-
daughter of
William Costerdine of Lancashire, and also the
widow of
George Halgh of
Halgh, Lancashire, with whom he had one
daughter and
three sons, including...
-
meaning "on the rocks".
Alternative theories are that it is
derived from
halgh meaning an area of land at a border, Old
Norse hallr meaning a
slope or...
-
which has been
abbreviated from
Green Hollow/Hole,
Green Hill or
Green Halgh.
Notable people with the
surname include:
Colin Greenall (born 1963), English...
- Greenhalgh's Full name Greenhalgh's
Football Club Nickname(s)
Halghs Founded 1870
Dissolved 1894
Ground Field Mill
Secretary E. H. Greenhalgh, A. O. Scroft...
- in the
county of Cheshire.[citation needed]
Formerly known as "Brueres
Halgh"
during the
early Middle Ages, the land was used for
agricultural purposes...
- a day. A
Bible school had been
previously established in 1912 by Mr R.
Halgh,
using a hall near the
Hawthorne ferry wharf. In 1970, the
building was...
-
early 10th-century do****ent.
Other early forms include Halgewill(e) and
Halgh(e)wille (14th
century or earlier),
Hallewell (c. 1400), and
Holwell (1675)...
-
before the battle. More
likely ‘hole’ is a
corruption of
early English halgh; an area of
flood plain enclosed by a
meandering river. The name
could originally...