In the process of tracing my own family tree I discovered there were many more Pidgeons all over England and Wales, but with concentrations in certain places. Who were all these Pidgeons? Where did they all come from? Were we all related? Would it be possible to link them together in one large family tree? Or would it only be possible to group them into a number of separate family trees?
These are the questions we are trying to answer. In the process we discover there are also many Pidgeons in Ireland, in the USA and Canada, and in Australia and New Zealand – all part of the world-wide Pidgeon clan.
A web-site http://homepage.ntlworld.com/i.c.pidgeon/Genealogy/GenHome.htm publishes results of the study, including about 30 Pidgeon family trees. A newsletter, the Pidgeon Post was first issued in 2008.
Today there are only three ways to spell the name – PIDGEON, PIGEON or PIDGEN. But in the past the name was spelt in many ways, depending on the whims of a scribe. These are just a few examples:
Pidgin, Pidgion, Pidgon, Pedgeon, Pigin, Pigion, Pigen, Pigine, Pigyn, Piggin, Piggen, pyggen, Pydgeon, Pegyn
Some of these must be distinguished from the separate name Piggin (pronounced Pig-Inn). Today that is easy because the spelling is different. But in the past, the only clue may be the geographic location of its use.
The origin of the name has at least three possibilities:–
There are three main areas outside London where Pidgeons were traditionally concentrated – Devon, Shropshire and Norfolk. They have been there for at least five centuries, but where did they come from? There are Pigeons in France today – do we share a common ancestor?
Probably the most well known member of the clan was Walter Pidgeon, the Hollywood actor of 119 films between 1926 and 1978. He was born at St John, New Brunswick in Canada but his family roots are lost in the mists of 18th century America.
Less well known was one “Pygon of Yarmouth” who was excluded from the general pardon of prisoners by King Henry VIII in 1509, and was subsequently hanged for treason.
In the 1881 census there were 1270 people with the surname Pidgeon or one of its variants or misspellings in Great Britain. In 1901 there were over 1550 in England and Wales and today there are estimated to be about 2500. To these can be added an unknown number in America and Australasia.
By 1881 there was a high concentration of Pidgeons in Lancashire and London. But these people had come from elsewhere. In earlier centuries the main concentrations were in Norfolk, Shropshire and Devon, the last having by far the most. Pidgeons in Ireland may have come from England, as did those in Wales and Scotland. Emigration to other countries has occurred at all times.
The database of Pidgeon births, marriages and deaths between 1837 and 2005 contains over 14,300 records, Over 40% of these have been identified and placed on family trees, together with a large number of people identified through parish records. All the 1901 census images have been collected and are being supplemented by a growing number of images from all the other censuses.
A Pidgeon DNA project was started in 2007 with Family Tree DNA of Houston, Texas. For more information and all the latest reults visit http://www.familytreedna.com/public/Pidgeon/.
Study web-site: http://homepage.ntlworld.com/i.c.pidgeon/Genealogy/GenHome.htm.
DNA web-site: http://www.familytreedna.com/public/Pidgeon/.
For further information, contact:
Mr Ian C Pidgeon
4 Barncroft Way,
St Albans,
Hertfordshire
AL1 5QZ
UNITED KINGDOM
E-mail:

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2007
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