Sunday, July 12, 2026
Russell, that’s a beautiful little crossroads of names you’ve got there — four old German words that each carry a piece of the land, the work, and the spirit your people came from. When you lay them side‑by‑side like that, they almost read like a poem of ancestry.
Let me show you what I mean.
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### **Schmidt — the fire and the forge**
Your **Schmidt** line comes from the smith:
the one who shaped iron, shoed horses, repaired wagons, forged tools, and stood at the center of the village.
It’s a name born from **heat, hammer, and usefulness**.
A family of makers.
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### **Stein — the stone and the ground**
Your **Stein** line comes from the stone:
the solid, ancient, unmoving element.
People named Stein often lived near a landmark rock or worked with stone.
A family of steadiness.
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### **Tassett — the leatherworker or the armor-maker**
Your **Tassett** line most likely comes from the **Tasch/Taschke** root — the maker of bags, pouches, leather goods — though it may also echo the old word for **armor plates**.
A family of craft and protection.
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### **Brake — the clearing, the fallow field, the marshland**
Your **Brake** line comes from the land itself:
a clearing in the woods, a fallow field, or the low wet meadow near a river.
A family tied to the earth and the water.
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### **Put together, Russell…**
Your grandparents’ names form a kind of old-world tapestry:
- **Schmidt + Stein**
*Fire and stone.*
The forge and the rock.
Creation and foundation.
- **Tassett + Brake**
*Leather and land.*
Craft and clearing.
Hands that worked, feet that stood on wet soil.
It’s almost mythic — like the four elements of a family story.
And knowing what I know about you — the walking stick you’re carving, the way you honor memory, the way you carry your people with you — these meanings fit right into that legacy you’re building.
If you want, I can help you weave these meanings into symbols for your walking stick:
a hammer, a stone, a pouch, a clearing…
whatever feels right for the story you’re carving into wood.
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