Tracy Surname

12,279th
Most Common
surname in the World

Approximately 45,749 people bear this surname

Most prevalent in:
United States
Highest density in:
United States

Tracy Surname Definition:

This surname is derived from a geographical locality. 'of Traci-Boccage,' in the arrondissement of Caen. Settled in Barnstaple, Devon, the parishes, manors, &c, of Woolcombe-Tracy, Bovey-Tracy, Minet-Tracy, and Bradford-Tracy bear witness to their local ascendancy.

Read More About This Surname

Tracy Surname Distribution Map

PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
United States40,1611:9,0251,089
Canada1,3961:26,3943,527
Australia1,0601:25,4683,466
England8241:67,6197,828
Ghana4851:55,7135,980
New Zealand3381:13,3972,320
Ireland2781:16,9391,863
China1651:8,286,797558
Scotland1021:52,4884,471
Botswana771:28,4025,684
Germany761:1,059,28271,604
Mexico601:2,068,77019,099
Jamaica591:48,6432,881
Singapore511:107,9944,447
South Africa501:1,083,55464,652
Kenya471:982,55134,283
Nigeria441:4,025,972113,480
France331:2,012,810168,616
Dominican Republic311:336,54611,471
Malaysia311:951,42742,969
India281:27,395,192354,286
Wales241:128,9399,528
Philippines171:5,955,190180,670
Uganda161:2,439,95572,451
Solomon Islands151:38,6697,565
Taiwan151:1,562,98310,375
Spain151:3,116,80265,296
Thailand141:5,045,596363,835
Russia141:10,294,504334,277
Hong Kong131:564,2683,428
Netherlands121:1,407,26575,423
Switzerland121:684,41046,196
Papua New Guinea111:741,24783,447
Northern Ireland111:167,7318,683
Argentina111:3,885,765145,016
Guyana111:69,2935,568
Egypt91:10,215,08448,153
United Arab Emirates91:1,018,03036,884
Israel81:1,069,70462,476
Czechia81:1,329,18491,312
Brazil81:26,759,292405,030
Panama81:489,0328,962
Vietnam81:11,580,7572,851
Costa Rica71:682,8675,051
Venezuela71:4,314,86839,591
Sweden61:1,641,126116,183
Indonesia51:26,449,839597,308
Japan41:31,961,07353,820
Yemen31:8,808,43135,773
Italy31:20,385,563143,117
Cameroon21:10,384,534165,830
Chile21:8,808,23765,417
Zimbabwe21:7,719,120118,432
Ecuador21:7,952,92334,269
Poland21:19,004,374199,659
Turkey21:38,910,711171,901
South Korea21:25,620,1284,175
Trinidad and Tobago21:681,98817,017
United States Virgin Islands11:110,3756,934
Belize11:355,4743,977
Belgium11:11,496,644167,539
Sierra Leone11:7,089,6311,533
Bangladesh11:159,356,77326,077
Zambia11:15,849,92253,989
Bahrain11:1,348,60810,432
Azerbaijan11:9,649,12247,873
Angola11:26,989,21411,853
American Samoa11:55,7583,072
Norway11:5,142,286129,201
Ivory Coast11:23,071,23276,679
Isle of Man11:85,8224,091
Latvia11:2,050,04660,295
Macau11:601,6301,582
Madagascar11:23,649,8379,420
Maldives11:404,1727,269
Malta11:430,2723,380
Myanmar11:51,937,9852,166
Guinea11:11,833,8173,268
Guernsey11:64,4392,137
Guatemala11:16,082,66812,169
Sri Lanka11:20,808,56018,521
Oman11:3,687,97114,390
Gabon11:1,889,1946,814
Peru11:31,784,12364,452
Fiji11:894,3914,568
Puerto Rico11:3,550,1399,109
Rwanda11:11,364,9785,947
Senegal11:14,579,34211,705
Seychelles11:92,3931,532
DR Congo11:73,879,570260,543
Denmark11:5,644,71593,155
PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
Ireland4571:9,6931,419
PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
England7331:33,2544,387
Scotland991:37,8102,945
Wales341:46,1302,397
Isle of Man21:27,1351,659
PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
United States11,5051:4,365540

Tracy (798,332) may also be a first name.

Tracy Surname Meaning

From Where Does The Surname Originate? meaning and history

This surname is derived from a geographical locality. 'of Traci-Boccage,' in the arrondissement of Caen. Settled in Barnstaple, Devon, the parishes, manors, &c, of Woolcombe-Tracy, Bovey-Tracy, Minet-Tracy, and Bradford-Tracy bear witness to their local ascendancy. (Fuller's Worthies)

Henry de Tracy, Devon, 1273. Hundred Rolls.

Richard de Tracy, Devon, ibid.

