WOTHERSPOON,
WEDDERSPOON: The origin of this name is believed to be from
the old English WEDERSPONG 'sheep pasture'. WEDER is a Lowland
term for 'sheep' or 'lamb,' and SPONG, obsolete English for
a tongue-shaped piece of land enclosed by or lying next to higher
ground. In the 13th c. Roger Wythirspon attested a grant by
James, High Steward of lands in Renfrew. Thomas Witherspuyn
witnessed a lease by the abbot of Cupar in 1521, and Archibald
Wetherspune held the vicarage of Karridden in 1546. The Rev.
John Witherspoon (1722-1794), born in Yester, East Lothian ,
became president of the College of New Jersey (now Princeton
University) in 1768, and took an active part in the American
Revolution on the side of the colonists. General William Wallace
Wotherspoon (1850- 1921), head of the state canal system in
New York, was of Scottish descent. In addition to the variations
shown, there are some 30 different spellings of this name in
old records. As the Wotherspoons are a Low!and family, they
do not have a chief.