A Heritage

Two Lines,
One Knot

The ancestry of Elizabeth Anne Peek — the American South and Podlaskie, Poland

Compiled from the Peek Family Tree — 445 individuals across 197 family groups. Prepared June 2026.

The Shape of It

Split down the middle

Your ancestry splits almost perfectly down the middle, one half from each parent — and the two halves could hardly be less alike. Your father's side reaches deep into the American South: a dense, well-documented web of families settled across Mississippi, South Carolina, Alabama, Georgia, and Virginia, several of them in the colonies before the Revolution. Your mother's side is almost entirely Polish, drawn from a tight cluster of villages in the Podlaskie region of the northeast, who crossed to the New England mill towns around the turn of the twentieth century.

Father — Peek

English & Scots-Irish colonial South, with threads of German, French Huguenot, and possibly Italian.

Arrived colonial era · 1600s–1700s
Mother — Makowski

Polish — the Podlaskie villages of Makowskie, Wypychy, Nadbory, and Siestrzanki.

Arrived c. 1890–1910 · New England

The Peek Line

The American South

This is the larger and older of your two branches, and the migration follows a pattern repeated by thousands of Southern families: Virginia and the Carolinas in the 1700s, pushing southwest into Alabama and then Mississippi by the early 1800s, chasing newly opened land. By the mid-nineteenth century the family is firmly rooted in Jasper, Copiah, and Covington counties, Mississippi, where they stay for generations.

The Revolutionary thread

The Peek surname traces back to Capt. George Peek (c. 1720–1808), recorded in the tree as an officer of the 14th Virginia Regiment and rooted in Pittsylvania County, Virginia. The 14th Virginia was a real Continental Army regiment, formed in 1777 and drawing its companies from exactly that part of Virginia — Halifax, Pittsylvania, Albemarle and neighbors — which makes the geography of the claim sound. From him the line runs through William Peek (1755–1843), George Peek (1784–1860) who moved the family to Alabama, and on into Mississippi.

A line of physicians and preachers

The Mississippi Peeks include Dr. Ocie Rush Peek (1867–1941) and, through marriage, a string of clergymen — Rev. Edward P. Stanley, Rev. Elijah Gardner — suggesting a family of some standing in their counties: the local doctor, the circuit preacher, the names that turn up in church and courthouse records.

The European threads underneath

A necessary honesty Families of this profile — landholding households across South Carolina, Alabama, and Mississippi in the decades before 1865 — lived inside the system of slavery, and many owned enslaved people. The tree does not document that side of the record, but it is part of the truth of this lineage, worth naming plainly rather than leaving in the silence between dates.

The Makowski Line

Podlaskie, Poland

Where the Peek side sprawls across a continent, the Makowski side is remarkably concentrated. A large share of these families come from the same small cluster of villages in Podlaskie Voivodeship in northeastern Poland — Makowskie, Wypychy, Nadbory, Siestrzanki, Burzyn — names that repeat across the generations because people married their neighbors for two hundred years.

The village that bears the name

Michał (Michael) Alexander Makowski (1894–2003) was born in the village of Makowskie — the place the family is named for — and died in Pascoag, Rhode Island. He lived to 108 years old, spanning from the Poland of the partitions to twenty-first-century America. His father Walenty Makowski (1859–1935) lived and died in the same village his ancestors had farmed.

A trace of the gentry

Several of these lines carry the marker "herbu Nowina" — "of the Nowina coat of arms." In Polish naming this signals descent from the szlachta, the minor nobility, who were identified by shared heraldic clans rather than individual titles. The Brzostowski and Grądzki families both appear with this mark, hinting at gentry roots — likely the kind of modest, land-poor nobility that was common in this corner of Poland.

Two streams into New England

Your mother's mother's side — the Modliszewski, Pietruszka, Czelusniak, and Bożek families — is also wholly Polish, some of them from Galicia (the Austrian-ruled partition of Poland, around Wysoka). They settled into the Fall River and Rhode Island mill-town corridor, the great magnet for Polish immigration to New England, between roughly 1890 and 1920.

The Two Migrations

Both columns end in the same place

The Peek Side
The Makowski Side
England & Scotland-Ireland1600s – early 1700s
Colonial Virginia & the CarolinasPittsylvania Co., VA
Alabama frontierearly 1800s
MississippiJasper · Copiah · Covington Cos.
Podlaskie & Galicia, Polandthrough the 1800s
The home villagesMakowskie · Wypychy · Nadbory
Atlantic crossingc. 1890–1910
New England mill townsFall River, MA · Rhode Island · CT
College Park, Maryland — where Christian Peek met Susan Makowski at university Salisbury, Maryland — you, 1986 Both families were pulled into the Washington–Baltimore orbit by two government careers — foreign aid and defense radar — and the two children found each other at the state university.

How Much to Trust

An honest sorting

Ancestry trees are a mix of careful documentation and hopeful copy-paste. Here is an honest sorting of the claims in yours, strongest first.

Solid — the Polish villages

The Podlaskie lines are tightly clustered, internally consistent, and tied to specific parish villages with the kind of detail (exact dates, the herbu Nowina heraldic marks) that comes from real parish registers. Michał Makowski's 1894 birth in Makowskie and long life to 2003 is easy to confirm against immigration and census records.

Solid — the 19th-c. Mississippi core

The Jasper / Copiah / Covington County Peek, Whitman, Francis, and Smith families sit in well-trodden census territory and are very likely accurate back to the early 1800s.

Probable — the Revolutionary Peek

Capt. George Peek in Pittsylvania County fits the real geography of the 14th Virginia Regiment, which genuinely recruited there. The line back to him is plausible; treat the exact military rank as "likely but verify against a pension or DAR record" rather than proven.

Intriguing but unproven — Italian Longino

The "Giovanni Tomaso Longino of Ravenna" story is widely repeated and, unusually, backed by some real Surry County, NC records and a DAR patriot listing for John Thomas Longino. The Italian-noble origin itself rests on family tradition — enjoy it as a strong family legend, not a documented fact.

Treat with caution — the deepest dates

Anything in the 1600s–1720s with confident day-and-month birth dates (and any single ancestor pushed back to a glamorous origin) is where Ancestry trees are least reliable. The further back a clean date sits, the more it deserves a raised eyebrow.

Where to push next U.S. census records (1850–1950) would nail down the Mississippi generations; ship manifests and naturalization papers would confirm the Makowski and Modliszewski crossings; and the LDS / FamilySearch Polish parish microfilms for the Łomża region could take the Podlaskie lines back further than Ancestry has.