What gave the baby name Floella a boost in 1927?

Murder victim Floella McDonald of Arkansas.
Floella McDonald

The old-fashioned name Floella saw peak usage in the U.S. in 1927, and a disproportionate amount of that usage happened in the southern state of Arkansas:

  • 1929: 6 baby girls named Floella
  • 1928: 13 baby girls named Floella
    • 5 (38%) born in Arkansas
  • 1927: 26 baby girls named Floella
    • 7 (30%) born in Arkansas, 5 (19%) born in Kentucky
  • 1926: 9 baby girls named Floella
  • 1925: 10 baby girls named Floella
Graph of the usage of the baby name Floella in the U.S. since 1880
Usage of the baby name Floella

Why 1927? And why Arkansas?

The answer has to do with a young girl whose murder was part of the chain of events that led to the last lynching in Little Rock.

On April 12, 1927 — amid the devastating Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 — a 12-year-old white girl named Floella McDonald visited the public library (to check out Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch). That’s the last time Floella was seen alive.

On April 30, Floella’s body was discovered in the belfry of the First Presbyterian Church in Little Rock. The local papers described the crime scene in detail, even insinuating (without proof) that Floella had been raped.

The police rounded up several suspects — all of whom were black men — but the primary suspects were always the church’s janitor, Frank Dixon, and Frank’s teenage son Lonnie. Both men denied any involvement, and no evidence linked either one directly to the crime.

Lonnie Dixon (a “blue-eyed, brown-haired mulatto”) was interrogated for almost 24 hours straight. He wasn’t permitted to eat or sleep, and there was no defense lawyer present. The ordeal ended when he gave the police an oral confession.

The police relocated both Lonnie and his father to jails outside the city, which proved prescient. Several hours after word of the confession got out, “angry mobs of whites formed outside of the state penitentiary and city hall.” Notably, several thousand people gathered at each of the two locations.

On “May 2, an Arkansas Gazette headline summed up the previous day’s developments: “Negro Youth Confesses to Brutal Crime” and “Crowd Gathers To Lynch Young Negro.””

But the mob members, try as they might, were not able to figure out which jail was sheltering the Dixons.

So tension was still running high when, on the morning of May 4, a completely unrelated event happened: a black man named John Carter allegedly attacked a white woman and her teenage daughter “in a rural area just west of Little Rock.”

Posses of white men immediately began searching for Carter, who was captured at about 5 p.m. and promptly lynched. This was followed by rioting that continued until around 10 p.m., when the governor called the National Guard.

What happened to Lonnie Dixon? His trial was held on May 19th. “The all-white jury deliberated for seven minutes — approximately the time it took for all the members to sign the guilty verdict.” He was electrocuted on June 24 — his 18th birthday.

And what about Floella McDonald? We may never know who murdered her, or why. But her memory lives on via her influence on the U.S. baby name data.

Sources:

Baby name story: Cameron

Illustration of the COVID-19 virus
COVID-19 virus

Diana Crouch of Texas contracted COVID-19 pneumonia in August of 2021, when she was 18 weeks pregnant.

She was admitted to a hospital in Houston and placed on a ventilator. When her condition didn’t improve, she was moved to a life support machine. (Diana suffered “a heart attack, multiple seizures and a stroke on one particularly severe day in September.”)

In November, after gradual improvement, Diana’s condition “plateaued.” So her doctor, Cameron Dezfulian, performed a C-section on November 10. (The baby wasn’t due until January 9.)

Diana was finally released from the hospital on December 23.

She and her husband decided to name their baby boy Cameron Andrew Crouch — first name in honor of the doctor who they credit “with helping to save both Diana and Cameron’s lives.”

Sources: Pregnant woman who nearly died of COVID names baby after Texas doctor who treated her, Parents name baby boy after doctor who treated mom for COVID-19

Image: COVID-19 virus (CDC)

Where did the baby name Griezmann come from in 2016?

French soccer player Antoine Griezmann
Antoine Griezmann

The unusual name Griezmann debuted in the U.S. baby name data in 2016:

  • 2018: 11 baby boys named Griezmann
  • 2017: 11 baby boys named Griezmann
  • 2016: 6 baby boys named Griezmann [debut]
  • 2015: unlisted
  • 2014: unlisted

Where did it come from?

French soccer player Antoine Griezmann (pronounced an-twahn gree-ez-man).

Though he was born and raised in France, he has strong affiliations with several European countries: his father’s family came from Germany, his mother’s family from Portugal, and he “was brought up as a footballer in Spain” (from the age of 13 onward).

He has been playing professionally since 2009, but garnered a lot of attention in 2016 specifically while playing for Atlético Madrid. That year, he won two La Liga awards — for best player and fan favorite — and was nominated for both the Ballon d’Or and Best FIFA Men’s Player.

He was also chosen to play for France in the UEFA Euro 2016. Though France was defeated by Portugal in the final, Griezmann was named Player of the Tournament and won the Golden Boot (for most goals scored). He was later declared French Player of the Year.

Griezmann’s Germanic surname, originally spelled Griesmann, could be related to the Middle High German word griez, meaning “sand” (in reference to a person who lived in a sandy location), or the Middle Low German word gris, meaning “gray” (in reference to a gray-haired person).

What are your thoughts on Griezmann as a first name?

P.S. I don’t usually publish data-based posts on Fridays, but I felt compelled to publish this one today because all three of Griezmann’s children — Mia, Amaro, and Alba — were born on April 8th (in 2016, 2019, and 2021, respectively). His son was named after his maternal grandfather, Amaro Lopes, who played professional soccer in Portugal before immigrating to France in the 1950s.

Sources:

Image: Adapted from Antoine Griezmann – CdR – RM v ATL by DSanchez17 under CC BY 2.0.

Iowa septuplets: Kenneth, Alexis, Natalie, Kelsey…

kinderfest

I’ve posted about sextuplets and octuplets before, but never septuplets!

A set of seven — four boys and three girls — was born in Des Moines, Iowa, to Kenny and Bobbi McCaughey on November 19, 1997. The McCaughey septuplets are the world’s first surviving set of septuplets.

What are the names of all seven? Here are their firsts and middles:

  1. Kenneth Robert
  2. Alexis May
  3. Natalie Sue
  4. Kelsey Ann
  5. Nathan Roy
  6. Brandon James
  7. Joel Steven

The McCaugheys also have an older daughter named Mikayla Marie (b. 1996).

What are your thoughts on the names? If you were having a set of seven (same mix of genders), which names would you choose?

Sources: McCaughey septuplets – Wikipedia, Happy birthday x 7! McCaughey septuplets turn 23

Image: Ein Kinderfest (1868) by Ludwig Knaus