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THE SECRET CONFESSIONS OF A GIRL CALLED (gulp) BESSIE

Guest blogger Mary Elizabeth Barr Mann’s family has always called her Bessie, a name she deems fit only for torch singers, great beauties….or cows.

bessieMy birth certificate reads “Mary Elizabeth” . Perhaps more importantly in my family, my baptismal certificate reads “Mary Elizabeth”. But, to my father and my brother, I am “Bessie.”

My mother’s name is Mary, and so my father has never called me such. Dr. Freud would approve. And while my extended family makes the distinction by calling me “Mary Beth,” somehow my dad came up with Bessie and thought it was adorable. When my parents discovered that Bessie was easy for my toddler brother to pronounce, it stuck. At least on the nuclear level.

As you might imagine, in my adolescence, I did not like being Bessie. It was not, nor is it yet again, popular. While the U.S. Census pegged Bessie as the 13th most popular girls’ name in 1880, it plummeted out of the top 100 by 1930 and nosedived from the top 1000 by 1970.

Worse yet for my teenage years, Bessie is neither sleek, nor sexy. It is not stylish. Not a single model in Seventeen magazine ever had that name. And, though somewhere in a corner of Park Slope there may be an urban hipster mother plotting to bring back the name is a burst of ugly-chic, to this day Bessie remains shunned.

The nickname didn’t bother me as a very young child. Heck, I was surrounded by relatives with equally unattractive, ragged-old-laundry-hanging-in-the-back-alley names—like Reenie (for Irene) and Mossie (for Martha). But by my teenage years, I really, really wanted my dad and my brother—and by now my younger sisters who had gotten in on the act—to quit it. The worst was when my brother’s friends would tease me about the name: “Bessie the cow.” “Old Bess, my gun.” (And this from a kid with a big schnoz whose surname was Finnochio. Sheesh.)

Sure, there was Bessie Smith. And Bess Myerson—the first Jewish Miss America. But that was IT. Unless you were belting out the blues with a voice full of sorrow and steel, or you were transcendentally beautiful, this was not a good name. With my reedy soprano, eyeglasses and frizzy hair, I was none of these things (although I have since graduated to contact lenses!).

Out in the wide world, I was always Mary. I can thank the nuns for this one thing: They invariably stuck to the name on the form, the proper name of your patron saint. On a bad day, if I got in trouble, it would get lengthened to Mary Elizabeth. Not bad, considering the possibilities. School transitioned to work where, again, I was Mary. Plain. Vanilla. Virginal. (Yes, there’s another blog here.) But clean and crisp and professional. I just needed to keep my home and work lives separate. And always, always, there came the cringe-inducing moment in any serious romance where my love learned about “Bessie.” How he handled that knowledge pretty much sealed the fate of the relationship.

Now, however, that I am in my 40s, I am liking Bessie. It has the advantage of being rare. And I am secure enough to feel that I can overcome its negative connotations. Particularly, I like that the only people who know me as Bessie and call me by that name, are people to whom I am deeply attached. Also, I’ve discovered Bessie (or Bess) Coleman, a beautiful African-American, part-Cherokee pioneer aviatrix who was a famous barnstorming pilot in the 1920s. Talk about your style and moxie.

Still, I would not suggest naming a child Bess or Bessie (or Mossie or Flossie or Mable or Bertha or Phyllis or any of their ugly sisters) unless you are a supermodel who is married to George Clooney and you are pretty well assured that your child will be gorgeous. Also, you and George will need to be able to insulate her from teasing by using your wealth to hire a security detail around your home on Lake Como in Italy.

And while you’re at it, buy her an airplane. What the heck.

Mary (Bessie) Barr Mann is a freelance writer and editor living in Maplewood, NJ, with her husband and two children. Her work appears regularly on www.patch.com and www.glocallynewark.com and in the occasional print publication.

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15 Responses to “THE SECRET CONFESSIONS OF A GIRL CALLED (gulp) BESSIE”
redridiing Says:

September 25th, 2009 at 4:35 am

Bessie, I love your name! Nicknames for Elizabeth have come and gone in fashion – Liz, Beth, Betty, Betsy, Eliza, Lizzie etc., and I think it is good that you have come to love your name. I foresee Bessie coming back into style in a big way now, just as Betty has, and Eliza, but at least you have the choice of using Elizabeth if you wanted to, OR could use trillions of its nicknames if you so chose. And Mary is perennially beautiful.

My middle name is Joyce, and I have tried and tried, but cannot love it at all.

Interesting post. I would love to know what you have called your own children?

Abby Says:

September 25th, 2009 at 7:34 am

I can’t help but agree with RedRidiing, though as someone who grew up hating her name, I understand your feelings, too.

Bess makes me think of Queen Elizabeth – as in Good Queen Bess. Bessie is a bit cutesy, but Bess? I love Bess.

