. Barrett Lovejoy, Jr, Juanita Lovejoy-Bailey, Steven Pratt, Kenneth E. Lovejoy (1922-1998), Winefred Lovejoy-Morgan, Posey County News, (Indiana), History of Greene County, Iowa (1887), Rush Medical College, Chicago, IL, Westminister Memorial Park, Westminister, CA, Evergreen Cemetary, Tucson, AZ, Wabash College, Crawfordsville, IN



