Beatty

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Our Beatty, Oregon Mortgage Brokers are licensed professionals, and with each mortgage you’ll find they have one common goal in mind, finding you the best deal with superior customer service.  We are ready to answer your questions, explain loan options, and get you pre-qualified for a new Beatty, Oregon mortgage.  So if you need a mortgage expert in Beatty, Oregon then please call us at the number above. We have worked very hard to develop our reputation in Beatty, OR and we’re working even harder, not only to keep that good reputation, but to continually try to improve it. We treat all of our customers with the utmost respect, no matter how complex the job in hand. When we complete your Beatty, Oregon mortgage we want you to feel happy to leave us a 5-star evaluation and also to feel comfortable enough that you would recommend us to others. You can always rely on us for your Beatty, Oregon mortgage needs, so we’re on standby waiting to hear from you whenever you need us.

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More About Beatty

 

Beatty is a surname of Scottish and Irish origin. In some cases from Bartholomew, which was often shortened to Bate or Baty. Male descendants were then often called Beatty, or similar derivations like Beattie or Beatey. The name Beatty or Beattie, others think, arose in Ireland from Betagh, a surname meaning hospitaller. A majority of people named Beatty or Beattie in Ireland are the descendants of Scots who came over to Ulster in the seventeenth century. Beattie is common in counties Antrim and Down, whilst Beatty is more common in counties Armagh and Tyrone. In Fermanagh in 1962, Beatty was the fifteenth most common name and was recorded as synonymous with the names Betty and MacCaffrey (or McCaffrey).

It is most likely that the name derives from Mac a’Bhiadhtaigh, from biadhtach, “one who held land on condition of supplying food (biad) to those billeted on him by the chief”. In the rest of Ireland, the name Biadhtach (Betagh; “public victualler”) was changed to Beatty or Beattie. In Scotland, the Beatties were a reiver clan in the Langholm area of Eskdale. George MacDonald Fraser has written about the reiving clans in “The Steel Bonnets : The Story of the Anglo-Scottish Border Reivers”.