Thanks for sharing your story and I can’t help but share Redriiding’s curiosity – what did you name your kiddos?

madeleine Says:

September 25th, 2009 at 9:07 am

I think Bess is fantastic, personally. And I would have never imagined Mabel lumped into the ‘ugly sister category’; I think the name is stunning.

http://legitbabenames.wordpress.com/ Says:

September 25th, 2009 at 12:37 pm

I actually think Bess/Bessie is quite sweet. I don’t think of cows, rather, I think of Queen Elizabeth I. That said, maybe it would be a different story if Bess or Bessie was actually my name. I have had a distinctively, soft, feminine sounding name and I have always loved it for those reasons. Maybe having a name that is associated with frumpiness and cows would have had a different impact on me.

Mary "Bessie" Mann Says:

September 25th, 2009 at 12:49 pm

To all:
My children are named Ethan Harald (to give him the same initials as his dad, Erik Henry) and Susanna Elisabeth. Susanna is named after her Oma (grandmother from Germany) who waited 70 years for a little girl.

I was not delighted when I realized how popular the name “Ethan” is, although I love the name meaning (”strong, firm”) and find that it really suits my determined but sweet boy (age 7). Susanna always seemed lush and bountiful and romantic to me and so is my Susanna. My Susanna (age 5) also likes to be called “Susie.” I can’t tell you how many people are delighted to hear “Susie” when I call it out in the playground (or the aisle at Target when I’ve lost her!). It has a very retro quality.

Sorry! Didn’t mean to insult any Mabels! But sometimes a name might seem beautiful until you have to wear it. Walk a mile in Mabel’s shoes. . . .

peach Says:

September 25th, 2009 at 3:49 pm

An interesting story, thank you. Your children have fine names: I love Susanna! My hubby’s Grandma was named Bessie (not Elizabeth) by a 3-yr.old sibling who named her after her favorite milk cow. Bessie never learned to love her first name and goes by her middle name, Evelyn, ALWAYS. I like many of the retro nicknames coming back in style but prefer to have some formal name as an option, as you had.

redridiing Says:

September 25th, 2009 at 6:08 pm

Thank you for sharing that. I like your children’s names. I first remember hearing the name Ethan on one of my favourite-ever American series, THIRTYSOMETHING, in the late 80s. And I love the Scandinavian way of spelling HarAld, it seems more attractive (to me anyway) than HarOld.

Susanna Elisabeth is beautiful. I have used Elisabeth for a middle name for one of my daughters, too. As well as being the European way of spelling the name, Elisabeth is also the Welsh way rather than the English “z” spelling.

I grew up with a girl called Susan Mabel, and she LOATHED Mabel, and we all chuckled about it growing up in the 50s/60s. It is a generational thing. But I can see its charm now – as with Edith and Maud etc.

Ailsa

Mary "Bessie" Mann Says:

September 26th, 2009 at 9:53 pm

Peach,
What a great story! Lessons to learn: Never let a 3-year-old name your child. And: Never let a 3-year-old (or anyone, for that matter) name your child after a milk cow.

Did grandma have another sibling named “Mittens” after the house cat? (Sorry, couldn’t help it!)

Mary "Bessie" Mann Says:

September 26th, 2009 at 10:37 pm

Ailsa,
I love your name! Are you Scottish?

Jill Says:

September 28th, 2009 at 12:19 am

I love the name Bess/Bessie, and am glad that you’re liking it these days. :-)

I’ve known one Bess in my life, and she was a bright, happy little girl who truly loved her name. (I’m sure she still does, but we’ve fallen out of touch.)

I also associate the name with the feisty Bess Lindstrom, Phyllis Lindstrom’s daughter on The Mary Tyler Moore Show.

Thanks for your great blog! :-)

happydreamsbee Says:

September 28th, 2009 at 7:24 am

I am a Bessie/Bess really an Elizabeth, I have always liked my name. I loved being a Bess my nn came from my younger sister unable to prounce Elizabeth and stuck so i have been Bess ever since. its unique and have only ever came across a few.

Emz does London Says:

September 28th, 2009 at 3:23 pm

I love Bessie/Bess and would use it in a second. I don’t like Elizabeth though so I’d use it on its own (or possibly as a nickname for Beatrice). To be honest, round here it wouldn’t even stand out – I teach in south London and I have a Betsy, a Floss, several Jessies, a Millie and an Agnes in my classes (all aged between 12 – 15). And those girls pull their names off pretty damn well.

Vickie Says:

October 1st, 2009 at 11:35 am

When my aunt came from Greece, people here said she should be called Bessie because I guess Bessie sounds like a perfect nickname for Vasilki (still have no idea why). Then she married a Smith so she became Bessie Smith.

niki72 Says:

October 2nd, 2009 at 7:40 pm

Bessie is actually a cute nn. It is really nice. My own daughter got teased and embarrassed when she was in middle school (her nn is Elsie).

Elizabeth (Bessie) Says:

November 8th, 2009 at 5:06 am

Bessie, I am another Bessie. In fact I am an Elizabeth Mary aka Bessie. I LOVE your article. I have no time to write more at the moment but I echo, reverberate with and utterly love every sentiment you express. Couldn’t have put it better myself.

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