Bracy Surname
Approximately 4,719 people bear this surname
Bracy Surname Definition:
From Brécy near Caen-Robert de Brezé and M. de Brecé were among the one hundred and nineteen Norman gentlemen who defended Mont St. Michel against the English in 1423; and three noble families of the name existed in the Duchy. It dates from the Conquest in England.
Read More About This SurnameBracy Surname Distribution Map
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | 4,644 | 1:78,049 | 8,915 |
| Australia | 19 | 1:1,420,826 | 73,129 |
| Panama | 13 | 1:300,943 | 7,078 |
| England | 7 | 1:7,959,723 | 202,100 |
| Wales | 7 | 1:442,076 | 21,198 |
| United States Virgin Islands | 6 | 1:18,396 | 2,503 |
| Brazil | 4 | 1:53,518,583 | 632,670 |
| France | 3 | 1:22,140,907 | 385,998 |
| South Africa | 3 | 1:18,059,235 | 248,362 |
| Taiwan | 2 | 1:11,722,373 | 63,559 |
| Saint Vincent and the Grenadines | 1 | 1:112,659 | 1,704 |
| Afghanistan | 1 | 1:32,153,183 | 60,828 |
| Canada | 1 | 1:36,845,591 | 464,108 |
| China | 1 | 1:1,367,321,566 | 51,149 |
| Philippines | 1 | 1:101,238,223 | 404,861 |
| Peru | 1 | 1:31,784,123 | 64,452 |
| New Zealand | 1 | 1:4,528,323 | 55,372 |
| Kenya | 1 | 1:46,179,900 | 103,372 |
| India | 1 | 1:767,065,382 | 1,851,717 |
| Guatemala | 1 | 1:16,082,668 | 12,169 |
| Colombia | 1 | 1:47,774,072 | 44,230 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ireland | 1 | 1:4,429,866 | 40,727 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| England | 109 | 1:223,627 | 17,016 |
| Wales | 8 | 1:196,052 | 7,186 |
| Scotland | 2 | 1:1,871,608 | 27,884 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | 951 | 1:52,806 | 5,958 |
Bracy (235) may also be a first name.
Bracy Surname Meaning
From Where Does The Surname Originate? meaning and history
From Brécy near Caen-Robert de Brezé and M. de Brecé were among the one hundred and nineteen Norman gentlemen who defended Mont St. Michel against the English in 1423; and three noble families of the name existed in the Duchy. It dates from the Conquest in England. William, son of Radulphus de Braceio (who occurs in a Norman charter of 1080), held Wistaton in Cheshire of the Barony of Nantwich; and the first mesne-lords of the manor, who bore its name, and continued till the time of Henry VI., are conjectured to have been the elder male branch of his descendants. The younger, that continued to be called De Bracy, “was connected with the parish soon after the Conquest, and had a share in the manor which they alienated before 16 Hen. VI.”—Ormerod. William Malbank, Baron of Nantwich, gives notice, in one of his charters, that he has received from “Robert de Bracy, his black nephew,” the homage and service of three knight’s fees. Their original seat at Wistaston was Wildecattesheth, which became Wilcott’s or Wilcock’s Heath. From this parent stock there were numerous offsets; for in Cheshire “the Bressie’s hath been a great name of gentlemen,” writes Sir Peter Leycester; “but the connection of the branches is not sufficiently identified to form a pedigree.”—Ormerod. Robert de Bracy was Sheriff of the county 31 and 33 Ed. I. Wilcock’s Heath was still in their possession in 1666, though, during the reign of Henry IV., Thomas de Bracy had removed to Tiverton, on his marriage with the heiress of its manorial lords, the Hulgreves. “The family continued settled here in the male line to the middle of the last century. The daughter of the last Bressy married a Mr. Garnett, and was resident in the old family mansion in 1804. From this last line the Bressies of Chester descended.”—Ormerod. The Bressies of Bulkeley, derived from a common ancestor, survived in a lower grade of the social scale. Hamo de Bresci acquired Roger de Bulkeley’s estate through the heiress of the Hadleighs about 1409. “The Bressies continued resident there in great respectability for two centuries and a half; and their lineal representative, Richard Bressy, entered his pedigree in Sir William Dugdale’s Visitation of 1663. The family have retained their property” (of 300 or 400 acres) “but have gradually sunk to the rank of yeomanry, and are now represented by Mr. Richard Brcssie of Cotton Abbott’s, grandson of the above-named Richard, and proprietor of the Bressie estate in this township.”—Ibid. To this “race of substantial yeomen” belonged the eminent engineer and contractor Thomas Brassey, whose eldest son received a baronetcy a few years ago, and was further created Lord Brassey of Bulkeley in 1886. “His father had lands of his own at Buerton, and rented from the Marquess of Westminster a large farm adjacent to it.”—Sir Arthur Helps. He bequeathed to his children the largest fortune probably ever made by individual enterprise; and what, in these days of reckless speculation, is the rarer legacy of a stainless name.
Brace’s Leigh, in Worcestershire, bears the name of another branch of the family, that can, with every probability, be traced back to the Domesday owner. “Warmedon and Eston were then held of the Bishop’s manor of Norwiche by Urso d’Abitot and by Robert of him” (here follows a description of the property): “to which agreeth the book of tenures, temp. Ed. I., where Robert de Bracy held in Warmedon of William de Beauchamp” (who inherited Urso’s domains). “Robert de Bracy 20 Ed. III., held in Warmedon the same land that Robert his ancestor had.
