Morton Surname

3,984th
Most Common
surname in the World

Approximately 140,955 people bear this surname

Most prevalent in:
United States
Highest density in:
Saint Kitts and Nevis

Morton Surname Definition:

This surname is derived from a geographical locality. 'of Morton,' i.e. the moor-ton, the farm or enclosure on the moor. This naturally has given birth to many place-names, and as a consequence surnames. There are places, large and small hamlets and parishes, styled Morton in Derbyshire, Lincolnshire (3), Nottinghamshire, Yorkshire (4), Worcestershire, Warwickshire, County Durham (2), Herefordshire, Norfolk, Northamptnshire, &c.

Read More About This Surname

Morton Surname Distribution Map

PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
United States81,8431:4,429494
England24,6781:2,258280
Australia11,5311:2,341309
Canada8,2621:4,460626
Scotland4,1711:1,284220
South Africa1,9991:27,1023,462
New Zealand1,8851:2,402334
Northern Ireland9981:1,849383
Wales7391:4,187452
Ireland7361:6,398966
France5851:113,54317,037
Saint Kitts and Nevis4831:11414
Mexico2271:546,8119,446
Thailand1851:381,82967,077
Argentina1841:232,30118,973
Spain1621:288,59317,624
Germany1561:516,06143,667
Poland1301:292,37535,141
United States Virgin Islands1151:960141
Trinidad and Tobago1071:12,7471,692
Bahrain1031:13,0932,472
Brazil981:2,184,43268,273
Singapore981:56,2012,231
Dominican Republic921:113,4014,751
Liberia821:53,7634,754
Denmark751:75,2637,389
British Virgin Islands531:596110
Zimbabwe511:302,71130,394
Russia491:2,941,287160,625
Kuwait481:79,1819,331
Portugal471:221,6658,706
Guernsey441:1,465311
India431:17,838,730274,051
Belgium411:280,40633,354
Netherlands401:422,17943,576
Ghana391:692,83811,453
Chile381:463,59112,075
Jersey361:2,756488
Papua New Guinea351:232,96332,024
Sweden331:298,38720,789
Antigua and Barbuda321:3,099465
Botswana281:78,10513,263
Anguilla271:49848
Austria271:315,38635,058
Bermuda271:2,418390
Israel261:329,14027,831
Norway261:197,78022,769
Philippines251:4,049,529157,830
Switzerland241:342,20526,446
Isle of Man221:3,901846
Qatar221:107,18211,536
Malaysia211:1,404,48759,312
Greece191:583,14770,237
Nigeria181:9,841,264197,192
Tanzania171:3,114,21350,054
Cyprus131:68,0677,075
China121:113,943,4645,994
Vietnam121:7,720,5042,596
Panama111:355,6607,645
Venezuela111:2,745,82529,869
Hong Kong101:733,5483,685
Italy101:6,115,669111,715
Indonesia91:14,694,355460,137
Saudi Arabia91:3,428,42432,607
Cuba81:1,440,3407,824
Czechia81:1,329,18491,312
Kazakhstan81:2,210,31295,036
Saint Martin81:4,394114
Egypt71:13,133,67962,289
Japan71:18,263,47047,869
American Samoa61:9,2931,961
Kenya61:7,696,65052,907
Uruguay61:571,96026,877
Afghanistan51:6,430,63727,710
Azerbaijan51:1,929,82423,635
Jamaica51:573,98910,196
Monaco51:7,4131,114
Pakistan51:35,728,777102,388
Finland41:1,374,17650,379
Malawi41:4,279,77724,060
Romania41:5,019,46862,922
Bahamas31:130,5841,472
Luxembourg31:193,5147,046
South Korea31:17,080,0852,793
United Arab Emirates31:3,054,09190,853
Zambia31:5,283,30743,479
Bulgaria21:3,489,45264,958
DR Congo21:36,939,785260,488
Georgia21:1,872,77235,618
Hungary21:4,908,13864,617
Ivory Coast21:11,535,61661,806
Oman21:1,843,9869,590
Peru21:15,892,06251,966
Slovakia21:2,668,225118,680
Taiwan21:11,722,37363,559
Uganda21:19,519,640189,114
Albania11:2,914,05529,474
Aruba11:103,4772,586
Bangladesh11:159,356,77326,077
Barbados11:287,4482,772
Belarus11:9,501,059159,228
Belize11:355,4743,977
Burundi11:9,804,8522,349
Cambodia11:15,487,14614,824
Cameroon11:20,769,068227,406
Cape Verde11:529,6426,792
Costa Rica11:4,780,06913,345
Croatia11:4,228,60499,289
Ecuador11:15,905,84650,210
El Salvador11:6,343,8888,415
Fiji11:894,3914,568
Gibraltar11:33,9541,660
Guam11:160,1214,893
Guatemala11:16,082,66812,169
Haiti11:10,683,90724,607
Honduras11:8,816,4429,272
Laos11:6,588,3231,961
Latvia11:2,050,04660,295
Lebanon11:5,637,08332,436
Macau11:601,6301,582
Malta11:430,2723,380
Marshall Islands11:51,8212,326
Moldova11:3,561,36878,271
Montserrat11:4,947471
Morocco11:34,476,099111,471
Namibia11:2,409,40119,676
Nicaragua11:6,021,0908,768
Puerto Rico11:3,550,1399,109
Rwanda11:11,364,9785,947
Saint Lucia11:178,7813,800
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines11:112,6591,704
Somalia11:13,452,0619,224
Sri Lanka11:20,808,56018,521
Turkey11:77,821,422191,047
Turks and Caicos Islands11:34,329862
Yemen11:26,425,29455,147
PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
Ireland1,2801:3,461631
PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
England11,8341:2,060295
Scotland4,0571:923158
Wales1861:8,432522
Isle of Man31:18,0901,402
Guernsey11:32,6562,283
Jersey11:51,8823,898
PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
United States17,9731:2,794316

