Explore the Family Name Ellerbeck

The meaning of Ellerbeck

1. German: habitational name from any of various minor places called as the ‘stream where the alder trees grow’. 2. English (Lancashire and Yorkshire): habitational name from Ellerbeck in Ingleton (Yorkshire), Ellerbek (a lost place in West Derby Hundred, Lancashire), or Ellerbeck in Osmotherley (North Yorkshire), all from Old Norse elri ‘alder tree’ + bekkr ‘stream’. History: Heinrich Ellerbeck was born in 1818 in Holzfelde in Prussia. In 1845 he came to America, joining his uncle August Broemmelsieck on the Brommelsieck farm in Franklin County, MO.

Dictionary of American Family Names, 2nd edition, © Oxford University Press, 2022.

How common is the last name Ellerbeck in the United States?

Based on data from the Decennial U.S. Census, the surname Ellerbeck has seen a slight decrease in popularity between 2000 and 2010. In 2000, Ellerbeck was ranked 76,946th most common surname, dropping to 82,908th by 2010. This represents a 7.75% fall in rank. The number of individuals with this last name also declined over this period, with a count of 232 in 2000 falling slightly to 227 people in 2010, marking a decrease of 2.16%. Consequently, the proportion of people with the Ellerbeck surname per 100,000 also fell by 11.11%.

20002010Change
Rank#76,946#82,908-7.75%
Count232227-2.16%
Proportion per 100k0.090.08-11.11%

Race and Ethnicity of people with the last name Ellerbeck

Turning to ethnic identity, the Decennial U.S. Census data reveals that the majority of individuals with the Ellerbeck surname identify as White, accounting for 95.26% in 2000 and slightly decreasing to 94.27% in 2010. Over this decade, there has been a notable increase in those identifying as Asian/Pacific Islander, rising from 2.16% to 3.08%, reflecting a 42.59% change. Meanwhile, the percentage identifying as Hispanic saw an emergence from 0% in 2000 to 2.64% in 2010. Other ethnic identities including Black, and American Indian and Alaskan Native remained at 0% for both years, while there were no individuals who identified as being of two or more races.

20002010Change
White95.26%94.27%-1.04%
Asian/Pacific Islander2.16%3.08%42.59%
Hispanic0%2.64%0%
Two or More Races0%0%0%
Black0%0%0%
American Indian and Alaskan Native0%0%0%