“Soon after this, the Bracys went to Madresfield. 7 Henry VI. William Bracy was an esquire returned into the Exchequer to attend the King’s person with horse and arms into France; and the same year Thomas Lygon was certified in the Exchequer to hold the lands in Warmedon which Robert Bracy sometime had; for 7 Henry V. Joan Bracy, the heiress of that family, married Thomas Lygon.”—Nash's Worcestershire. Madresfield is now the seat of Earl Beauchamp, their representative in the female line. Nothing is said of William Bracy’s posterity; most probably he had none. His arms, Gules, a fesse and two mullets in chief Or, remain in one of the windows of Malvern Church; and are entirely different from those of the Cheshire Bracys, who bore Quarterly indented per fesse Sable and Argent, in the first quarter a mallard of the second.
“‘Aldulfus de Braci, filius Bwerne, nepos Osberti Martell,’ as he is styled in the Registers of Croxton Abbey, Leicestershire, and Melton Priory, Yorkshire, to both of which he was a benefactor, occurs in Domesday only as ‘the foreigner’ holding Croxton. He gave to the canons of Sempringham some large possessions in Normandy.”—Nichols Leicestershire. Three Ardulfs or Audulfs de Bracy, presumably his descendants, appear in Shropshire during the two ensuing centuries. The first Audulf, in the time of Henry II., received from his kinsman, William Martel, the manor of Meole, since Melesbracy or Meole-Brace; and held Eaton in Bedfordshire by gift of King John. His daughter Mascelina was the first wife of the first William de Cantilupe. Audulf II. was a benefactor of Dunstaple Priory, as his father had been before him; and had a long lawsuit with Roger de Mortimer, who unsuccessfully contested Meole. “The Fitz Warine Chronicle calls Audulf de Bracy his cousin, and implies that he shared his exile in Little Brittany in 1201.”—Eyton. Audulf III. occurs 1267-1280, and had apparently succeeded John de Bracy of Meole, who was dead before 1262. Robert, perhaps his son, living 1272-1306, married Maud, one of the daughters and co-heirs of William de Warren or de Blancminster (Albo Monasterio), murdered about 1260. He and his wife granted their share (a third part) of Whitchurch-Warren to Fulco le Estraunge and his wife Alianor (perhaps their daughter); “the latter to restore the premises to the Grantors for their lives, to hold by payment of a rose-rent, and by render of all capital services.”—Ibid. The last mentioned of the name is Ralph Bracy, Vicar of Meole in 1333.
In the Rotuli Hundredorum of 1272, I find entered Richard and Elias de Bracy, both of Oxfordshire; and William de Bracy, with his daughters Avicia and Joanna, of Kent.
(French.) Local. From Bracy, a town in Normandy.
A Norman name: Brecy; a local name
Bracy: William de Braceio appears in a charter of 1080 as holding Wistaton in Cheshire. The name became Brescie. Lord Brassey might suppose that he derives from the Sieur de Braçy. Possibly Samson and Sally Brass may have done the same.
Bracy Demographics
Bracy Political Affiliation
in United States
United States
Average
Bracy Last Name Facts
Where Does The Last Name Bracy Come From? nationality or country of origin
The last name Bracy is borne by more people in The United States than any other country/territory. It can also be rendered in the variant forms:. For other potential spellings of Bracy click here.
How Common Is The Last Name Bracy? popularity and diffusion
It is the 100,155th most commonly occurring surname at a global level It is held by approximately 1 in 1,544,299 people. The surname Bracy is mostly found in The Americas, where 96 percent of Bracy are found; 96 percent are found in North America and 96 percent are found in Anglo-North America. It is also the 584,346th most commonly occurring first name worldwide. It is borne by 235 people.
The surname Bracy is most frequent in The United States, where it is held by 4,644 people, or 1 in 78,049. In The United States it is primarily concentrated in: California, where 11 percent live, New York, where 7 percent live and Texas, where 6 percent live. Without taking into account The United States it is found in 20 countries. It also occurs in Australia, where 0 percent live and Panama, where 0 percent live.
Bracy Family Population Trend historical fluctuation
The incidence of Bracy has changed over time. In The United States the share of the population with the surname grew 488 percent between 1880 and 2014; in England it contracted 94 percent between 1881 and 2014 and in Wales it contracted 12 percent between 1881 and 2014.
Bracy Last Name Statistics demography
The religious devotion of those bearing the Bracy last name is chiefly Episcopalian (100%) in Ireland.
In The United States those bearing the Bracy surname are 1.1% more likely to be registered with the Democratic Party than the national average, with 54.33% being registered to vote for the party.
Bracy earn marginally less than the average income. In United States they earn 1.75% less than the national average, earning $42,395 USD per year.
Phonetically Similar Names
Search for Another Surname
The name statistics are still in development, sign up for information on more maps and data
Footnotes
- Surnames are taken as the first part of an person's inherited family name, caste, clan name or in some cases patronymic
- Descriptions may contain details on the name's etymology, origin, ethnicity and history. They are largely reproduced from 3rd party sources; diligence is advised on accepting their validity - more information
- Name distribution statistics are generated from a global database of over 4 billion people - more information
- Heatmap: Dark red means there is a higher occurrence of the name, transitioning to light yellow signifies a progressively lower occurrence. Clicking on selected countries will show mapping at a regional level
- Rank: Name are ranked by incidence using the ordinal ranking method; the name that occurs the most is assigned a rank of 1; name that occur less frequently receive an incremented rank; if two or more name occur the same number of times they are assigned the same rank and successive rank is incremented by the total preceeding names
- Ethnic group cannot necessarily be determined by geographic occurrence
- Similar: Names listed in the "Similar" section are phonetically similar and may not have any relation to Bracy
- To find out more about this surname's family history, lookup records on FamilySearch, MyHeritage, FindMyPast and Ancestry. Further information may be obtained by DNA analysis