Dowdy

Dowdy

THE CLAN · NAME VARIANTS

Dowdy

Ó Dubhda
“One clan, many spellings.”

Dowdy is one of the common anglicised spellings of Ó Dubhda, carried by descendants of the north Connacht clan whose records stretch from the 10th century to today.

The spelling Dowdy

The surname Dowdy is an English phonetic anglicisation of the Irish Ó Dubhda (the name of the dark-haired one, or ‘the dark one’). It is closely related to the forms O’Dowd, O’Dowda, Dowd, Doody, Duddy and Dawdy. All share a single root.

Bearers of the name in the United States, Britain, Canada and Australia are very likely descended from Irish emigrants who left Ó Dubhda homelands in counties Sligo and Mayo — particularly during and after the Great Hunger of 1845–1852. The clan held the tuáth of Uí Fhiachrach Muaidhe, a kingdom that stretched along the lower River Moy.

If your family name is Dowdy, you are welcome here. This is your clan.

THE ORIGINAL NAME
The Irish Ó Dubhda is the source of every anglicised spelling on this page. For the full story of the name — its etymology, its medieval attestations, and the way English-speaking scribes fractured it into today’s variants — see The O’Dubhda Name.
A NOTE FROM THE CLAN

If you have family records, photographs, or an oral tradition connected to this spelling — especially any record of the Irish emigrants the name came from — we would love to hear from you. Our clan-keepers are volunteers, and every scrap of evidence helps piece together the scatter of the diaspora.

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