-
TRIBAL AFFILIATION
Cherokee
-
SURNAME HERITAGE
Scotland/Ireland
Houston History, Family Crest & Coats of Arms
In the mountains of Scotland’s west coast and on the Hebrides islands, the ancestors of the Houston family were born. Their name comes from the medieval Scottish given name Hugh. Houston is a patronymic surname, which belongs to the category of hereditary surnames. In general, patronyms were derived from either the first name of the father of the bearer, or from the names of famous religious and secular figures. By and large, surnames descending from one’s father’s name were the most common. The surname also came from the place called Houston, near Glasgow. In Old English, the name Houston, meant the settlement belonging to Hugh. 1
Early Origins of the Houston family
The surname Houston was first found in Renfrewshire (Gaelic: Siorrachd Rinn FriĆ¹), a historic county of Scotland, today encompassing the Council Areas of Renfrew, East Renfrewshire, and Iverclyde, in the Strathclyde region of southwestern Scotland, where they were descended from a Scottish knight, Hugh de Paduinan, who in 1165 founded the town of Houston in that shire.
“The ancient family of Houston originally bore the name of Paduinan, from a place of that name in Lanarkshire. In the reign of Malcolm IV Baldwin de Bigre gave the lands of Kilpeter to Hugh de Paduinan, who appears as a witness to the foundation charter of the Abbey of Paisley between 1165-1173.” 2