O'Meara is the Anglicized form of the Gaelic surname O' Meadra. This translates
as "The descendant of the merry one", from the ancient word meadhar,
meaning merry, and applying to the first chief of the clan. Who this was
is not clear, but the clan originated from the town of Toomevara in
County Tipperary, to which they gave their surname, and they are almost
unique amongst the Irish surnames in never having lost the "O" prefix.
To add to the confusion the name also came into England through the
Huguenot refugees, one Jacques Maro for example, being recorded at the
French Huguenot church, Threadneedle Street, London on October 17th
1683. Other recordings of the surname include John Mara of the
Pensioners Army Hospital, Chelsea on May 17th 1761, and Daniel Mara of
Holborn on August 31st 1769. The first recorded spelling of the family
name is believed to be that of Dermot O'Meara, a doctor and poet, and
author of the first medical work to be printed in Dublin in 1619. His
precise dates of birth and death are not known, but his son Edmund
O'Meara, also a doctor died in Dublin in 1680. The name is also
associated with Limerick, Joseph O'Mara of that city being the founder
of the O'Mara Opera Company. Throughout the centuries surnames in every
country have continued to "develop", often leading to astonishing
variants of the original spelling. In our family the spelling was changed to O'Mire
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