The Oxford English Dictionary indicates that the name Carlton derives
from the Danish word Carl or Churl and the Saxon word Ceorl which commonly
refer to "a man of common people, a countryman, a husbandman."
Other definitions include, "a bondman, a villein (churl), a fellow
of low or rude manners, a base fellow, one who is churlish or mean in money
matters." In addition the name has also been used to apply as a definition
of character indicating "no reference to rank or manners but including
the notion of sturdiness, strength, and sometimes roughness." The
suffix "tun" is an Anglo-Saxon term indicating a farmstead.
The Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology provides a somewhat more
universally accepted background for the Carlton name; "man, male,
freeman, man of the people, from the time of Danish Kings in England."
A more complete etymological reference is given by Reaney in The Origin
of English Surnames: "Carlton for Charlton - Scandinavian origin from
Canute (King Cnut) men who obtained land in the south after the Norman
Conquest."
Bishop, discussing Britain before the Norman Conquest of 1066 in The
Middle Ages, perceived a churl as the ordinary man, a free man, not bound
to the soil, but able to own land and sell it. He added that most churls
were farmers, although some became specialists such as sailors or carpenters.
Bishop also related that the 15th Century Lady Juliana Berners, records
the common conviction of her time that Seth and Abel, sons of Adam and
Eve, were gentlemen, but Cain was a churl and ancestor of the churls of
the world. Christ, she says, was a gentleman on his mother's side.
Bardsley in A Dictionary of English and Welsh Surnames with Special
American Instances refers to Carlton meaning "of Carlton" with
indication that there are 22 townships and parishes bearing the name in
England. In actuality, there are at least 44 sites bearing the Carlton
name or a close derivative such as Carleton or Charlton. At least 2 of
these sites are within the region where our Carlton ancestors first appear.
The best definition of our name would seem to be from Elsdon C. Smith
in his New Dictionary of American Family Names, with the definition of
Carlton as "the one who came from Carlton - the homestead of the free
peasants." Thus providing an occupational description for our name
as "the one who came from the tun, or farmstead, of the Churl, or
freeman." The tun was a Saxon stockade from the period between the
Romans withdrawal (in 410) and the end of the Anglo-Saxon invasions (in
815). It was much like the forts that would be built centuries later in
western North America. The name Carlton means, "The rude boys from the fort."
IF YOU HAVE ANY INFORMATION ON ANY OF THESE
LINES
PLEASE E-MAIL ME