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Popular baby names, state by state — 15 Comments

  1. and there i thought you would use the man calling 911 on his missing jello to add irrelevence…

  2. I have to admit that I don’t quite get the trend on girls’ names – what, are parents flipping through English fiction of the 1800s? There weren’t two girls named Emma, Sophia, Isabella, Olivia or Ava combined during my entire (Gen-X era) K-12 years – and if they were, we’d have wondered why they got such icky old-fashioned names. What’s up next, Gladys, Mildred and Edna?

  3. My most recent grand daughter is named Cora. The little girl next door is named Gwendolyn, and there is a Martha and a Margaret just down the block. Concerning boys we have a Jonah, a Nathan, a Julian, and an Anthony in the neighborhood. These are far better names than Brooklyn, Dakota, Kinasha, T’Char, and all the rest, including Moon Unit.

  4. My son and his wife wanted to name their daughter–approaching two–something that nobody else would use.
    It’s “Laura”.
    I think they’re good.

  5. My 3 nephews (ages 4, 3 and 3) are named Ethan, Alexander, and Benjamin. Alexander was almost Jacob, but I asked my pagan sister when she became enthralled with the Old Testament and that ended that name.

  6. My son and daughter (4 years old) are Maximilian ( family name on SWMBO’s side) and Stella ( just a pretty name, in my opinion).

    But, there are three boys in their class ( pre-k) named Jayden…

    I don’t understand the blending of two names into one. But to each his own.

  7. I can see the NY/NJ axis for Alexander, but isn’t CO the same as the northern plains/mountains? Liam? DE looks like another Alexander to me.

  8. My ex hated her name, the to her, pretense and formality of Catherine Victoria. I liked it and think its the person who defines the name.

    But in the 50’s & 60’s no one was familiar with my spelling of Jeffrey as Geoffrey, which led to near constant butchering of my name’s pronunciation. In some ways, America was less sophisticated than it is today.

    Given all of this, we were particularly sensitive to providing our daughter with a name chosen for being a bit unusual but readily accepted. We wanted to combine uniqueness with familiarity. We bought baby name books and had numerous discussions about it. In 1984, some names were rare including the one we choose. It was near the bottom in popularity according to the baby books.

    Our daughter was born in Jan of 85 and we were stunned to find that within weeks and months of her birth, the name Jessica had apparently gone from rare to in the top five, literally overnight. My daughter knows lots of Jessica’s, prior to her birth neither I nor my ex had ever met even one.

    Given this and the maps above I’d say there’s something going on with names, kind of like fads, a kind of mass convergence but how it works is a mystery.

  9. raf:

    Brain glitch; I meant Nevada rather than Colorado (will fix). Couldn’t even see Delaware (note to self; put on reading glasses).

  10. NJ and NY are Michael, not Alexander. NV is brown, they are purple. It’s close in color tone, but not the same.

    I always think of Mason Williams when I hear “Mason”, too. I heard of him through Mannheim Steamroller.

    I’m just glad that Taylor isn’t the top for girls. So… stupid. I can’t stand it when parents gender bend a name.

  11. Ethan is another old name that seems to be making a comeback. I tend to think of Revolutionary War era people being named Ethan (Ethan Allen), and of course there was a book named Ethan Frome from about 100 years ago.

    Where in the world did Liam come from?

  12. Tesh:

    Those states all look the same color on my computer, but I defer to your more discriminatory sense. I’m not going to change the post again, though, because I really can’t tell which color is which, although I believe you’re correct.

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