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Place of Birth
Philadelphia, United States of America
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TRIBAL AFFILIATION
Cherokee/Seminole
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SURNAME HERITAGE
England Ireland
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Payton History, Family Crest & Coats of Arms
Etymology of Payton
What does the name Payton mean?
The ancestors of the Payton family brought their name to England in the wave of migration after the Norman Conquest of 1066. They lived in Sussex, at Peyton, a small town near Boxford from whence their name derives.
Early Origins of the Payton family
The surname Payton was first found in Suffolk where “the Peytons have a common descent with the Uffords, afterwards Earls of Suffolk, from the great Baron William Mallet, who came hither at the Conquest. The first of the family who assumed the surname was Reginald de Peyton, lord of Peyton in the parish of Boxford, co. Suffolk, in which county, at Isleham, in later centuries, his descendants were very eminent. In medieval charters, this surname was latinized De Pavilliano and Pietonus.” 1 2 Later some of the family were found at Doddington in Cambridgeshire. ” The manor was one of the ancient estates of the church of Ely, and was alienated by Bishop Heton to the crown in 1600; it soon afterwards became the property of the Peytons, who appear to have been settled here nearly a century before, as lessees of the bishop. John Peyton was created a Baronet in 1660, and dying without issue, his next brother, Algernon, was advanced to the same dignity in 1666. The title again becoming extinct in 1771, on the death of Sir Thomas Peyton, who was the last male heir of the family, Henry Dashwood, Esq., whose father had married a daughter of Sir Sewster Peyton, succeeded to the estate, took the name of Peyton by act of parliament, and was created a baronet in 1776.” 3 There is a small chapelry named Peyton in Devon in the parish and hundred of Bampton, union of Tiverton and this may be a later branch of the family.