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[Facts] Re: I need the meaning of the name kelsey
The original name was Giese - changed to Giesey when the family arrived from Germany sometime before 1802. It was changed to Kiesey in about 1880. My great grandfather changed it when he moved from Ohio to Illinois. He sired 13 children, my grandfather being one of them. To find out more information, you may contact Bill Kiesey (my great uncle, I think?)in Washington, Iowa. He retired from medical practice in the army and decided to research the family tree and this is what he came up with. The furthest he went back was 1802. My great-great-great grandfather was born in Zanesville, Ohio in that year. Hope this helps!!!
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Oh, that is long ago, but this question popped up again. Giese is indeed a frequent German surname, and the main deriviation is from given names lies Gisbert or Gismar. See (in German): Dräger, Kathrin und Schiller, Christiane, Giese, in: Digitales Familiennamenwörterbuch Deutschlands,
URL: < http://www.namenforschung.net/id/name/441/1 >
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I am related to the Kiesey family, and my great grandfather is one of the “13” children from William Kiesey. My grandmother would mention that the family originated in Ohio, and that the surname had changed from the original Giesey. I never knew why it changed. (Apparently it changed with William)
My side of the family always thought we were Irish. Any chance they said they were from Ireland to cover the German roots? And therefore the name change from Giesey to Kiesey? Anyone in Iowa know as that was where the Kiesey family name just popped up.
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The date given for the change doesn't fit. German Americans didn't feel as much pressure to assimilate and downplay their German roots until WWII (unlike the UK where families changed their surnames around WWI). More likely Giesey was being continually mispronounced /djeesee/, and William changed it Kiesey to better approximate the pronunciation for English speakers (G and K are a voiced/unvoiced pair which are often allophones in many languages).If it originated as a short form of Giesel it could have begun as a surname without any shortening of a dithematic personal name, either from the name of river in Saxony, or a variant of Geisel/Geißel, "hostage, guarantee, pledge" or the homonym Geisel/Geißel "whip, crop, scourge" (originally a short staff or cane, a symbol of office in Lombardy).
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