How popular is the baby name Christmas in the United States right now? How popular was it historically? Use the popularity graph and data table below to find out! Plus, see all the blog posts that mention the name Christmas.

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Popularity of the baby name Christmas


Posts that mention the name Christmas

Holiday baby name: Christmas Carol

Christmas tree decorations

We’ve found people named Christmas Eve, Merry Christmas, and Christmas Day…what about Christmas Carol? Are there any Christmas Carols out there?

Yes, I’ve found a couple dozen people named “Christmas Carol.” Some examples:

  • Christmas Carol Porter (male) was born on December 24, 1872, in Iowa.
  • Christmas Carol Haley (male) was born on December 25, 1891, in Kentucky.
  • Christmas Carol Marshall (female) was born on December 25, 1894, in Indiana.
  • Christmas Carol Smith (female) was born on December 25, 1899, in Colorado.
  • Christmas Carol Miller (female) was born on December 25, 1902, in Indiana.
  • Christmas Carol Adams (female) was born on December 25, 1908, in Utah.

I’ve also come across a handful of people with the surname Carroll who have the first name Christmas.

Image: Adapted from Bellagio Christmas tree by Bert Kaufmann under CC BY-SA 2.0.

Holiday baby name: Christmas Day

Christmas tree decorations

Yesterday I listed some people named Christmas Eve. Have there also been people named Christmas Day?

Yup, dozens.

The oldest I’ve spotted is Christmas Day (male) who was christened in March of 1659 in Berkshire, England.

The next-oldest are from the 1700s:

  • Christmas Day (male) christened on June 12, 1711, in London, England
  • Christmas Day (male) christened on December 27, 1762, in Suffolk, England

And there are a bunch in the 1800s, including the following:

  • Samuel Christmas Day (male) born on November 9, 1809 (and christened on December 24, 1809) in London, England
  • Christmas Day Godfrey (male) christened on January 3, 1817, in Norfolk, England
  • William Christmas Day (male) christened December 28, 1820, in Suffolk, England
  • Anna Christmas Day Dye (female) christened on November 11, 1837, in Norfolk, England
  • Christmas Day Jones (male) born circa 1850 in Wales
  • Christmas Day (male) born in December, 1876, in Ohio
  • John Christmas Day (male) born circa 1878 in New Zealand
  • Christmas Day Wagstaff, christened on January 27, 1884, in Essex, England

I haven’t seen anyone named Christmas Day since 1900, though.

[More holiday baby names: Merry Christmas, Christmas Eve, Christmas Carol, Christmas Tree, Happy New Year]

Image: Adapted from Bellagio Christmas tree by Bert Kaufmann under CC BY-SA 2.0.

Holiday baby name: Merry Christmas

Christmas tree decorations

Conrad and Nellie Miller built Santa Claus House in North Pole, Alaska, in the early 1950s. It’s now “one of the top attractions in Interior Alaska,” according to the website.

Con and Nellie also had three children, the third of which was a daughter born in 1961. She was named Merry Christmas Miller.

A name like “Merry Christmas” might have made sense for the proprietors of Santa Clause House, but what about for the rest of us? Have any other parents named their children “Merry Christmas”?

Yup.

Merry Christmas Miller is one of only about 40 people that I’ve found so far with the first and middle names Merry Christmas.

Another is Merry Christmas Easter, 1918-2008, of California.

I’ve also discovered about a dozen people with the first and last names Merry Christmas.

Many — though not all — of these Merry Christmases were females born on December 25, just like Merry Christmas Miller.

[More holiday baby names: Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, Christmas Carol, Christmas Tree, Happy New Year]

Source: Williams, Verne. “Santa not in red at $1.50 a letter.” Miami News 29 Nov. 1976: 1A.

Image: Adapted from Bellagio Christmas tree by Bert Kaufmann under CC BY-SA 2.0.

Holiday baby name: Christmas Eve

Christmas tree decorations

Have any babies ever been named Christmas Eve?

Yup. So far, I’ve found over a dozen.

The earliest two were both born in Norfolk, England, in the 1700s:

  • Christmas Eve Steward, female, baptized on December 28, 1777
  • Christmas Eve Hayes, female, born on December 24, 1793

The next three were born in the 1800s:

  • Christmas Eve, female, christened on January 7, 1838, in Norfolk, England
  • Christmas Eve Flourney, male, born on December 24, 1871, in Texas
  • Alfred Christmas Eve, male, born circa 1877 in Lancashire, England

And the rest are from the 1900s:

  • Christmas Eve Fouts, female, born on December 24, 1901, in Indiana
  • Jonathan Christmas Eve, male, born circa 1903 in Essex, England
  • Christmas Eve Paul, born on 24 December 14, 1962, in North Carolina
  • Christmas Eve Holley, female, born on August 12, 1979, in California
  • Christmas Eve Hall, female, born on December 24, 1984, in Texas
  • Christmas Eve Morgan, female, born on December 24, 1984, in Texas
  • Christmas Eve Gruber, female, born on December 24, 1988, in California
  • Christmas Eve Heywood, female, married in 1993 in Nevada
  • Karen Christmas Eve Wiggins, female, married in 1999 in Florida

Only one of the above was definitively not born on Christmas Eve. I think her August 12 birth date makes a conception date of Christmas Eve plausible. Either that or her surname, Holley, sounds like “holly” and that inspired the Christmas theme.

[More holiday baby names: Merry Christmas, Christmas Day, Christmas Carol, Christmas Tree, Happy New Year]

Image: Adapted from Bellagio Christmas tree by Bert Kaufmann under CC BY-SA 2.0.