Wilmot Surname

30,783rd
Most Common
surname in the World

Approximately 17,347 people bear this surname

Most prevalent in:
United States
Highest density in:
Jamaica

Wilmot Surname Definition:

This surname is derived from the name of an ancestor. 'the son of William,' from diminutive William-ot, used for both sexes. It existed in Cornwall as a girl's name till the close of the last century.

Williametta Cantatrix. Rotuli Litterarum Clausarum in Turri Londinesi.

Read More About This Surname

Wilmot Surname Distribution Map

PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
United States6,8541:52,8836,352
England3,3271:16,7472,427
Australia1,1341:23,8063,263
South Africa1,1091:48,8536,208
Jamaica1,0091:2,844441
Canada9451:38,9904,888
Ghana8311:32,5163,831
France4971:133,64720,433
Belgium2651:43,3847,087
Ireland1701:27,7002,530
Liberia1651:26,7182,589
Malawi1311:130,68014,293
Scotland1241:43,1763,951
Wales1141:27,1452,804
Dominican Republic1001:104,3294,466
New Zealand751:60,3789,390
Netherlands651:259,80332,877
Ecuador641:248,5298,463
Northern Ireland531:34,8123,411
Panama261:150,4714,892
Thailand221:3,210,834301,565
Spain211:2,226,28755,801
Bermuda171:3,840587
Solomon Islands171:34,1196,789
Mexico151:8,275,08036,578
Germany141:5,750,390205,224
Papua New Guinea141:582,40870,330
Norway131:395,56035,657
Singapore131:423,66918,211
Switzerland111:746,62949,719
Israel111:777,96750,646
Zimbabwe111:1,403,47676,064
Brazil101:21,407,433350,627
Sweden91:1,094,08481,336
Italy81:7,644,586115,463
India81:95,883,173728,828
United Arab Emirates81:1,145,28440,289
Kenya51:9,235,98055,978
Argentina51:8,548,683204,003
Sri Lanka41:5,202,14012,146
Indonesia41:33,062,298643,618
Botswana41:546,73222,624
Denmark31:1,881,57267,227
Trinidad and Tobago31:454,65814,297
Nigeria31:59,047,586507,603
Cayman Islands31:21,2981,488
Philippines21:50,619,112341,003
Russia21:72,061,528727,117
Finland21:2,748,35172,663
Costa Rica21:2,390,03410,205
Japan21:63,922,14662,827
Czechia11:10,633,469206,023
Uganda11:39,039,279258,887
Guyana11:762,22114,420
Belarus11:9,501,059159,228
Bahamas11:391,7512,737
Zambia11:15,849,92253,989
Austria11:8,515,435118,036
Tanzania11:52,941,613123,716
Dominica11:75,891912
Antigua and Barbuda11:99,1712,137
Isle of Man11:85,8224,091
China11:1,367,321,56651,149
Pakistan11:178,643,885213,220
Taiwan11:23,444,74693,622
Luxembourg11:580,54215,155
Bulgaria11:6,978,90586,260
Belize11:355,4743,977
Malaysia11:29,494,225409,885
Mozambique11:27,261,5697,432
Namibia11:2,409,40119,676
Saudi Arabia11:30,855,81763,028
Puerto Rico11:3,550,1399,109
Oman11:3,687,97114,390
PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
Ireland1401:31,6423,133
PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
England1,9581:12,4491,881
Wales331:47,5282,451
Scotland211:178,2486,976
Jersey21:25,9413,069
Guernsey21:16,3281,834
PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
United States1,4101:35,6164,227

Wilmot (3,817) may also be a first name.

Wilmot Surname Meaning

From Where Does The Surname Originate? meaning and history

This surname is derived from the name of an ancestor. 'the son of William,' from diminutive William-ot, used for both sexes. It existed in Cornwall as a girl's name till the close of the last century.

Williametta Cantatrix. Rotuli Litterarum Clausarum in Turri Londinesi.

Willimett (without surname). Rotuli Litterarum Clausarum in Turri Londinesi.

Gilemota Carrecke, Yorkshire Testamenta Eboracensia (Surtees Society).

