Well, the luthier's name is Robert Pascoe! Is there some mystic connection between doublenecked stringed instruments and the name Pascoe?
Dave?
Moderators: rickenbrother, ajish4
My last name was also altered, my grandparents on my father's side came here from the Ukraine via Argentina; the name was originally Tkach.dswp wrote:Where my name is a Lithuanian name that was shorten from a longer name (with 18 letters in it), some time in the mid 1800’s.
pascoevonovichsky?dswp wrote:Jeff,
Quite the coincidence.
I have been asked this before strangely enough.
No relation.
Pascoe is an English name. Where my name is a Lithuanian name that was shorten from a longer name (with 18 letters in it), some time in the mid 1800’s.
pazqcoevonovichsky?phlemmy wrote:pascoevonovichsky?dswp wrote:Jeff,
Quite the coincidence.
I have been asked this before strangely enough.
No relation.
Pascoe is an English name. Where my name is a Lithuanian name that was shorten from a longer name (with 18 letters in it), some time in the mid 1800’s.
That's Elys Island these days, Joey! They changed the spelling of that too!rickenbrother wrote:My parrots doctor is Dr. Pasco no "e" at the end.
See Dave, I told you that you don't need the "e" at the end of your name!!![]()
Jeffy T, I know many Italian-American people that had their name altered or even would up changed to another name that does not at all sound Italian. I think it happened to some other Europeans also when they got to Ellis Island. Luckily all the Italian names in my family made it though without getting changed.
The spelling of my last name was most definitely changed at Ellis Island. I'm not sure if it was Biscuiti, or actually Biscotti!rickenbrother wrote:Jeffy T, I know many Italian-American people that had their name altered or even would up changed to another name that does not at all sound Italian. I think it happened to some other Europeans also when they got to Ellis Island. Luckily all the Italian names in my family made it though without getting changed.
Or maybe a Piece-a Pienos wrote:"The spelling of my last name was most definitely changed at Elys Island. I'm not sure if it was Biscuiti, or actually Biscotti!"
John, either way it's still a piece of cake.