The alternate forms: Mortoń (32) are calculated separately.

Morton (16,494) may also be a first name.

Morton Surname Meaning

From Where Does The Surname Originate? meaning and history

This surname is derived from a geographical locality. 'of Morton,' i.e. the moor-ton, the farm or enclosure on the moor. This naturally has given birth to many place-names, and as a consequence surnames. There are places, large and small hamlets and parishes, styled Morton in Derbyshire, Lincolnshire (3), Nottinghamshire, Yorkshire (4), Worcestershire, Warwickshire, County Durham (2), Herefordshire, Norfolk, Northamptnshire, &c.

Robert de Morton, Nottinghamshire, 1273. Hundred Rolls.

Egidius de Morton, Northamptonshire, ibid.

Richard de Morton, Oxfordshire, ibid.

Felicia de Morton, Lincolnshire, ibid.

Alicia de Morton, Yorkshire, Henry III- Edward I: Testa de Nevill, sive Liber Feodorum, temp. Henry III-Edward I.

Michael de Morton, Salop, ibid.

Rogerus de Morton, 1379: Poll Tax of Yorkshire.

Johannes de Morton, 1379: ibid.

Manser de Morton, Huntingdonshire, 20 Edward I: Placita de Quo Warranto, temp. Edward I-III.

1594. John Morton, Leicestershire: Register of the University of Oxford.

A Dictionary of English and Welsh Surnames (1896) by Charles Wareing Endell Bardsley

