Watters Surname
Approximately 27,071 people bear this surname
Watters Surname Definition:
This surname is derived from the name of an ancestor. the son of Walter.' Middle English Water, Old French Wauter and Watier.
'My name is Walter Whitmore. How now! why start'st thou? what! doth death affright? Suffolk. Thy name affrights me, in whose sound is death.
Read More About This SurnameWatters Surname Distribution Map
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | 15,218 | 1:23,818 | 2,999 |
| Australia | 2,583 | 1:10,451 | 1,550 |
| Canada | 2,326 | 1:15,841 | 2,295 |
| England | 2,278 | 1:24,459 | 3,376 |
| Scotland | 1,382 | 1:3,874 | 683 |
| Ireland | 1,291 | 1:3,648 | 637 |
| Northern Ireland | 882 | 1:2,092 | 429 |
| New Zealand | 287 | 1:15,778 | 2,756 |
| South Africa | 208 | 1:260,470 | 26,176 |
| Wales | 120 | 1:25,788 | 2,682 |
| Argentina | 90 | 1:474,927 | 35,376 |
| Belize | 55 | 1:6,463 | 1,030 |
| Nicaragua | 49 | 1:122,879 | 2,037 |
| Singapore | 43 | 1:128,086 | 5,748 |
| Thailand | 29 | 1:2,435,805 | 267,220 |
| Honduras | 26 | 1:339,094 | 2,848 |
| Germany | 22 | 1:3,659,339 | 158,771 |
| France | 19 | 1:3,495,933 | 219,029 |
| Brazil | 18 | 1:11,893,018 | 236,958 |
| Kazakhstan | 15 | 1:1,178,833 | 65,606 |
| Switzerland | 10 | 1:821,292 | 53,588 |
| Zimbabwe | 9 | 1:1,715,360 | 84,476 |
| Netherlands | 9 | 1:1,876,353 | 85,467 |
| Malaysia | 9 | 1:3,277,136 | 121,952 |
| Norway | 8 | 1:642,786 | 47,258 |
| Panama | 7 | 1:558,894 | 9,437 |
| Philippines | 7 | 1:14,462,603 | 238,248 |
| Spain | 6 | 1:7,792,006 | 100,283 |
| Isle of Man | 6 | 1:14,304 | 3,169 |
| Japan | 4 | 1:31,961,073 | 53,820 |
| Mexico | 4 | 1:31,031,551 | 63,627 |
| Italy | 4 | 1:15,289,172 | 132,955 |
| Saudi Arabia | 4 | 1:7,713,954 | 37,548 |
| United States Virgin Islands | 3 | 1:36,792 | 4,502 |
| Indonesia | 3 | 1:44,083,065 | 698,220 |
| India | 3 | 1:255,688,461 | 1,306,352 |
| China | 3 | 1:455,773,855 | 21,925 |
| South Korea | 2 | 1:25,620,128 | 4,175 |
| Sweden | 2 | 1:4,923,378 | 241,212 |
| United Arab Emirates | 2 | 1:4,581,136 | 93,443 |
| Czechia | 2 | 1:5,316,734 | 169,646 |
| Costa Rica | 2 | 1:2,390,034 | 10,205 |
| Chile | 2 | 1:8,808,237 | 65,417 |
| Belgium | 2 | 1:5,748,322 | 130,559 |
| Uruguay | 1 | 1:3,431,758 | 38,295 |
| Chad | 1 | 1:13,592,199 | 13,092 |
| Oman | 1 | 1:3,687,971 | 14,390 |
| Sri Lanka | 1 | 1:20,808,560 | 18,521 |
| Cyprus | 1 | 1:884,876 | 13,055 |
| Russia | 1 | 1:144,123,056 | 881,408 |
| Puerto Rico | 1 | 1:3,550,139 | 9,109 |
| Denmark | 1 | 1:5,644,715 | 93,155 |
| Luxembourg | 1 | 1:580,542 | 15,155 |
| Kuwait | 1 | 1:3,800,694 | 27,187 |
| Kenya | 1 | 1:46,179,900 | 103,372 |
| Greece | 1 | 1:11,079,790 | 145,225 |
| Georgia | 1 | 1:3,745,545 | 47,852 |
| Fiji | 1 | 1:894,391 | 4,568 |
| Bulgaria | 1 | 1:6,978,905 | 86,260 |
| Ecuador | 1 | 1:15,905,846 | 50,210 |
| Dominican Republic | 1 | 1:10,432,932 | 36,508 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ireland | 1,233 | 1:3,593 | 643 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| Scotland | 504 | 1:7,427 | 1,039 |
| England | 454 | 1:53,690 | 6,448 |
| Wales | 32 | 1:49,013 | 2,509 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | 3,095 | 1:16,226 | 2,063 |
Watters (40) may also be a first name.
