It can be Irish or Scottish.
From a Scottish surname which was derived from Gaelic caol meaning "narrows, channel, strait".
answer from ancestry.comWalker - English (especially Yorkshire) and Scottish: occupational name for a fuller, Middle English walkere, Old English wealcere, an agent derivative of wealcan 'to walk, tread'. This was the regular term for the occupation during the Middle Ages in western and northern England. Compare Fuller and Tucker. As a Scottish surname it has also been used as a translation of Gaelic Mac an Fhucadair 'son of the fuller'.
This is a Scottish name, a corruption of Colquhoun.
A Scottish surname (MacNèill in Gaelic) it means 'son of Niall'.
Scottish; it derives from the surname Henderson, which is pronounced "Eauring" in Scottish.
Is mcchrystal scottish
Yes, it is. If you check the top 1000 Indian surnames, Walker is definitely included. The Walker surname is usually said to be Scottish or Irish. Long before Europeans invaded America, many tribes, in their own language, included "Walker" as part of their name i.e. Firewalker; Skywalker; etc. Also, many Native American languages use the syllables "wau" and "quah" frequently, as well as very similar sounding syllables. These syllables mean different things in different Native American languages. My "Walker" surname is in no way related to Scottish or Irish ancestry. Each "Walker" just has to do the research, if the information is available, and figure out how their ancestors came by their surname.
no it is not
It is a Scottish surname meaning 'son of Coinneach (Kenneth)' and is spelled MacCoinnich in Scottish Gaelic.
The surname is a Scottish variant of the English name Courts. So the nationality would be Scottish.
Bill Walker - Scottish Conservative politician - was born in 1929.
Billy Walker - Scottish footballer - was born on 1893-05-05.
The Scottish surname Downie (MacIlleDhòmhnaich, in Scottish Gaelic) does havea tartan. See tartansauthority.com for a picture.
Campbell is a Scottish surname. It is derived from the Scottish Gaelic words meaning 'crooked-mouthed'; the Campbell clan's tartan is yellow, black, and red.
Lytle is an English, Scottish, and Irish surname.
McKinzie is a family surname derived from the Scottish surname MacKenzie.