Henry Wilmot, Cambridgeshire, 1273. Hundred Rolls.

Wylymot Swynhird, 1379: Poll Tax of Yorkshire.

Matilda Wylymot, 1379: ibid.

1579. Hugh Wyllymott, of Knutsford, Cheshire: East Cheshire.

1583. Baptised — John, son of Wyllmott Scobeld: Reg. St. Columb Major.

1592. — Wulmott, daughter of Robert Edwardes: St. James, Clerkenwell.

1613. — Symon, s. Symon Wiflimott: St. Peter, Cornhill.

1631. Baptised — Wilmote, d. Patient Wilmote: Reg. St. Columb Major.

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

= Willmot(t, q .v.

Surnames of the United Kingdom (1912) by Henry Harrison

Corruption of William.

South African Surnames (1965) by Eric Rosenthal

(French) Descendant of little Will, a pet form of Guillaume (resolution, helmet).

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

May be a corruption of Guillemot, a name frequent in France in early times, derived from Guillaume, William.

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

Galterus de Villa Mota held lands in Normandy t. Philip Augustus (MSAN, v. 181). His lands of Villa Mota or Villa Monta occur, 182. Henry Wilmot, Engl. c. 1272 (Rotuli Hundredorum). Hence Wilmot, Lord Chief Justice, and the Baronets Wilmot.

The Norman People (1874)

From the Flemish, Wilmart, Wilmet; from the French, Wilmotte; a personal name.

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

For 350 years, the Derbyshire Wilmots, who have been honoured with three baronetcies, have been settled at Derby or at Cliaddesden in its neighbourhood (G.). Robert Wilmot, of Osmaston, was high sheriff of Derbyshire in 1689 (P.). There were Wilmots in Cambridgeshire in the 13th century (H. R.).

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

The Wilmots, who once possessed Long Marston, were the ancestors of the Earls of Rochester (CL). An old gentle family of Willymot owned the manor of Kelshall in the 17th century (Ch.). There is a tablet in All Saints' Church, Hertford, to Sheirecliffe Willymott, gent., who died in 1723, at the age of 24 (T.). Two Hertfordshire clerics bore the name of Wilmot last century, a rector of Stapleton and a rector of Digswell (Cl.). This name is also established in Derbyshire and Somerset.

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

The surname Williams sometimes means the same as Williamson, while it sometimes denotes other dependants-servants, daughters, wives, and so on. All come from the first name William. This name is of Old Germanic origin, coming originally from the name Willahelm. This is formed from the words ‘wilja’ meaning ‘will’ and ‘helm’ meaning ‘protection’. Thus the name was probably first given as a kind of talisman of hoped-for traits.

As the Old German name spread, it became Normanised to Willelm. (In French it also became Guillaume, and as such gave rise to the English name Gillam). Compare Gaulter, Gautier for Walter, under Watson.

Following the Norman Conquest, William quickly became the most popular first name in the land, only being superseded by John in the middle of the twelfth century. Since then it has remained as one of our most popular first names, and has been the name of four kings. (Only Edward, Henry and George are more popular royal names.) As one might expect, this popular first name gave rise to a number of diminutives and variations. Most of these have spawned their own variant surnames. Thus the diminutive Wylymot gives the surname Wilmot, and Willet and Willot arise similarly. The diminutive Wilkin gives Wilkins and Wilkinson, and the shortened form Will (for many years the most popular pet version, as in Will Shakespeare) gives us Wills and Wilson.

The name Williams is widespread throughout the land, but has special popularity in Wales. At the end of the last century one in every fourteen Welsh farmers was called Williams.

The earliest mention of Williams as a surname appears in the Domesday Book. Here in the records for 1086 one Robertus filius Willelmi is mentioned.

Ellen Cicely Wilkinson (1891—1947) was an English politician, labour organiser and suffragette who led the famous 1936 ‘Jarrow Crusade’ as MP for the northern town of Jarrow, whose shipyard had been closed down in the Depression. Thousands of unemployed Geordies marched to London in a fruitless bid to obtain help from the government. Ellen Wilkinson died in office as Minister of Education, the first woman to hold that post.

One Williams has been Lord Mayor of London: Sir John Williams (1735).