Watters Surname Meaning
From Where Does The Surname Originate? meaning and history
This surname is derived from the name of an ancestor. the son of Walter.' Middle English Water, Old French Wauter and Watier.
'My name is Walter Whitmore. How now! why start'st thou? what! doth death affright? Suffolk. Thy name affrights me, in whose sound is death. A cunning man did calculate my birth, And told me that by Water I should die.': 2 Henry VI, Act iv. sc. 1.
'The account of Wattare Taylor and Wyllyam Partrynge, benge churchewardens': Churchwardens Accounts, Ludlow, 1541, Cam. Soc.
Wauter de Cornwaille, 1313. Writs of Parliament.
Alicia Wartson, 1379: Poll Tax of Yorkshire.
Johannes Wauterson, 1379: ibid.
John Waterson, Yorkshire: Deposition from York Castle (Surtees Society).
1579- Judith, d. of Water Arksone, stranger: St. Dionis Backchurch (London).
1563. Baptised — William, son of Water Lancaster: St. Antholin (London).
— Buried — Water Right, servant to Richard Clarke: ibid.
1588. Margaret Watterson, of Cartmell: Lancashire Wills at Richmond.
Married — Edward Waterson and Jane Harrison: St. Michael, Cornhill.
This surname is derived from the name of an ancestor. A variant of Waters, which see. Similarly Watterson was a variant of Waterson.
1791. Married — Joseph Watters and Deborah Perry: St. George, Hanover Square.
Forms of 'Walters,' 'son of Walter.' which see. Alison Walters in Fishweicke, 1676 (Lauder). Sergeant-Major Watters distinguished himself in the first Great War and was promoted to captain.
Like Waters, a form of Walters, q.v.
Mac Uaitear (W)
(Welsh, English) Descendant of Walter (rule, folk), the early pronunciation of the name; dweller near the stream or lake.
In some dialects, the word water is applied to lakes and rivers, as Ullswater, Derwent-water, Black-water. Upon the adoption of surnames by the common people, a person who resided near such a place would be called William or John Atte-Water, still retained in Attwater; but on the omission of the preposition in the XV. century, the name was pluralized to Waters. The latinizations are De Aqua and Ad Aquam. See Water.
Local. A name given to one who navigated the waters, or resided near them.
The surname Watson literally means ‘son of Wat’. The first name Wat is a diminutive of the first name Walter (as in Wat Tyler, the leader of the Peasants’ Revolt during the reign of Richard II). This derivation arose because in medieval times the usual pronunciation of Walter was Water.
The first name Walter derives from the Old German name Waldhari. This is made up of two words-‘wald’ meaning ‘rule’, and ‘hari’ meaning ‘army’. So some original Walters may have been war leaders.
The first name Walter came to England with the Norman Conquest and appears frequently as a first name in the Domesday Book (where it was invariably Latinised to Walterius). Right through to the mid-seventeenth century it was more customary to pronounce this first name Water, and in consequence the popular diminutive Wat (or Watt) gave rise to that surname.
Other variations of names from the first-name source of Walter include Watts (short for Watson) and Watmough (‘Walter’s brother-in-law’). Waters (short for Walter’s son, derived from the early pronunciation of the surname as Waters) is also a derivation from a place name for a ‘dweller by the water or stream’.
The surname Watson is widespread throughout the land, but appears most numerously in the north of England and the southern Scottish counties.
The earliest appearance of the name Watson in the records is in the 1324 Rolls for the Manor of Wakefield in Yorkshire, when one Richard Watson is listed.
Watsons and Watts have excelled in many fields of science. The Scottish inventor James Watt (1736—1819) is generally credited with the invention of the steam engine, for which he was granted a patent in 1769; the watt, a unit of power, is named after him and he also coined the term ‘horsepower’; another of his inventions was the duplicating machine, to make quick copies of his records. Another Scotsman, the physicist Sir Robert Alexander Watson-Watt (1892—1973) was knighted in 1942 for his role in the development of radar (Radio Detection And Ranging), a device for locating aircraft which played a vital part in the defence of Britain against German bombing raids in World War II. Another, Dr Thomas A. Watson, worked as assistant to Alexander Graham Bell when he made the first trans-Atlantic telephone call in 1915. The American geneticist, James D. Watson (b. 1928), won a Nobel Prize in 1962 for his crucial role in the discovery of the molecular structure of DNA, the vital constituent in the genetic process.
