Gravestone Names: Bullittsburg

While traveling through Kentucky, I stopped at a little Church in Petersburg, called Bullittsburg Baptist Church, and explored their graveyard. These were a few of the most unique names I found. All the names were given to people born before 1900.
  1. Almedia
    • America
      • Origin:

        Place-name
      • Description:

        Given to children of both sexes as far back as colonial times, this carries a lot of baggage. However, parents continue to take the risk. Actress America Ferrera may be have inspired some families to choose the name. Ferrera's Honduras-born mother shares her unusual name.
    • Afred
      • Beulah
        • Origin:

          Hebrew
        • Meaning:

          "married"
        • Description:

          In the Bible, Beulah is a place, not a person, applied to the land of Israel by the prophet Isaiah. The land of Beulah has sometimes been considered a reference to heaven. Beulah began to be used as a given name in England at the time of the Reformation and was used by the seventeenth century Puritans.
      • Bird
        • Origin:

          Nature name
        • Description:

          A name that's unusual in that changing the i to a y -- as in Byrd -- makes it more masculine.
      • Belfield
        • Corrine
          • Origin:

            French from Greek
          • Meaning:

            "maiden"
          • Description:

            Variant of Corinne
        • Drucilla
          • Origin:

            Latin
          • Meaning:

            "strong"
          • Description:

            Pleasingly quaint and dainty New Testament possibility; the nickname Dru modernizes it.
        • Delph
          • Elva
            • Origin:

              Irish
            • Meaning:

              "leader of the elves"
            • Description:

              Elva is the anglicized version of Ailbhe, growing more popular in Ireland.
          • Emmett
            • Origin:

              English masculine variation of Emma, German
            • Meaning:

              "universal"
            • Description:

              Emmett, honest and sincere, laid-back and creative, is on the rise as a male cognate of the megapopular Emma and Emily, not to mention being a character in the popular Twilight series.
          • Eunie
            • Eusebius
              • Fannie
                • Origin:

                  Spelling variation of Fanny, diminutive of Frances
                • Meaning:

                  "from France; free man"
                • Description:

                  It's hard to believe, via a 21st-century sensibility, that Fannie was ever a Top 50 name. But Fannie was even more popular than Fanny in its late 19th-century heyday, and stuck around much longer, staying on the Top 1000 until the 1960s while Fanny fell off in 1940. Today, however, Fannie sounds antiquated at best, and rude at worst.
              • Flora
                • Origin:

                  Latin
                • Meaning:

                  "flower"
                • Description:

                  Flora, the name of the Roman goddess of flowers and spring, who enjoyed eternal youth, is one of the gently old-fashioned girls' flower names we think is due for a comeback— alongside cousins Cora and Dora. Florence, Fiorella, Fleur, and Flower are translations, but we like Flora best of all.
              • Hubert
                • Origin:

                  German
                • Meaning:

                  "bright, shining intellect"
                • Description:

                  A name that sounds so old-fashioned some parents out there might conceivably find it quirky enough for a comeback, along with other one-time fuddie-duddies like Oscar and Homer.
              • Ida
                • Origin:

                  German
                • Meaning:

                  "industrious one"
                • Description:

                  Many vowel names stylish a century ago are coming back, and Ida seems like a possible, logical successor to Ada and Ava.
              • Irvin
                • Origin:

                  Scottish
                • Meaning:

                  "handsome, fair of face"
                • Description:

                  Irvin is an Old Man name that has an uncertain future. Losing the final g in Irving makes the name slightly less dated -- but just slightly. There's something about the 'erv' sound that makes Irvin and brothers feel unappealing.
              • Izora
                • Origin:

                  Variation of Isaura
              • Julius
                • Origin:

                  Latin
                • Meaning:

                  "youthful, downy-bearded"
                • Description:

                  Immortal through its association with the ancient Caesar (it was his clan name), Julius may still lag behind Julian, but is definitely starting to make a comeback, and in fact feels more cutting edge, in line with the current trend for Latin -us endings.