William Carlos Williams (1883—1963) was one of America’s greatest twentieth-century poets. In an era when Bohemian exile was the rule, Williams was an exception. As a home-town family doctor, his influential verse mirrored this practical streak and his love of everyday events.

Those great ‘golden oldie’ hits Your Cheatin’ Heart and Hey, Good Lookin’ were composed by the celebrated American country and western singer, Hank Williams (1923—53). Hank’s style has played an influential role in much modern popular music.

The first fighting tank, manufactured by William Foster and Company of Lincoln, was nicknamed ‘Big Willie’.

The United Kingdom has one town and one body of water related to this surname: Williamscot and Williams lake. Canada has 4 namesake towns while the United States has 24, including 5 called Williams. Australia also has a Williams as well as a Williamsburg. Geographic Williams’s are fairly common, with rivers in Canada (2) and Australia as well as mountains in these two countries, while the Bahamas includes a Williams Island.

With about 451,000 namesakes Williams is the 3rd most popular surname in England and Wales. (The name is not common enough throughout Scotland to be counted separately.) Williams is notably popular in and around Cardiff where an estimated one in about 35 families bears the name. In decending numerical order Liverpool, Bristol and Birmingham are other Williams strongholds. Around the world Williams’s are most common in Canberra (one in 232 families), Wellington (one in 237) and Sydney (one in 247). The United States has more Williams’s than the entire population of Merseyside-an estimated total of just over 1,646,000 makes this their 3rd most popular surname.

— Peter Verstappen

The name dates back to the ancient root word ‘willahelm’ which meant ‘a willing man with a helmet’ (i.e. protection). This word is largely intact today in the Germanic countries as Willem and Wilhelm. In Normandy it becomes Guillem. By the time of the Norman invasion of our country, this had become today’s Guillaume. The name, along with Robert, Richard and John, was widely adopted in preference to Old English first names.

By the twelfth century derivations on William had become the most popular of all first names, accounting for fully 10 per cent of the entire male population registered on one of the rolls. Thus, early on, as efforts were made to distinguish one Will from another, the name was already destined to give rise to many of today’s most popular surnames.

By 1324 we were getting close to today’s name. That year’s Court of Roles at the Manor of Wakefield in Yorkshire records a Robert Willeson. The first recorded Wilson per se was also in Yorkshire: Robert Wilson at Kirkstall in 1341.

Thereafter, during Henry IV’s reign from the end of the fourteenth century onwards the ‘-son’ ending was much in vogue. This was notably true in the north of the country.

Ever since, the fairly formal straightforward Wilson has predominated in the north, while in our southern counties less formal pet names gave rise to the diminutives Wilcocks and Wilkin, derived from the Dutch word ‘ken’ which means ‘to know’.

The first record we have of the name in its formative stages is in the Domesday Book of 1086 which refers to a Robertus filius Willelmi (Robert son of William).

‘A week is a long time in politics’ was a saying coined by Harold Wilson (b. 1916), one of Britain’s longest-serving Prime Ministers. Earlier in his career he was the youngest Cabinet Minister since Pitt. Another great political Wilson was the American President, Woodrow Wilson (1856—1924). After the Allied victory in World War I, he master-minded the Versailles Peace Conference for which he was dubbed ‘the architect of world peace’. During his last years in office he was a bed-ridden recluse and, unknown to the public, the affairs of state were virtually run by his wife.

Wilson’s Disease is a hereditary condition leading to degenera­tion of the brain tissues.

Wilson’s Promontory, the southernmost point on Australia’s mainland, is named after Thomas Wilson, an English merchant. It boasts over 700 species of plants.

Eighteenth-century English mathematician John Wilson gave his name to Wilson’s Theorem, the statement that sets criteria for what are natural prime numbers.

Sir Erasmus Wilson, early nineteenth-century surgeon and noted specialist on skin diseases, spent the vast wealth his practice brought him on charitable bequests and the promo­tion of Egyptian research. He paid £10,000 to have Cleopatra’s Needle brought to London in 1878.