William de Tracy, Sussex, ibid.

Henry Tracy, Somerset , 1 Edward III: Kirby's Quest.

1597. Richard Tracy, Gloucestershire: Register of the University of Oxford.

1601. Samuel Tracy, Gloucestershire: ibid.

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

(Anglo-French-Latin) belonging to Tracy (Nor- mandy): (1) Tracy- Bocage-a.d. 1198 Traceium, 1417 Tracheium; (2) Tracy- sur-Mer—12thcent.Traceum, 1155 (Wace, ‘Rom. de Rou’) Trade, 1255 Tracheium [the Latin suff. -eium denotes possession: the first elem. embodies a pers. name, prob. the Latin-Greek Thrasius, from Greek thrasys (θρασύς), bold, courageous] Richard de Tracy.—Hundred Rolls (Celtic) the Irish Treasach (nepotic-genit.-form O’Treasaigh) [Irish treas, battle + the agential suff. -ach]

Surnames of the United Kingdom (1912) by Henry Harrison

Place name in France.

South African Surnames (1965) by Eric Rosenthal

(English) One who came from Tracy (terrace), in France.

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

From the castle and barony of Tracy, near Vire, arrondissement of Caen. “The Sire de Traci”is named in Wace’s account of the battle of Hastings. “The family does not appear to have been of much importance in England before the time of Stephen, who bestowed upon Henry de Tracy the Honour of Barnstaple in Devonshire; but the first of the name we hear of is Turgis or Turgisius de Tracy who, with William de la Ferté, was defeated and driven out of Maine by Fulk de Rechin, Count of Anjou, in 1073: and who was therefore in all probability the Sire de Traci in the army of Hastings.” - Planché. Henry de Traci is said to have been the only man in Devonshire who stood firm to Stephen against the Empress Maud. He was succeeded in his barony by his son, his grandson, and his great-grandson, but the latter, who died in 1273, left only a daughter, Eve, married to Guy de Brienne.

William de Tracy, who became notorious as one of the murderers of Thomas a Becket (see Fitz Urse), had extensive estates in Devonshire and Gloucestershire, and was the second son of John de Sudeley and Grace de Traci, heiress of another William, believed to be a natural son of Henry I. He probably succeeded to his mother’s inheritance, as he took her name, and is described by the monkish chroniclers as a brave soldier, but of parricidal wickedness. After the bloody tragedy at Canterbury, he and his three accomplices sought refuge at Knaresborough Castle, from whence they went to throw themselves at the feet of Pope Alexander III. at Rome. He sentenced them to expiate their sin in the Holy Land, and they accordingly set out together on a pilgrimage to Jerusalem. “Tracy alone, it is said, was never able to accomplish his vow. The crime of having struck the first blow - ‘primus percussor’ - was avenged by the winds of heaven, which always drove him back. According to one story, he never left England. According to another, and, as we shall see, more correct version, he reached the coast of Calabria, and was seized, at Cosenza, with a dreadful disorder, which caused him to tear the flesh from his bones with his own hands, calling, ‘Mercy, St. Thomas!’ and there he died miserably, after having made his confession to the bishop of the place. His fate was long remembered among his descendants in Gloucestershire, and gave rise to the distich that - 'The Tracys Have always the wind in their faces.’ Such is the legend.” - Dean Stanley. But William de Tracy certainly did not die in Calabria. There is evidence to show that he actually set out on his pilgrimage, and he probably got as far as Cosenza; for, in the charter by which he grants Doccombe “The manor of Doccombe, Daccombe, or Dockham, in the parish of Moreton Hampstead in Devonshire, still forms part of the possessions of the church of Canterbury.” to the Chapter of Canterbury, as an oblation to make some amends for his crime, the first of the witnesses is described as Abbot of Euphemia. “There can be little doubt that this Abbey of St. Euphemia was the celebrated convent of that name in Calabria, not twenty miles from Cosenza, and about sixty miles north of the Straits of Messina.” - Ibid. Thus it would seem most likely that he was detained by a severe illness at Cosenza, and believing himself to be on his deathbed, sought to make atonement to the Church by this deed of gift. It is plain that he must have lived to return home. “Within four years of the murder he appears as Justiciary of Normandy; he was present at Falaise in 1174 when William, King of Scotland, did homage to Henry II., and in 1176 was succeeded in his office by the Bishop of Winchester. This is the last authentic notice of him.” - Ibid. There exists, however, a generally received tradition that he retired to his estates in the West of England, where “he lived a private life when wind and weather turned against him:”and, according to the local history of his native county of Gloucester, reached the good old age of ninety. His residence was at Morthoe, close to Woollacomb Bay, and the worthy folks of Devonshire aver that his tormented spirit may, even now, be heard moaning and lamenting on the Woollacomb sands, where it is doomed to wander restlessly to and fro, toiling to “make bundles of sand, and wisps of the same”for all time to come. They also believe that for a fortnight after the murder, he lay concealed in the Crookham Cavern, on the coast between Morthoe and Ilfracombe, and that his daughter - the only person entrusted with the secret - used to steal out thither at night to bring him food. He was, it is said, buried at Morthoe, where an effigy, by some believed to be his, remains in the church. But even in his grave he was not left in peace. “Morthoe,” says Westcote, “is the place where for a time he rested at ease; untill some ill-affected persons seeking for treasure, but disappointed thereof, stole the leaden sheets he lay in, leaving him in danger to take cold.” Woollacomb-Tracy, Bovey-Tracy, Nymet-Tracy, Newton Tracy, and Bradford-Tracy, still bear his name in Devonshire.