(1) Of local origin from Morton in Dumfriesshire. Hugh de Mortun, prior of May, c. 1204-11 (RAA., I, 47). William de Mortun who witnessed a grant of the churches of Trauerflat and Dungray to the Abbey of Kelso in 1266 (Kelso, 345), may be W. de Mortun, rector of the church of Dunbenauch, 1269 (RPSA., p. 174). Thomas de Mortoun held the mill of Mortoun, Dumfriesshire, 1376 (RHM., I, p. lvii), and John de Mortoun was provost of the Collegiate Church of Bothevile, 1413 (REG., 323). (2) Of territorial origin from the lands of Myrton or Myretoun, afterwards Morton, in the parish of Kemback, Fife. The Myretons, Myretouns, or Mortons of Cambo were an old and considerable family in Fife, who took their surname from these lands (Stodart, II). The family "are said to have derived their name from an ancestor in the fourteenth century, who held office as mair of the barony of Crail, and whose own lands were designated Mairtoun. But it is more probable that the family were named from the character or condition of their lands-Myretoun being a corrupt form of Muirtown" (Crail, p. 9). William de Myrton, dominus ejundem, appears in record in 1361. Malcolm de Myrtoun witnessed resignation by Sir David de Wemyss of land in Fife, 1373 (Wemyss, II, 15). Master Thomas of Mirton, chaplain of the king of Scots, 1422 (Bain, IV, 912,922), is doubtless Thomas de Myrtone (Myretoun, or Myrton) who appears between 1429 and 1446 (Soltre, p. 298; RER., I, 56, II, 23-REG., 348,349; Bain, IV, 1051). Thomas Myrtone was archdeacon of Aberdeen, 1514 (REA, II, p. 310), and Hector Myrtoune "cheplan of the Magdalin alter," Aberdeen, 1559 (CRA., p. 324). Alexander Morton (1820-1869), inventor of machinery for pointing, tempering and grinding steel pens, was born in Darvel Ayrshire. Mireton 1431, Mortein and Martein 1694, Mortown 1598, Myrtoun 1584, Myrtoune 1544.

The Surnames of Scotland (1946) by George Fraser Black (1866-1948)

(English) belonging to Morton = the Moor Farm or Village [Old English mór + tún]

Surnames of the United Kingdom (1912) by Henry Harrison

An English toponymic, in Ireland continuously since the thirteenth century. MIF 13*

A Guide to Irish Names (1964) by Edward MacLysaght

(English) One who came from Morton (homestead by a marsh), the name of many places in England.

Dictionary of American Family Names (1956) by Elsdon Coles Smith

Macy de Moritania held a barony in 1066; and in after times the name of Morton or Morteyne became widely spread. But I think this entry rather refers to the Conqueror’s half-brother, Robert, the “Comes Moritoniensis” of Domesday, born of Herleva’s marriage with Herluin de Conteville. When her base-born son became Duke of Normandy, he lost no opportunity of raising her kinsfolk from their humble estate, to the discomfiture and mortification of his haughty relatives on the father’s side. Most of all he took pleasure in promoting his brothers to the level of the scornful nobles who looked down upon them; and on the exile of William the Warling, he bestowed upon Robert the county of Mortain.

Robert, we are told, “loved him much,” and proved through life his faithful liegeman. William of Malmesbury describes him as of “a heavy, sluggish disposition,” and wanting in decision of character; but he was not cruel, and had all the courage of his race in the field. He contributed one hundred and twenty vessels to the fleet that invaded England, and joined the expedition with all his knights and retainers, bringing “great aid.” He is three times represented in the Bayeux Tapestry; first, sitting at meat on his brother’s left hand, the evening after their landing; next, in council with him and Odo; and lastly, directing the building of the castellum erected at Hastings. According to tradition, the consecrated banner of St. Michael de Periculo Maris, brought from the monastery of the Mount in Normandy, was borne before him in the battle; during which, as Wace tells us, he never went far from the Duke’s side. We may judge that he did his part well, for he was rewarded with the lion’s share of the spoils of England. No other grant equalled, or even approached his in magnitude; for his possessions stretched across the whole breadth of the island, and reached the Land’s End. With the title of Earl, he had the entire county of Cornwall (two manors and the church lands alone excepted) comprising two hundred and forty eight manors; fifty-four in Sussex, besides the borough of Pevensey; seventy-five in Devonshire, forty-nine in Dorsetshire, ten in Suffolk, twenty-nine in Buckinghamshire, thirteen in Hertfordshire, ten in Wiltshire, ninety-nine in Northamptonshire, and one hundred and ninety-six in Yorkshire, besides smaller grants in five other counties, making a grand total of seven hundred and ninety-seven lordships. One account—Dugdale’s—carries the number up to eight hundred and two. He built a castle on the rock of Dunheved (now Launceston) as his chief seat in Cornwall: but he had another, with a market, at Trematon; a third fortress at Montagud, near Yeovil, in Somersetshire; and a fourth at Pevensey in Sussex, where he repaired the old Roman stronghold. There is little to record of him during the Conqueror’s reign, beyond a successful repulse of the Danes in Lindsey, where he and the Count of Eu had been left in command; but in 1087 we find him pleading at the Ring’s deathbed for the pardon and release of their brother Odo. William granted his petition with undisguised reluctance. “My brother Odo,” he declared, “is not a man to be trusted; he is ambitious, prone to fleshly lusts, and of enormous cruelty. If set free he will bring confusion to the realm, and ruin to thousands.” These dying words were prophetic. Odo rose in rebellion against the new King within a year of his accession; and Robert, being strongly opposed to the separation of the Duchy, where he still retained his county of Mortain, joined him in attempting to place Robert Courtheuse on the throne. The two brothers were besieged by Rufus in Pevensey Castle, and, after holding out for six weeks, surrendered themselves to the mercy of their nephew, and were banished the realm. “Perhaps Robert sailed away for the last time, a broken man, from the very spot where he had landed.”—A. S. Ellis. His vast domains were forfeited, and according to the obituary of his father’s abbey of Grestain in Normandy, where he was buried, he died in the following year. By his wife Matilda, the daughter of Earl Roger de Montgomerie, he had an only son William, and three daughters; Agnes, first offered in marriage to William de Grentemesnil, but afterwards the wife of André de Vitré; Denise, married to Guy de La Val; and Emma, married to William Count of Toulouse.

