How popular is the baby name Zebulon 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 Zebulon.

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Popularity of the baby name Zebulon


Posts that mention the name Zebulon

Baby names inspired by explorers (Namestorm #15)

Reader “C in DC” recently e-mailed me with a great namestorm idea–explorers. She mentioned Zebulon Pike to start things off. Here are ten more explorers I’d add to the list:

Abel
The Tasmanian Devil has Dutch sailor Abel Tasman (1603 – 1659) to thank for his name. Tasman was the first European to reach both New Zealand and Tasmania (which was eventually named after him).

Gil
Portuguese sailors feared Africa’s dangerous Cape Bojador…until Gil Eannes became the first to sail beyond the Cape (in 1434) and return. His groundbreaking journey marked the beginning of European exploration of Africa and, later, India.

Henry
British explorer Henry Kelsey (1667 – 1724) was likely the first European to have seen the buffalo herds, grizzly bears and prairies of inland Canada.

Isabelle
Swiss-Algerian explorer Isabelle Eberhardt (1877 – 1904) converted to Islam and dressed as a man in order to live and travel in Northern Africa around the turn of the century.

Jedediah
American explorer Jedediah Smith (1798 – ca. 1831) was the first Eurpoean-American to reach California via the overland route.

John
Scottish doctor and surveyor John Rae (1813 – 1893) surveyed thousands of miles of previously unexplored territory while living in the Canadian Arctic. And he did it all on foot, with the help of his Inuit-inspired snowshoes.

Mary
English explorer Mary Kingsley (1862 – 1900) was the first European to visit remote parts of Gabon, on the west coast of Africa.

Ranulph
English explorer Ranulph Fiennes (b. 1944) was the first person to circumnavigate the Earth along its polar axis and the first person to cross Antarctica on foot. He also runs marathons (he once ran 7, on 7 continents, in 7 days, just months after suffering a heart attack) and searches for lost cities. Quite the overachiever.

Roald
Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen (1872 – 1928) was also an ambitious fellow. He was the first person to reach the South Pole, the first person to reach the North Pole, and the first person to traverse the Northwest Passage.

Robert
French explorer Robert de LaSalle (1643 – 1687) was the first European to travel the length of the Mississippi River. He named the entire Mississippi basin Louisiane (Louisiana) in honor of King Louis XIV.

What other explorers can you think of?

Sources: Explorers of North America, Wikipedia

Where did the baby name Shalako come from in 1970?

Movie poster for "Shalako" (1968)
Shalako” movie poster

The unusual name Shalako was a one-hit wonder in the U.S. baby name data in 1970:

  • 1972: unlisted
  • 1971: unlisted
  • 1970: 6 baby boys named Shalako [debut]
  • 1969: unlisted
  • 1968: unlisted

Where did it come from?

The movie Shalako, released toward the end of 1968. It was a Western starring Sean Connery as main character Moses Zebulon “Shalako” Carlin, a tracker and former cavalry officer. (Shalako’s love interest was played by Brigitte Bardot.)

In the story, set in New Mexico in 1880, Shalako had to rescue a group of European aristocrats that had decided to go hunting on reservation land and, as a result, gotten in trouble with the local Apaches.

The film was based on a 1962 novel by Louis L’Amour. Here’s how Shalako explained his unusual name in the book:

Name of the Zuni rain god. Seemed like every time I showed up in their country it rained, so they called me that for a joke.

For a time during the 1960s, L’Amour and others tried to build a working Old West town called Shalako in southwestern Colorado, but the town never materialized.

What are your thoughts on Shalako as a baby name?

Source: Shalako by Louis L’Amour – Internet Archive, Shalako (1968) – TCM.com