Someone Knows my Name

Unusual names from the 'Book of Negroes' Part 1. A list composed to let them know that their names live on and that we respect them as individuals not property. It would be an honour to name a child after one of these strong people.
  1. Absolom
    • Amoretta
      • Bacchus
        • Origin:

          Roman mythology name
        • Description:

          Only if you're hoping for your son to become a wine-besotted poet. To the ancient Romans, Bacchus was the god of agriculture, wine and fertility.
      • Betsey
        • Bristol
          • Origin:

            British place-name
          • Description:

            This name of a busy British port city -- as well as of several places in America -- has a brisk and bustling air. It will now--and for years to come--be identified as a (female) Sarah Palin name.
        • Brutus
          • Origin:

            Latin
          • Meaning:

            "heavy, dull"
          • Description:

            Brutus is the quintessential brute--far too close to the word brutal. And any child with this name would spend much of his life hearing "Et tu."
        • Brass
          • Casar
            • Cato
              • Origin:

                Latin
              • Meaning:

                "all-knowing"
              • Description:

                Cato conjures up images of ancient Roman statesmen and southern antebellum retainers; it could have revival potential, with its 'O' ending and the current interest in the names of Greek and Roman antiquity.
            • Charity
              • Origin:

                English word name
              • Meaning:

                "charity"
              • Description:

                Charity is one of the Big Three abstract virtue names, along with Hope and Faith, though far less widely used than the others. But as Faith, Grace and Hope grow more common, some parents are beginning to look at the more unusual three-syllable choices like Verity, Amity, Clarity and Charity, which sound much fresher and also have that pleasingly rhythmic 'y'-ending sound.
            • China
              • Origin:

                Place-name
              • Description:

                Long before the current place-name craze, a pair of the more daring pop singers of the Age of Aquarius picked this name for their daughters. Jefferson Airplane's Grace Slick used the conventional spelling, the Mamas and the Papas's Michelle Phillips went further afield with Chynna (of the group Wilson Phillips).
            • Cornelius
              • Origin:

                Latin
              • Meaning:

                "horn"
              • Description:

                Cornelius, the New Testament name of a third century Pope and saint, is one of those venerable Latin names on the edge of consideration, despite the corny nickname alert.
            • Carsy
              • Cazar
                • Ceasor
                  • Cuff
                    • Dempsey
                      • Origin:

                        Irish
                      • Meaning:

                        "proud, haughty"
                      • Description:

                        Spunky Irish surname that still has a pugnacious feel from its lingering association with one of boxing's greatest champs, Jack Dempsey. Many people may associate it more with Patrick Dempsey these days—McDreamy from TV's Grey's Anatomy.
                    • Dian
                      • Dinah
                        • Origin:

                          Hebrew
                        • Meaning:

                          "God will judge"
                        • Description:

                          As the song says, "Dinah, is there anyone finer?" Dinah is a charming, underused Old Testament name with a rich literary and musical resume.
                      • Dolly
                        • Origin:

                          English, diminutive of Dorothy
                        • Meaning:

                          "gift of God"
                        • Description:

                          Hello, Dolly! Okay, we couldn't resist, but be warned: Most people who meet your little Dolly won't be able to either. This nickname-name, rarely heard since whatever decade Dolly Parton was born, is singing a fashionable note again along with sisters Dottie and Dixie; it was chosen for one of their twin girls by Rebecca Romijn and Jerry O'Connell.