The United Kingdom has 3 towns which are related-2 Wilsons and a Wilsontown. Canada has one, the curiously named Wilson’s Prom, while the United States has 12 of which 9 are Wilsons. Australia has but one-Wilson Cliffs. Canada, the United States and Australia have Wilson lakes and rivers while the US has 3 Mount Wilsons including California’s with its world-famed observatory. Australia also has a Wilson mountain.

With about 231,000 namesakes Wilson is the 11th most popular surname in England and Wales. There are over 46.000 Wilsons in Scotland where it is 3rd in popularity. In Ireland it is estimated that with about 14,000, Wilson is the 26th most popular surname. Wilson is notably popular in and around Edinburgh where an estimated one in about 95 families bears the name. In descending numerical order Glasgow, Teesside and Leeds are other Wilson strongholds. Around the world Wilsons are most common in Canberra (one in 230 families), Wellington (one in 237) and Auckland (one in 253). The United States has more Wilsons than the entire population of Leeds-an estimated total of just over 831.000 makes this their 10th most popular surname.

— Peter Verstappen

Wilmot Last Name Facts

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

The surname Wilmot is found in The United States more than any other country/territory. It may be found as:. For other potential spellings of this surname click here.

How Common Is The Last Name Wilmot? popularity and diffusion

This last name is the 30,783rd most widespread last name on a global scale. It is borne by around 1 in 420,104 people. The last name is predominantly found in The Americas, where 48 percent of Wilmot are found; 41 percent are found in North America and 40 percent are found in Anglo-North America. It is also the 113,770th most commonly held first name at a global level, held by 3,817 people.

This surname is most frequently occurring in The United States, where it is borne by 6,854 people, or 1 in 52,883. In The United States Wilmot is most prevalent in: New York, where 8 percent live, California, where 8 percent live and Texas, where 6 percent live. Beside The United States it occurs in 73 countries. It also occurs in England, where 19 percent live and Australia, where 7 percent live.

Wilmot Family Population Trend historical fluctuation

The incidence of Wilmot has changed through the years. In The United States the number of people bearing the Wilmot surname grew 486 percent between 1880 and 2014; in England it grew 170 percent between 1881 and 2014; in Ireland it grew 121 percent between 1901 and 2014; in Scotland it grew 590 percent between 1881 and 2014 and in Wales it grew 345 percent between 1881 and 2014.

Wilmot Last Name Statistics demography

The religious devotion of those bearing the Wilmot surname is predominantly Anglican (56%) in Ireland.

In The United States those bearing the Wilmot last name are 12.58% more likely to be registered with the Republican Party than the national average, with 59.35% being registered with the political party.

The amount Wilmot earn in different countries varies greatly. In Norway they earn 88.66% more than the national average, earning 652,901 kr per year; in South Africa they earn 53.81% more than the national average, earning R 365,508 per year; in United States they earn 6.73% more than the national average, earning $46,052 USD per year and in Canada they earn 1.64% more than the national average, earning $50,500 CAD per year.

Phonetically Similar Names

SurnameSimilarityWorldwide IncidencePrevalency
Wilmoth927,067/
Wilmott922,685/
Willmot921,198/
Wuilmot9214/
Wilmote923/
Wilmout922/
Wilmoht921/
Wlmot911/
Willmott868,420/
Wilmotte861,418/
Wilmouth86556/
Willmoth86327/
Willmote861/
Wilmotth861/
Whilmoth861/
Wilmotch861/
Vilmot8399/
Wilmut8365/
Wilmat8312/
Uilmot835/
Wllmot831/
Welmot830/
Willmouth8029/
Willmotte807/
Wuilmotte801/
Wilmath77162/
Wilmuth7750/
Vilmote771/
Wilmaut771/
Huilmot771/
Welmoet771/
Willmod771/
Willmat771/
Willmut770/
Welmoth770/
Wilmatt770/
Wellmot770/
Willmuth71131/
Vilmouth7129/
Willmath7124/
Wilmutte711/
Willmutt711/
Welmouth710/
Wellmott710/
Willmatt710/
Wilmeuth710/
Wilmauth710/
Vilmat6766/
Belmot6726/
Welmat679/
Vilmut673/
Welmut671/
Willmatte670/

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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 Wilmot
  • 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