William, the heir, was restored to the greater part of his father’s possessions, and the Earldom of Cornwall. But he remained a malcontent; for he expected, and audaciously demanded, his uncle Odo’s great Earldom of Kent. It must have been he, and not, as Dugdale infers, his father, who, on the very day and hour that William Rufus died “by the glance of an arrow” in the New Forest, saw the apparition described by Matthew Paris. He himself was hunting in another part of the forest, and had lost sight of his attendants, when, in a lonesome place, he was confronted by “a very great black Goat, bearing the King all black and naked and wounded through the midst of his Brest. And adjuring the Goat by the Holy Trinity to tell what that was he so carried, he answered, ‘I am carrying your King to Judgment: yea, that Tyrant, William Rufus; for I am an evil spirit and the Revenger of the malice he bore to the Church of God: and it was I that did cause this his slaughter, the Protomartyr of England, St.Alban, commanding me so to do, who complained to God of him for his grievous oppressions in this Isle of Britain, which he first hallowed.’”

The black goat conveyed these tidings of deliverance to most unwilling ears: for the Earl had hated and envied Henry Beauclerk from childhood, and could ill endure to see him ascend the throne. Before long, he was openly in arms against him, and, espousing the cause of Duke Robert as his father had done, was punished as he had been for his treason—deprived of his title and estates, and sent out of the kingdom. He then raised the standard of revolt in Normandy; was besieged by the King in his castle of Tinchebrai: and led the van with determined valour in the decisive battle fought beneath its walls. But he was worsted, taken prisoner, and carried to the Tower of London, where he spent the rest of his life in captivity. His eyes were put out by the King’s order. No one can tell how or when he died: and Dugdale “can find no mention of either Wife or issue that he had.”

The Battle Abbey Roll (1889) by Catherine Lucy Wilhelmina Powlett

Parishes and places in cos. Derby, Lincoln, York, Warwick, Durham, Norfolk, Hereford, Northampton, &c.

Patronymica Britannica (1860) by Mark Antony Lower

Local: from the parish of Morton in Dumfriesshire.

The Origin and Signification of Scottish Surnames (1862) by Clifford Stanley Sims (1839-1896)

(Gaelic.) Local. From the parish of Morton, in Nithsdale, Dumfriesshire, Scotland. Mor, big, great, and dun, ton, a hill.

An Etymological Dictionary of Family and Christian Names (1857) by William Arthur

1. An English local name, 2. For Mauretaine. See Mortan.

The Norman People (1874)

A location name in Derbyshire, Dumfriesshire, Lincolnshire, Yorkshire.

British Family Names: Their Origin and Meaning (1903) by Henry Barber

The Cheshire Mortons take their names from townships in the county. An ancient family of the name lived in the county.

Homes of Family Names in Great Britain (1890) by Henry Brougham Guppy

Morton Last Name Facts

Where Does The Last Name Morton Come From? nationality or country of origin

The last name Morton (Marathi: मोरटोन, Russian: Мортон) is found most in The United States. It may occur as: Mortoń. For other possible spellings of this surname click here.

