It’s easy to figure out which baby names appeared on all (or most) of the state-specific baby name lists for 2017. But what about the rare names that only made one or two state lists?
A total of 1,324 names appeared on just one state list, and a total of 1,198 names appeared on two state lists. (I analyzed boy names and girl names separately, though, so several of these names did show up on extra lists as the other gender.)
Here’s a selection of the baby names that appeared on just one state list last year:
- Neyland, 41 boys in Tennessee (out of 53 nation-wide)
- Roel, 23 boys in Texas (out of 50 nation-wide)
- Ariza, 22 girls in Arizona (out of 31 nation-wide)
- Marty, 21 boys in Ohio (out of 66 boys, and 13 girls, nation-wide)
- Venice, 20 girls and 5 boys in California (out of 44 and 12 nation-wide)
- Kinnick, 19 boys in Iowa (out of 29 nation-wide)
- Benuel, 17 boys in Pennsylvania (out of 26 nation-wide)
- Barbie, 16 girls in Pennsylvania (out of 29 nation-wide)
- Kainalu, 16 boys in Hawaii (out of 23 nation-wide)
- Mahina, 16 girls in Hawaii (out of 22 nation-wide)
- Taysom, 14 boys in Utah (out of 24 nation-wide)
- Hatcher, 10 boys in Alaska (out of 40 nation-wide)
- Talmage, 10 boys in Utah (out of 20 nation-wide)
- Atlee, 8 boys in Ohio (out of 25 boys and 32 girls nation-wide)
- Cruzito, 8 boys in New Mexico (out of 25 nation-wide)
- Nizhoni, 8 girls in Arizona (out of 21 nation-wide)
- California, 7 girls in California (out of 16 nation-wide)
- Griffey, 7 boys in Washington state (out of 21 nation-wide)
- Kodiak, 7 boys in California (out of 30 nation-wide)
- Rainier, 7 boys in Washington state (out of 24 nation-wide)
- Alabama, 5 girls in California (out of 16 nation-wide)
- Boomer, 5 boys in Texas (out of 33 nation-wide)
- Cleveland, 5 boys in Florida (out of 28 nation-wide)
- Crockett, 5 boys in Texas (out of 10 nation-wide)
- Ole, 5 boys in Minnesota (out of 21 nation-wide)
A lot of these have easy explanations (e.g., Neyland Stadium, Kinnick Stadium, Mount Rainier, Taysom Hill) or are logical in some other way (like “Ariza” in Arizona).
Two that I couldn’t figure out, though, were Marty in Ohio and Barbie in Pennsylvania. My assumption regarding Barbie is that it’s popular among the Amish. (Benuel too.) But I have no clue about Marty. Is it college sports…?
And here’s a selection of the baby names that showed up on two state lists in 2017:
- Hyrum, 36 boys in Utah and 15 in Idaho (out of 88 nation-wide)
- Ammon, 24 boys in Utah and 6 in Pennsylvania (out of 64 nation-wide)
- Fannie, 18 in Pennsylvania and 6 in New York (out of 45 nation-wide)
- Avenir, 11 boys in Washington state and 6 in California (out of 31 nation-wide)
- Reverie, 8 girls in California and 5 in Illinois (out of 26 nation-wide)
- Sunshine, 7 girls in Arizona and 7 in California (out of 55 nation-wide)
I was confused about Avenir a few years ago, but I’ve since found the answer: it’s the Russian form of the Biblical name Abner. Avenir has been popping up on West Coast state lists (WA, OR, CA) lately, which makes sense given the fact that several West Coast cities have relatively large Russian-American populations.
Have you had a chance to go over the state lists yet? If so, did you spot anything interesting?
Nizhoni appears to be a Navajo name. The Navajo Nation covers parts of Arizona, Utah, and New Mexico.
You’re right! The meaning is something along the lines of “beautiful,” “pretty,” “nice,” “good,” “clean,” etc. (I mentioned it back in this post.)
The Cincinnati Reds’ announcer is Marty Brennaman. Not sure that’s the correct explanation, but considering people name their kids after stadiums….
It’s a good guess! Better than anything I’ve come up with so far. Thanks Ellyn!
Ole is the Danish and Norwegian form of Olaf–lots of Norwegian heritage in Minnesota.
Hyrum was the name of an early Mormon leader.
Also, these are the extended state lists, yes? The only ones I seen on a top 100 are Kainalu and Mahina.
@Greta – Yes, these names came from the full-length lists. Here’s the link to the SSA page with the state-specific data.
Griffey is after Hall of Famer, Ken Griffey, Jr. He played for the Seattle Mariners during the time today’s parents were teens or kids. He was one of the big faces in baseball back in the day.