His daughter (an only child,) married Sir Gervase Courtenay, and their son Oliver called himself De Tracy, as did all his descendants. They were prosperous country gentlemen, seated at Toddington in Gloucestershire, and constantly to be met with on the lists of Sheriffs and knights of the shire. Sir William Tracy, who died about 1530, was one of the earliest champions of the Reformation, and having declared in his will, “I bestow no part of my goods to that Intent, that any man shall say or do to help my Soul, for therein I trust only to the promises of Christ,” the document was condemned in the Bishop of London’s Court, and his body taken out of the grave and burned by the Chancellor of Worcester. From his eldest son, William, came the Irish Viscounts Tracy; and Richard, the second - whom he had endowed with the manor of Stanway, a part of the domain of Tewkesbury Abbey granted to him by the Crown - was the ancestor of five baronets of the name. The last died in 1677, and Stanway passed to Ferdinando, second son of the third Viscount Tracy, and through Ferdinando’s granddaughter to the Earls of Wemyss.

The elder line lasted for something less than another century and a quarter. Though Sir John Tracy of Toddington received in 1642 the title of Viscount Tracy of Rathcoole in Ireland, it does not appear that they were ever resident in that country, nor did they once intermarry with the Irish. The last and eighth Viscount left an only child, Henrietta, who on his death in 1797, inherited Toddington, and married her cousin, Charles Hanbury, who took her name and arms, and was created Baron Sudeley of Toddington in 1838. The family is now, however, extinct, and more than one claimant for the Viscountcy has laid his case before the House of Lords.

Tracies, in the parish of Newington, bears the name of its owners “in very early times,” whose coat of arms “had a near affinity to that of the Tracys of Gloucestershire.” - Hasted's Kent.

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

This famous Norman family borrowed their surname from Traci-Boccage in the arrondissement of Caen, called in documents of the XI. cent. Traceium. They came hither at the Conquest, and were subsequently lords of Barnstaple, in Devonshire. The parishes, &c., of Wooleombe-Tracy, Bovi-Tracy, Minet-Tracy, Bradford-Tracy, &c., in Devonshire, derived their suffixes from this family. Fuller's Worthies, i., 558. The male line failed at an early period, but the heiress married John de Sudley, whose son William adopted the maternal surname. This personage has by some genealogists been considered one of the four assassins of Thomas-a-Becket, though others stoutly deny it, and assert that there were other William de Tracys living contemporaneously with him. Whoever the assassin was, a curse was said to attach to him and to his seed for ever, namely, that wherever he or they went, by land or sea, the wind should blow in a direction opposite to that of their course. Hence the well-known traditional couplet —

Patronymica Britannica (1860) by Mark Antony Lower

Local. A village in the Department of Oise, France. E. Tracy came with William the Conqueror into England. Sir William Tracy was most active among the four knights that killed Thomas à Becket, on which account tradition reports, it is imposed on the Tracys for miraculous penance, that whether they go by land or water, the wind is always in their faces, hence an old saying,

"The Tracys have always the wind in their faces."

"If this were so,"says Dr. Fuller, "it were a favor in a hot summer to the females of that family, and would spare them the use of a fan."The word may signify a rampart, a terrace.

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

A baronial name. William de Tracy, Normandy 1180-95 (Magni Rotuli Scaccarii Normanniae); Turgis, Oliver, Reginald, William de T. 1198 (Ib.). The Castle and Barony of Tracy were near Vire, Normandy. William de Tracy came to England 1066, and is mentioned by Wace as at the battle of Hastings (ii. 244). The family possessed two baronies in Devon 1165, and also estates in Gloucester and Normandy. (See Dugdale, Banks.) The Viscounts Tracy were a branch.

