Surname: Wilson This distinguished surname, having more than
seventy Coats of Arms, and with as many notable entries in the
"Dictionary of National Biography" is of early medieval English origin
although recorded throughout the British Isles. It is a patronymic form
of the male given name Will, itself a diminutive of William. Introduced
into England by William, Duke of Normandy, and known to history as "The
Conqueror" , William soon became the most popular given name in England.
The Norman form and that borne by the Conqueror, was "Willelm", a
spelling adopted from the Frankish Empire of the 8th century. The name
is a compound which originally consisted of the elements "wil", meaning
desire, and "helm", a helmet which offered protection. Early examples of
the surname recording in England include: Robertus Willelmi in the
Domesday Book of 1086, whilst in 1341 Robert Wilson was recorded at
Kirkstall, Yorkshire, the patronymic form of the name having emerged
some seventeen years earlier (as below). One of the earliest emigrant to
the New World was John Wilson, recorded on a register of "those living
in Virginia on February 18th 1623". One of the most illustrious bearers
of the name was Sir Robert Thomas Wilson, general and governor of
Gibraltar, who in 1801 received the rank of baron of the Holy Roman
Empire. The first recorded spelling of the family name is shown to be
that of Robert Willeson. This was dated 1324, in records of the Manor of
Wakefield, Yorkshire. This was during the reign of King Edward 11nd of
England, 1307 - 1327.