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Lazell
Family Name History

 

This interesting surname, with variant spellings Lascelles, Lassells, Lascell and Lessels, is of French origin, and is locational from Lacelle, a place in Orne, Normandy, so called from the Old French "la", the, plus "celle", a hermit's cell (from the Latin "cella", small room).

 

The name was introduced into England by followers of William the Conqueror after the Norman Conquest of 1066, and first appears on record in the mid 12th Century. Early recordings of the surname include: Picot de Lasceles, noted in the 1185 Knights Templars Records of Yorkshire, who was vasal to the Count of Brittany, and Roger de Lascelles, who was a major land holder in Yorkshire and Lincolnshire, circa 1130.

 

In 1514, a Francis Lassells, of Richmond, was entered in the Oxford University Register. Recordings from London Church Registers include the marriage of Mary Lazell and Richard Frogley on 26 August 1727, at St. Benet's, Paul's Wharf. A later member of the family, Edward Lascelles, was created Earl of Harewood in 1812. The first recorded spelling of the family name is shown to be that of Peter de Laceles, which was dated circa 1150, in the "Chartulary of Rievaulx Abbey", Yorkshire, during the reign of King Stephen, known as "Count of Blois", 1135 - 1154. 

 

For more information on individuals, click on those names that are underlined

Thomas Lazell
b. 1777

d. 1827

married

Mary Roach

b. 1770

d. 1826

Tony

b. Aug 1961

married 23 Mar 1991

Sandra
b. Aug 1962

Angela

b. Mar 1964

married 10 Apr 2011

Simon Ben Tilley
b. Feb 1963

Ann Lazell
b. 1825
d. 1899

married 1857

John Bacon

b. 1808

d. 1886

John Mark Lazell Bacon
b. 1850
d. 2 Feb 1924

married 1874

Mary Ann Tabor

b. 1851

d. 8 Feb 1924

John Lazell
b. 1795

d. 1871

married

Mary Ann Brown

b. 1781

d. 1863

Mary (or Marie*) Jane Lazell
b. 9 Feb 1877
d. 1970

married 

George Cooper/Osborne**

b. 20 Oct 1876

d. 24 Nov 1946

Marjorie Mable Cooper

b.  17 Jan 1906

d. 9 Aug 1980

married 30 Apr 1936

Arthur Stanley Jackson
b. 30 Dec 1908

d. 15 Nov 1966

Brenda Ann

b. 31 Jan 1938

married 12 Mar 1960

Robert David
Pearce

b. 10 Dec 1939

Dorothy 
b.  1901

d. 1984

Sydney George 

b. 1902

d. 

Violet Vera 
b. 1904

d. 2005

Joyce
b. 1907

d. 

Gwendolin
b. 1909

d.

Gladys
b. 

d. 

Marion
b. 1912

d. 2003

Eric Gordon

b. 1916

d. 2012

James Lazell
b. 1740

d.1807

married

Sarah Hills

b. 1748

d. 1818

Thomas Lazell
b. 1715

d.1768

married

Martha Poole

b. 1717

d. 1768

Charles George Jackson

b.  

d. 

married 

Ann Sarah Ward
b. 

d. 

Archibald Jackson

b.  19 June 1881

d. 24 Feb 1965

married 11 Jan 1903

Elizabeth Jane Whitehead
b. 21 Feb 1881

d. 31 Jan 1966

​In a photo from July 1919, from left: Marge, Joyce, George, Marion and Vi Jackson

In a photo from July 1919, from left: Marge, Joyce, George, Marion and Vi Jackson.

​Mary Ann Tabor (born 1851, died 8 February 1924)

Mary Ann Tabor (born 1851, died 8 February 1924).

George and Marie Cooper in a typical wedding photo

George and Marie Cooper in a typical wedding photo.

Name changes

On her birth certificate she is Mary Jane Lazell* yet on her children's birth certificates between 1900-16 she is Marie Osborne. In 1912, she is Marie Osborne-Cooper on a Royal London Insurance document and in 1946 on a Kensington Cemetery Plot for her husband she appears as Marie Jennie Cooper. The probate for husband George Cooper in 1947 has her as Marie Cooper and finally, in 1970, her death certificate names her as Marie Jean Cooper.

 

Marie's husband, George Osborne**, changed his name by deed poll around 1902 to his mother's maiden name Cooper on discovering he was illegitimate. All nine of his children were registered as Osborne even though the name change had taken place, and all nine married as Cooper.

Brenda (née Jackson) Pearce with Olive, her father Arthur, Eric, and her mother, Marge

Brenda (née Jackson) Pearce with Olive, her father Arthur, Eric, and her mother, Marge.

Marjorie Cooper, front row, left, at Portobello Road School in London in 1914

Marjorie Cooper, front row, left, at Portobello Road School in London in 1914.

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