Ogilvie
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Ogilvie is a surname with origins in the in the Barony of Ogilvy in Angus, in Scotland, it may come from the Welsh Ochil, a high place.
People called Ogilvie include:
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- Scottish treasurers Walter Ogilvie of Lintrethan (15th century), Patrick de Ogilvie (15th century) and Walter Ogilvie of Stratheren (16th century)
- Scottish 17th century saint John Ogilvie, Saint
- 18th century William Ogilvie was tutor to Lord Edward FitzGerald and married Edward's mother Emily FitzGerald, Duchess of Leinster
- Scottish 19th century lexicographer John Ogilvie
- William Ogilvie (surveyor), Canadian Dominion land surveyor
- Albert Ogilvie, Premier of Tasmania in the 1930s
- Frederick Ogilvie, Director-General of the BBC at the end of the 1930s
- William Henry Ogilvie, Scottish-Australian poet and horseman
- Richard B. Ogilvie, 1960s American politician
- 1988 Byron Kennedy Award winner George Ogilvie
- Malcolm Ogilvie, British ornithologist
- Musician Kevin Graham Ogilvie, known as Nivek Ogre
- David Ogilvie, several people named David Ogilvie
[edit] Places
- Ogilvie, Minnesota
- Ogilvie Transportation Center, a commuter-rail terminal in Chicago, Illinois