TotallyUncool wrote:My family did a lot of geneaological research years ago - for the most part, it came down to some early New England settlers (in Maine), and two separate lines of German immigrants, with a few ods and ends thrown in.
I seem to recall that you once said that your surname was an anglicization of a German surname. Am I remembering correctly? I ask because my (purported) great×10 grandfather, the son of one of the passengers on the Mayflower, married a woman with your last name in Plymouth in 1639.
Of my ethnic makeup, I identify most with the Armenian from my mother's side, since that's a solid 50% of my background and also the result of more recent immigration: my grandparents came over from the Old Country in 1911 and 1924. The ancestors I've been able to trace on my father's side were English, Scotch-Irish, and Swiss-German, and came to America during the colonial period. The fact that I majored in German has little or nothing to do with my strand of German ancestry.