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| Bickerdike migration to the United States | + |
A great wave of immigration to the New World was the result of the enormous political and religious disarray that struck England at that time. Families left for the New World in extremely large numbers. The long journey was the end of many immigrants and many more arrived sick and starving. Still, those who made it were rewarded with an opportunity far greater than they had known at home in England. These emigrant families went on to make significant contributions to these emerging colonies in which they settled. Some of the first North American settlers carried this name or one of its variants:
Bickerdike Settlers in United States in the 19th Century
- George Bickerdike, who sailed to Baltimore in 1830
| Bickerdike migration to Australia | + |
Bickerdike Settlers in Australia in the 19th Century
- Miss Ruth Bickerdike, (b. 1807), aged 13, British settler who was convicted in Cambridgeshire, England for life for stealing, transported aboard the "Frances Charlotte" on 30th August 1832, arriving in Van Diemen's Land, Tasmania 1
| Contemporary Notables of the name Bickerdike (post 1700) | + |
- Robert Bickerdike Jr. (b. 1869), Canadian consulting engineer, and Lieutenant-Colonel in the Canadian armed forces
| Related Stories | + |
- Family Crests: Elements
- Anglo-Saxons: the birth of Old English from early German (Saxon) settlers (about 450-1066)
- Spelling variations: Why the spellings of names have changed over the centuries
- Family seat: the feudal principal residence of the landed gentry and aristocracy
- Hundred: an early Norse term typically denoting 100 households
- Van Diemen's
| Sources | + |
- Convict Records Voyages to Australia (Retrieved 24th October 2022). https://convictrecords.com.au

