THIS ASSOCIATION IS NO LONGER ACTIVE
The web site will remain open until domain expires, 2012

Should any member or other interested parties wish to continue this association contact the
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-- NOTE --
The complete PPA Data Base is now posted
The Parmenter genealogy here-in only shows the known (PPA) descendants of Dea. John
Other Parmenter families not connected to the Dea. John family line are also posted

The data can be accessed using any word processer/text editor, PDF Reader, or Gedcom
Forward all relative genealogy you wish to add to the Web Master

Personal data of the living has been removed
All corrections and/or exclusions are requested by the
Web Master
All data is for public use only


PARMENTER FAMILY ASSOCIATION

Parmenter Genealogy
(1520-2008)

PPA Data Page
(Index-Surnames-Sources)

PDF Format
(PDF Reader required)

Text Format
(word/text processer required)

Fam Grp Sheet - Print

Other Links



"Azure, a chevron or between three fleur-de-lis d'argent"

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The Parmenter Blazon:  "Azure, a chevron or between three fleur-de-lis d'argent"  Which means; [a (Azure) blue blazon with gold chevron between three silver (d'argent) fleur-de-lis]  Pioneering Parmenters of America makes no claim to the authenticity of this Parmenter Blazon; nor any sanction to display heraldic symbols.  The 'Parmenter Blazon' is displayed symbolically to honor all Parmenters, including the various spellings of the surname.  In heraldic law, one is only entitled to Arms by inheritance if one can prove a direct male line decent from an ancestor who is himself on official record as being entitled to Arms. There is no such thing as a "Coat of Arms for a SurnameIt should be noted that only the English Heraldic standards are presented.
 

First Parmenter to the New World 
In 1639 John Parmenter emigrated from the Sudbury area of East Anglia (England) to The Colonies (New England) with his wife Bridget and children, Mary and John Jr.. In his party were the widow Elizabeth Loker and her children. The name of the ship, its captain, or port of departure, are not known. John Parmenter was one of the original proprietor to Sudbury, MA, and was assigned lands May 1640 by the General Court of the Massachusetts Bay Colony [Suffolk court files, vol. I, No. 304, microfilm #A360, Univ. MA, Amherst]. John was an early Selectman, Deacon, Commissioner, and he made Freeman 13 May 1640. [NEHGS Reg. Vol 13, 261]

The Parmenter Name:  The name Parmentier is an occupation. Parer or Parmentier means to ornate, to embellish and/or a maker of facings and trimmings.  It is also is a technical term for working linen in order to soften it up so it is nicer to wear - something like stonewashing Levi pants. In French they are called Parmentier, in the English dialect it became Parmenter.  This may indicate that there is no single progenitor to search back to - just as with the occupational surnames of: Smith, Miller, Chandler, etc..  As surnames became the custom, it is very likely that there would have been both Parmentiers & Parmenters in any of the linen cloth producing districts.  Normandy (Nord) - Pas de Calais, Flanders and Holland, and the whole "foot" of England were of one economic region for centuries. Parmentiers and Parmenters are found to day all along the coastline, and they all may well be related - if not by blood, by ancestral occupation and mutual economic interests.

The English Channel [French La Manche] was the main highway, not a frontier, in that economic region. One of the most important things to remember when studying history is that distance isn't measured in miles, but in hours. From Dieppe, Southampton is 12 hours away, Bruges (rather Zeebrugge the port of Bruges), a whole day - Paris is three days away, about as far as London. Therefore William Parmenter, Guillaume Parmentier, Willem Parmentier, Wilhelmus Paremment, etc. may well knew of each other, if not personally acquainted.  Dieppe was a Protestant strongholds in North France.

An internet site for the white pages of the telephone book gives the following number of hits:  3339 Parmentiers for France - 2084 Parmentiers for Belgium, mostly from Flanders - 339 Parmenters for Britain, mostly in Southern England

Exchange of Parmenter genealogy must be done by Hard-Copy, Gedcom (best method), or by Family Group Sheet: print form.
Any and all Support Documentation must be mailed separately to the address at the bottom of the forms.  Originals will be scanned and retuned in the next mail.


 
 
 
 

Top

Your Name
You got it from your father, it was all he had to give,
so it's yours to keep and cherish for as long as you shall live,
It was clean the day he got it, & a worthy name to bear,
When he got it from his father, there was no dishonor there,
So protect and guard it safely, for when all is said and done,
You'll be proud the name is spotless when you give it to your son.
-Edgar A Guest-


 
 
 
 

 


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Jean & Gale Stroud



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[Est.  1999]
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06-26-08