In August 1965 Watts Riot in the Los Angeles ghetto (35,000 inhabitants) was the first big race riot in American history. Five days of burning, shooting and looting left 34 dead, 200 buildings destroyed and led to 3,900 arrests.
Charles Watson-Wentworth, Marquis of Rockingham (1730— 82), made a large bet that he could drive a coach and horses at full gallop through the eye of a needle. He then craftily built a 40-foot obelisk with a large opening at the base and won the wager. The ‘Needle’s Eye Folly’ still stands at Wentworth in Yorkshire as a memorial to his ingenuity.
English clergyman Isaac Watts (1674—1748) wrote hundreds of hymns, including ‘O God Our Help in Ages Past’ and ‘When I Survey the Wondrous Cross’.
British-born chemist Richard Watson (1737—1816) was credited with saving the government £100,000 in 1787 with his improvements to gunpowder.
Places and geographic features named for Watson are rare. There are none in the United Kingdom, one each in Canada and Australia (towns called Watson), while the United States has 3 towns so named along with a Watsonton and a Watsonville. No major mountains are so named and only a few bodies of water: Canada’s Watson lake and Watson river and Australia’s Watson bay.
With about 118,000 namesakes Watson is the 43rd most popular surname in England and Wales. There are over 21,000 Watsons in Scotland where it is 17th in popularity. Watson is notably popular in and around Edinburgh where an estimated one in about 195 families bears the name. In descending numerical order Teesside, Glasgow and Leeds are other Watson strongholds. Around the world Watsons are most common in Wellington (one in 562 families), Canberra (one in 605) and Auckland (one in 607). The United States has more Watsons than the entire population of Derby-an estimated total of just over 252,000 makes this their 71st most popular surname.
Watters Demographics
Watters Political Affiliation
in United States
United States
Average
Watters Last Name Facts
Where Does The Last Name Watters Come From? nationality or country of origin
The last name Watters has its highest incidence in The United States. It can also be found in the variant forms:. Click here for other possible spellings of this name.
How Common Is The Last Name Watters? popularity and diffusion
The surname is the 20,202nd most numerous surname globally, borne by approximately 1 in 269,201 people. This surname is primarily found in The Americas, where 66 percent of Watters are found; 65 percent are found in North America and 64 percent are found in Anglo-North America. Watters is also the 1,614,485th most common first name globally. It is borne by 40 people.
This surname is most commonly held in The United States, where it is held by 15,218 people, or 1 in 23,818. In The United States Watters is mostly found in: California, where 8 percent live, Texas, where 7 percent live and Ohio, where 6 percent live. Barring The United States Watters is found in 60 countries. It is also common in Australia, where 10 percent live and Canada, where 9 percent live.
Watters Family Population Trend historical fluctuation
The occurrence of Watters has changed over time. In The United States the number of people carrying the Watters last name increased 492 percent between 1880 and 2014; in England it increased 502 percent between 1881 and 2014; in Scotland it increased 274 percent between 1881 and 2014; in Ireland it increased 105 percent between 1901 and 2014 and in Wales it increased 375 percent between 1881 and 2014.
Watters Last Name Statistics demography
The religious adherence of those carrying the last name is primarily Catholic (58%) in Ireland.
In The United States those holding the Watters last name are 13.07% more likely to be registered Republicans than the national average, with 59.84% being registered to vote for the party.
The amount Watters earn in different countries varies greatly. In Norway they earn 36.51% less than the national average, earning 219,737 kr per year; in South Africa they earn 120.54% more than the national average, earning R 524,076 per year; in United States they earn 0.04% less than the national average, earning $43,130 USD per year and in Canada they earn 3.25% more than the national average, earning $51,299 CAD per year.
Phonetically Similar Names
Search for Another Surname
Watters Reference & Research
Waters FamilyTree DNA Group - A group collating DNA test results for those who bear the surname, includes results of DNA tests and discussions.
Waterhouse FamilyTree DNA Project - A description of a group researching the paternal lines of men who bear the surname with the help of DNA analysis.
Waters 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 Watters
- 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