The Norman People (1874)

Tracy: It is uncertain whether Tracy is intended in the entry in Leland. He gives “Graunson et Tracy,” and, in accordance with the system adopted in the roll, the name should be Gracy. The Sire de Traci was, however, according to Wace, in the Battle of Hastings. The family does not appear to have been of much importance in England before the time of Stephen, who bestowed upon Henry de Tracy the Honour of Barnstaple. William de Tracy, one of the murderers of Thomas a Becket, had extensive estates in Devonshire and Gloucestershire.

Family Names And Their Story (1913) by Sabine Baring-Gould

Tracy Last Name Facts

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

The last name Tracy (Arabic: ترسّي) occurs most in The United States. It can be found as:. Click here for further possible spellings of this name.

How Common Is The Last Name Tracy? popularity and diffusion

This last name is the 12,279th most commonly held surname internationally It is held by approximately 1 in 159,294 people. The surname is predominantly found in The Americas, where 91 percent of Tracy are found; 91 percent are found in North America and 90 percent are found in Anglo-North America. Tracy is also the 1,182nd most commonly held first name at a global level. It is borne by 798,332 people.

The surname Tracy is most widespread in The United States, where it is carried by 40,161 people, or 1 in 9,025. In The United States Tracy is mostly found in: California, where 10 percent live, New York, where 6 percent live and Illinois, where 5 percent live. Apart from The United States this last name exists in 90 countries. It also occurs in Canada, where 3 percent live and Australia, where 2 percent live.

Tracy Family Population Trend historical fluctuation

The occurrence of Tracy has changed over time. In The United States the number of people carrying the Tracy last name expanded 349 percent between 1880 and 2014; in England it expanded 112 percent between 1881 and 2014; in Ireland it declined 39 percent between 1901 and 2014; in Scotland it expanded 103 percent between 1881 and 2014 and in Wales it declined 29 percent between 1881 and 2014.

Tracy Last Name Statistics demography

The religious adherence of those holding the last name is chiefly Catholic (93%) in Ireland and Christian (100%) in Kenya.

In The United States those bearing the Tracy surname are 11.93% more likely to be registered Republicans than The US average, with 58.7% being registered to vote for the political party.

The amount Tracy earn in different countries varies greatly. In South Africa they earn 50.53% less than the national average, earning R 117,552 per year; in United States they earn 2.8% more than the national average, earning $44,359 USD per year and in Canada they earn 1.84% more than the national average, earning $50,598 CAD per year.

Phonetically Similar Names

SurnameSimilarityWorldwide IncidencePrevalency
Tracey9128,332/
Treacy9111,032/
Trachy91502/
Traczy915/
Traicy911/
Trracy911/
Tracay910/
Tracuy910/
Treacey83181/
Treachy836/
Traycey835/
Trachey834/
Thracey830/
Traicey830/
Trace802,681/
Traca80280/
Traci80261/
Trasy8089/
Trazy8011/
Tracé801/
Trocy800/
Treachey771/
Trache731,287/
Trachi73580/
Trayze73316/
Treace73169/
Trassy7372/
Traces7354/
Tracci7347/
Traica7346/
Trasiy7335/
Traice7321/
Thrace7319/
Trocay7319/
Trauca7319/
Tracie7314/
Tracis7314/
Tracze7313/
Tracer737/
Trajce737/
Tracea736/
Troccy736/
Tracez735/
Trasey734/
Treasy734/
Traché734/
Trayce733/
Tracet733/
Traysi732/
Tracee732/
Trochy732/
Tracit731/
Tracui731/
Trocey731/
Thrasy731/
Tracei731/
Trashy731/
Treazy731/
Traici731/
Troicy731/
Trayci730/
Traxey730/
Traiche67633/
Trachez67385/
Trachet67350/
Trayser67158/
Treachi67148/
Trachai67110/
Traichi67101/
Traisci6763/
Troschy6752/
Tratche6725/
Traches6720/
Trotsay6717/
Traysse6711/
Tracher677/
Traisay676/
Traicea675/
Trascio674/
Traceas674/
Trachio674/
Trachii672/
Thrasey672/
Traucer672/
Trasche672/
Treasey671/
Trachhi671/
Traicer671/
Traisey671/
Trascha671/
Traycee671/
Thracet671/
Ttrache671/
Tratchi671/
Trassoy671/
Trachoi671/
Trassey670/
Trayses670/
Troshay670/
Thrashy670/
Tracier670/
Traysey670/

Tracy Name Transliterations

TransliterationICU LatinPercentage of Incidence
Tracy in the Arabic language
ترسّيtrsy-
تراسيtrasy-
ترسيtrsy-
ترايسيtraysy-
تريسيtrysy-

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Tracy Reference & Research

Tracy DNA Website - A web page dedicated to the genetic research of those who bear the surname and its variants.

Tracy FamilyTree DNA Project - A description of a group researching the paternal lines of men who bear the surname with the help of DNA analysis.

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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 Tracy
  • 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