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Alves Surname

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This project began in February 2023.

The website  https://www.surnamedb.com/Surname/Alves  brings us this information.
This interesting surname is predominantly of Scottish origin, and is a locational name from Alves in Morayshire.
It is usually pronounced as one syllable, the "a" sounded long as in "alms". The placename is believed to have been a derivative of the Gaelic "all", white.
During the Middle Ages when migration for the purpose of job-seeking was becoming more common, people often took their former village name as a means of identification, thus resulting in a wide dispersal of the name.

The surname is first recorded in the latter half of the 13th Century (see below). 
Alexander Alves was admitted burgess of Aberdeen in 1406, and Bessie Alves was a witness in Elgin (1661). Alexander Alves and David Alves were church elders in the parish of Alves in 1685. In some instances the surname may be of Portuguese origin, and is a patronymic form of the personal name "Alvaro", composed of the Germanic elements "all", all, with "wer", true. One Robert Alves (1745 - 1794), was head-master at Banff grammar school. He taught classics and modern languages in Edinburgh, and also published poems, and literary history.

The first recorded spelling of the family name is shown to be that of Walter de Alveys, which was dated 1263, in the "Acts of the Parliaments of Scotland", during the reign of King Alexander 111 of Scotland, 1249 - 1286. Surnames became necessary when governments introduced personal taxation. In England this was known as Poll Tax. 

https://www.spanglefish.com/slavesandhighlanders/index.asp?pageid=221877

Archibald Alves

Archibald Alves (c1765-1839) was a London merchant, the son of Dr John Alves of Shipland, Inverness.

By the late 1790s, the Alves family already owned plantation Carrapan in St Vincent, where Archibald and his half-brother William were in a highly profitable partnership with George Baillie and George Inglis.

In 1800-01 Archibald Alves was part of a consortium which bought land in Berbice, the other members being Lord Seaforth, Edward Fraser of Reelig, William MunroJames Fraser of Belladrum and Anthony Somersall. At this time his business address was in Harley Street. He travelled to Holland with William Munro in order to complete the purchase.

By 1803 'Alves & Comp' had also acquired two lots of land on Canje Creek, which were named Rose Hall. [Netherlands National Archives, 1585, Kaart van Canaal en Ostsee kust van Berbice, 1803] The Alves' plantation on the Correntyne (see below) was also named Rose Hall, perhaps because of their partnership with George Baillie from Rosehall in Sutherland.

Thomas Alves [1731-1815], possibly an uncle, was a merchant, also working from Harley Street and other London addresses from the 1770s to the 1790s. In 1783 Dr John Alves and Thomas Alves, of Harley Street, were appointed attornies for Joseph Cuthbert, an Inverness merchant in Savannah, Georgia.

Archibald’s half-sister Helen [1782-1876] was married to George Inglis of Kingsmills.

William Alves

Archibald's half-brother William (1780-1835) also acquired land in Berbice and in 1817 owned, jointly with John Cameron, plantation Rose Hall, with 200 slaves, on the Corentyne Coast.

In 1801 he married Sarah Davidson, daughter of the Cromarty-born London sugar merchant Duncan Davidson of Tulloch. Their son John went out to Berbice, becoming a civil magistrate by 1827.

Thomas Alves

Archibald and William Alves' plantations in Berbice were managed by a Thomas Alves, who was described as an 'administrator' rather than a planter or merchant in a list of signatories of an address to the governor, van Batenburg, in 1803 [van Batenburg, Short History, p198]. Thereafter he is described as a planter.

John Alves

William's son, John (1802-57), is recorded as being present at the flogging of a slave in 1827. At emancipation he received compensation for ownership of a relatively small number of slaves and by 1837 he was back in England, where he married Susan Barclay Fraser, the daughter of Simon Fraser of Kilmorack and widow of Wolfert Katz.

The couple retuned to Berbice and in 1841 they were living at plantation Belair on the West Coast (National Archives of Guyana, 1841 Census). John Alves died in Georgetown on 31 August 1857 [Hampshire Chronicle, 10 October 1857]. When his wife died in 1874 she was described as the 'relict of John Alves Esq, Rose Hall, Berbice'. Their son, also John, was also active in Guiana, but died at sea on his way to Demerara in 1882.


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