Frequency Comparisons | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Total | Rank | Frequency % | Per million people | |
United States | ||||
United States (Current snapshot) | 29,316 | 1093 | 0.011 | 109 |
United States (1880 census) | 11,501 | 517 | 0.023 | 230 |
Change since 1880 | +17815 | -576 | -0.012 | -121 |
Other Countries | ||||
Australia | 335 | 4704 | 0.002 | 20 |
United Kingdom | 556 | 8233 | 0.001 | 12 |
'A figure of zero indicates that we don't have data for this name (usually because it's quite uncommon and our stats don't go down that far). It doesn't mean that there's no-one with that name at all!
For less common surnames, the figures get progressively less reliable the fewer holders of that name there are. This data is aggregated from several public lists, and some stats are interpolated from known values. The margin of error is well over 100% at the rarest end of the table!
For less common surnames, the frequency and "per million" values may be 0 even though there are people with that name. That's because they represent less than one in a million of the population, which ends up as 0 after rounding.
It's possible for a surname to gain in rank and/or total while being less common per million people (or vice versa) as there are now more surnames in the USA as a result of immigration. In mathematical terms, the tail has got longer, with a far larger number of less common surnames.
Region of origin: British Isles
Country of origin: England
Language of origin: English
Ethnic origin: English
Religious origin: Christian
Name derivation: From given name or forename
Data for religion and/or language relates to the culture in which the TRACY surname originated. It does not necessarily have any correlation with the language spoken, or religion practised, by the majority of current American citizens with that name.
Data for ethnic origin relates to the region and country in which the TRACY surname originated. It does not necessarily have any correlation with the ethnicity of the majority of current American citizens with that name.
Classification | Total | Percent |
---|---|---|
Black/African American | 838 | 2.86 |
White (Hispanic) | 463 | 1.58 |
Native American/Alaskan | 402 | 1.37 |
Mixed Race | 349 | 1.19 |
Asian/Pacific | 147 | 0.5 |
White (Caucasian) | 27,117 | 92.5 |
Ethnic distribution data shows the number and percentage of people with the TRACY surname who reported their ethnic background as being in these broad categories in the most recent national census.
TRACY. This famous Norman family borrowed their surname fromTraci-Boccage in the arrondissement of Caen, called in documents of the XL cent. Traceiura. They came hither at the Conquest, and were subsequently lords of Barnstaple, in Devonshire. The parishes, &c., of Woolcombe-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 —
Lower, Mark A (1860) Patronymica Britannica: a dictionary of the family names of the United Kingdom. London: J.R. Smith. Public Domain.
The following names have similar spellings or pronunciations as TRACY.
This does not necessarily imply a direct relationship between the names, but may indicate names that could be mistaken for this one when written down or misheard.
Matches are generated automatically by a combination of Soundex, Metaphone and Levenshtein matching.