How Common Is The Last Name Morton? popularity and diffusion

The surname Morton is the 3,984th most commonly occurring family name internationally It is held by approximately 1 in 51,701 people. Morton is predominantly found in The Americas, where 63 percent of Morton reside; 62 percent reside in North America and 62 percent reside in Anglo-North America. Morton is also the 43,461st most frequently held forename throughout the world It is held by 16,494 people.

Morton is most prevalent in The United States, where it is borne by 81,843 people, or 1 in 4,429. In The United States Morton is mostly found in: Texas, where 9 percent are found, California, where 8 percent are found and North Carolina, where 6 percent are found. Barring The United States Morton exists in 135 countries. It is also common in England, where 18 percent are found and Australia, where 8 percent are found.

Morton Family Population Trend historical fluctuation

The occurrence of Morton has changed through the years. In The United States the number of people carrying the Morton surname expanded 455 percent between 1880 and 2014; in England it expanded 209 percent between 1881 and 2014; in Scotland it expanded 103 percent between 1881 and 2014; in Wales it expanded 397 percent between 1881 and 2014 and in Ireland it declined 42 percent between 1901 and 2014.

Morton Last Name Statistics demography

The religious adherence of those bearing the Morton surname is principally Anglican (42%) in Ireland.

In The United States those bearing the Morton surname are 12.3% more likely to be registered Republicans than The US average, with 59.07% being registered to vote for the party.

The amount Morton earn in different countries varies greatly. In Norway they earn 4.26% less than the national average, earning 331,324 kr per year; in South Africa they earn 59.71% more than the national average, earning R 379,536 per year; in United States they earn 2.81% less than the national average, earning $41,937 USD per year and in Canada they earn 5.91% more than the national average, earning $52,617 CAD per year.

Phonetically Similar Names

SurnameSimilarityWorldwide IncidencePrevalency
Mortoń9432/
Mourton92534/
Moorton92153/
Morthon9223/
Mortton9213/
Mortone926/
Mortong922/
Morrton921/
Moerton921/
Mortonn921/
Motrton921/
Mortont921/
Mortoen920/
Mortoon920/
Morthong8620/
Mourtont862/
Morthone861/
Marton8328,332/
Márton8311,479/
Murton833,546/
Merton832,412/
Mortan83328/
Mortun83160/
Mortom8321/
Mãrton834/
Màrton833/
Mortonová802/
Martone7711,203/
Marthon77289/
Mortune77227/
Mehrton7725/
Meerton7723/
Martong7714/
Mertton7710/
Martoin779/
Merthon778/
Mortant775/
Mortgan775/
Mortang775/
Mordtan774/
Morthan774/
Marrton772/
Maarton772/
Moortan771/
Mortane771/
Muirton771/
Murrton770/
Martton770/
Mourtan770/
Maurton770/
Martoun770/
Martoon770/
Marthong714,686/
Mortagne71413/
Marthone71101/
Martonne713/
Mortahan713/
Morttand711/
Martohng711/
Marthond711/
Martosen711/
Mehrtoon711/
Moorthan711/
Martoing711/
Martoine711/
Martoung711/
Murthone711/
Murtongh710/
Maertton710/
Martan671,892/
Martonová67685/
Mertan67369/
Mártonová67153/
Martoň67105/
Martun6785/
Martonova6758/
Martoń6742/
Murtan6727/
Martom6722/
Mortum6721/
Martón6712/
Mertán6712/
Martthong6711/
Mortuń677/
Martão674/
Morteusen673/
Martãn672/
Mortanova672/
Mardthong672/
Murtun671/
Mortam671/
Martán671/
Martõn671/
Martoshyn671/

Morton Name Transliterations

TransliterationICU LatinPercentage of Incidence
Morton in the Marathi language
मोरटोनmoratona33.33
मोटर्नmotarna33.33
मॉटर्नmotarna33.33
Morton in the Russian language
Мортонmorton-

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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 Morton
  • To find out more about this surname's family history, lookup records on Family​Search, My​Heritage, FindMyPast and Ancestry. Further information may be obtained by DNA analysis