The Lost Names of 1880

The Lost Names of 1880

I was combing through the Top 1000 Names of 1880 the other day for another project (ah, the glamorous life of the baby name expert) and I was blown away by how many names on the list had been totally forgotten.  I don’t mean just marginalized, like Ethel or Beulah, but no longer even in our naming lexicon.

We tend to think of strange, invented, unique names as being a recent phenomenon, as if in the past everybody was named John and Mary, and it’s only since 1968 that we’ve had names like Hallie and Freedom.

But in fact, naming innovations have always been a part of American culture, and examining the list for 1880 – the first year for which we have records – makes that crystal clear.  The roster contains literally hundreds of names virtually unknown today.

Here, a two-part look at the lost names of 1880, starting with girls’ names.

The biggest name trend story of 1880 was nickname names – yes, dozens of the expected Minnie and Annies and Elsies (the name of the little girl in the Mary Cassatt painting that illustrates this post), but also dozen of names ending in –ie that have rarely been heard in the past hundred years.  There was a notable collection of boyish nickname names such as Donnie and Vinnie and Gussie, but here are the most outrageous overall:

ALCIE

ARRIE

AVIE

CORDIE

DESSIE

DILLIE

DOVIE

FRONNIE, FRONIE

HASSIE, HESSIE

HETTIE

JETTIE

LESSIE

LIDDIE, LITTIE

LOVIE

LUDIE

LULIE

LUTIE

MALLIE

MANIE

MELLIE

MERTIE

METTIE

MINTIE

MITTIE

NEALIE

NEPPIE

OCIE, OSIE

ONIE

RILLIE

SUDIE

TEMPIE

VALLIE

VERDIE

And then there were other short-form names not ending in the trendy –ie, but feeling like lopped-off pieces of longer names (though what exactly those longer names might be, it’s sometimes hard to guess).  Here, the most obscure:

ALLA

ARA

BENA

CINDA

EDA

EFFA

EOLA

ERA

ESTA

ETHA

ETTA

ILA

IOLA

IVA

LETTA

LINNA

LOMA

MANDA

NELLA

NETTA

NOLIA

OLA

OMA

ONA

ORILLA

OSA

RELLA

SINA

TELLA

TRESSA

ULA

VENA

ZOA

ZONA

Place names that might seem like 21st century creations were also used in 1880:

TEXAS

TENNESSEE

FLORIDA

INDIANA

ARIZONA

NEVADA

MISSOURI

And then there was a short list of word names:

GRACIA

LOVE

EASTER

BIRD

QUEEN

Perhaps the most intriguing category of lost names are the classic choices that have fallen into disuse.  Some of these are not exactly unknown – we’ve been promoting Araminta for years, for instance, and hipster mommy blogger Dooce’s daughter is named Leta – but most are quite obscure.  Among the most intriguing:

ALBINA – Third century martyr and feminine of Albinus, meaning white, bright.  A later saint Albinus was also called Aubin.

ALPHA – First letter of the Greek alphabet.

ARAMINTA and ARMINTA – Old English name fallen into disuse but was used in surprising number of forms, including Arminta, Araminta, and Mintie, in 1880.  Was also the birth name of abolitionist Harriet Tubman.

CELESTIA – Now rare feminine form of a late Roman name that means heavenly.  So much better than Nevaeh!

DELPHIA – Relating to the Greek city of Delphi, dwelling place of the prophetess.

DRUSILLA – Feminine form of a Roman family name and, in the New Testament, the wife of Felix.

ELECTA—Form of Electra from Greek mythology, with a tragic story.

ETNA – Classical Greek name for one of the world’s most active volcanoes.

FIDELIA – Feminine form of Latin name meaning faithful.

LETA – Mythological mother of Helen of Troy, also popular as Lida, Leota, and Lyda.

MAHALA – Old Testament name meaning “tender, affection.”

ORPHA – Form of the Old Testament Orpah, daughter-in-law of Naomi

PARTHENIA – Ancient Greek name, related to the Parthenon, meaning chaste maiden.

SOPHRONIA – More elaborate version of Sophia

SULA – Variation of Old Testament Shulamit, from the Song of Songs meaning peace.

VESTARoman goddess of the household, means pure in Latin.

And then there are the lost names that are just plain funny. R.I.P., your poor 1880 girls named:

CLASSIE

DICIE

DILLIE

ERIE

ICY

LOTTA

About the Author

Pamela Redmond

Pamela Redmond

Pamela Redmond is the cocreator and CEO of Nameberry and Baby Name DNA. The coauthor of ten groundbreaking books on names, Redmond is an internationally-recognized baby name expert, quoted and published widely in such media outlets as the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, The Today Show, CNN, and the BBC. She has written about baby names for The Daily Beast, The Huffington Post, and People.

Redmond is also a New York Times bestselling novelist whose books include Younger, the basis for the hit television show, and its sequel, Older. She has three new books in the works.