When we were preparing the article “Bizarre Baby Names: A Growing Trend?” for the July issue of Reader’s Digest magazine that’s just hit the stands, we put together a lonnnnnng timeline of the key markers in American name history–much longer than they could possibly use with the story. So here we offer you some of the dates and events that you won’t find in the magazine.
1620. The Mayflower arrives bearing 102 passengers, mostly with classic English names, but also one Degory, one Resolved, one Remember, one Wrestling, and one Oceanus, who was born mid-voyage.
1750s. Enter classical names (Homer, Horace), chivalrous names (Arthur, Elaine), and romantic girls (Lavinia, Rosalind). More boys are being called Junior.
1768. Birth of Dolley Madison, one of the increasing number of babies with nicknames on their birth certificates.
1825. John Quincy Adams is the first President to have a middle name, a rarity at this time, when it becomes fashionable to use the mother’s maiden name.
1845. The Irish famine sends masses of Bridgets and Patricks to America.
1925. Girls’ names ending in ’s’ are fashionable–Gladys, Doris, Phyllis, Lois; also those ending in een (Kathleen) and ette (Paulette).
1946. Publication of Dr. Benjamin Spock’s The Common Sense Book of Baby and Child Care encourages parents to be more relaxed, confident and collaborative: husbands participate more in child care–and baby naming.
1950. Linda unseats the seemingly unseatable Mary as the number one name for girls.
1959. First Gidget movie released; surfer dude names like Gary, Scott, Dwayne and Bruce catch the wave.
1959. Mattel introduces the Barbie doll; other nickname names like Lori, Cindy, Sherry and Terri are hot.
1966. Cassius Marcellus Clay, Jr. renounces his “slave name” to become Muhammed Ali; other celebrities follow suit, influencing African-American baby naming.
1967. Frank Zappa names his first child Moon Unit, a seminal ’kooky’ baby name. Son Dweezil will follow two years later.
1968. TV westerns like Here Come the Brides, featuring brothers Jason, Jeremy and Joshua, signal a return of old cowboy names.
1974. The first issue of People magazine accelerates fascination with celebrity culture, parents start to be increasingly influenced by names stars give their babies.
1987. Movie Wall Street proclaims “Greed is good,” summing up the Go-Go 80s and inspiring Waspy surnames for boys (Carter, Parker) and androgynous exec names for all (Kyle, Blake, Blair).
1998. Parents continue to get more and more kreeatif with spellings like Adan, Austyn and Alivia all in the year’s Top 700.
2000. The Internet inspires parents to search genealogy sites for old family names.
2003. Extreme starbaby names grow more extreme–this year alone sees the arrival of Pilot Inspektor, Audio Science and Banjo.
2008. Reason returns: With economic downturn, parents look back to solid, traditional girls’ names like Ella, Grace, Olivia, and biblical boys Jacob, Ethan, Benjamin.
Tags: African-American baby names, baby name history, baby name trends, Barbie, black names, celebrity baby names, classic baby names, Dr. Benjamin Spock, Dweezil Zappa, Frank Zappa, genealogy, Gidget, Irish baby names, Irish names for girls, Mayflower passenger names, middle names, Moon Unit Zappa, Muhammad Ali, Nevaeh, nickname names, People magazine, vintage baby names
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June 24th, 2009 at 2:59 am
Fascinating! I haven’t had a chance to read the Reader’s Digest article, but did your original list mention the early 20th-century’s interest in Greek names for girls? I’ve come across a lot of Zenobias, Hermiones, and Ariadnes from that time.