History 
	  of the name, "Petts"
	  The 
	  name, "Petts" originates from East Kent in England. At the 
	  end of Roman occupation of the British Isles in around 400AD, the inhabitants 
	  of Great Britain below Hadrian's wall on the border of Scotland were 
	  a mixture of tribes present before the arrival of the Romans in 43AD, 
	  retired Romans, and tribes moved to Britain by the Romans.
	    These people, now denuded of military support, became prey 
	  to Marauders, Saxon Pirates, Settlers, and Migrating Tribes. It is reported 
	  that the Romano-British leader, Vortigern, in 449 invited Saxon Mercenaries 
	  lead by Hengist and Horsa, to fend off incursions from raiders such 
	  as the Picts from Scotland and Scotii from Ireland. Their fee was the 
	  settlement of the Isle of Thanet in East Kent.
	     These 
	  mercenaries, known as foederati by the Romans, probably served 
	  as laeti under the Romans on the continent of Europe. It is reputed 
	  that once the mercenaries had completed their task and were given their 
	  land, they invited further people from their own tribes to join them. 
	  These people were generically known as, "Saxons", but were 
	  in fact more likely to have been Feresians, Jutes or Franks.
	    Some time after this, knowing that they now held the balance 
	  of power in the island, they attacked their previous paymasters, and 
	  took more land for themselves, carving out a "Kingdom" in an area formerly 
	  occupied by the Celtic tribe of the Cantiaci east of the river Medway. 
	  
	    The final battle between the Ramano-British and the "Saxons" 
	  was fought at Aylesford. Although it has always been reported that the 
	  newcomers were Saxon, or, by later writers, Jutes, it is more probable 
	  that they were Friesian or Frankish. This can be detected in their racial 
	  types, their language and customs, which differed from that of the Saxons. 
	  Later, when the Middle Saxons were extending their territory, the invaded 
	  the "Kingdom" of Kent and occupied the Western half, and even today 
	  the citizens of Kent are either Kentish Men or Men of Kent. The Men 
	  of Kent were the Middle Saxons of Kent, whereas the Kentish Men were 
	  the original invaders.
	    A distinctive class of pottery is found in the Eastern half of 
	  Kent from the middle of the fifth century. This is the so called Anglo-Frisian 
	  pottery, a grey ware with a burnished outside and a grooved or twisted-cable 
	  decoration. This pottery has been found at Canterbury, Lullington and 
	  Wingham.
	    These new settlers occupied huts that they built with sunken 
	  floors, were of the type known as Grubenhaus. A group of six 
	  Grubenhaus huts were found in Canterbury within the Roman City, 
	  aligned to fit into an insulae. It is thought likely that the 
	  new invaders did not put to flight the original inhabitants, but subjugated 
	  them to their rule.
	    It is this special small area of Kent, and in the "Kentish" language, 
	  from which the name Pett emerged, meaning, "the dweller of the 
	  hollows". The equivalent person, dwelling in a hollow in West Kent 
	  would have the name "Pitt", derived from the "Saxon" language. 
	  Other variations of other areas include Pitts, Putt and Pytt. 
	    Early Kentish, and all the family of Anglo-Saxon languages of 
	  the earliest times, were an oral languages, all information being passed 
	  on by word of mouth. It was not written down until literacy was introduced 
	  by the Christian church, both from the monks of Ireland and Priests 
	  from the continent. The north of Britain saw the introduction of learning 
	  from Ireland, whereas the south was from Gaul, (France). Because names 
	  were passed on by word of mouth, even after the introduction of writing, 
	  the spelling of the name varies greatly, and even now changes occur 
	  for various reasons.