How popular is the baby name Beatrice 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 Beatrice.

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Popularity of the baby name Beatrice


Posts that mention the name Beatrice

Babies named via radio in the 1920s

Antique cathedral radio

Since the 1990s, expectant parents have been using the internet to ask complete strangers for baby name suggestions.

Crowdsourcing via cutting-edge technology — seems thoroughly modern, doesn’t it? It’s been going on for a few decades now, sure, but it’s a distinctly “information age” sort of practice, right?

That’s what I would have said…before discovering that expectant parents were using cutting-edge technology to crowdsource for baby names over 80 years ago.

How?

Radio!

During the first years of the 20th century, radio was used by the military for two-way wireless communication. Around 1920, it began to be used for one-way communication to larger audiences. This was called “broadcasting” (as opposed to “narrowcasting”).

Before long, expectant parents began asking radio stations for help coming up with baby names.

Early radio wasn’t recorded, so there’s no telling how many babies were named via radio. Luckily, newspapers ran stories on at least a handful of these radio-named babies. (That’s how I learned about them.)

The first instances I know of occurred in early 1923. This is long before the founding of broadcast networks such as NBC (1926) and CBS (1927), which were radio-based before making the jump to television years later.

Here’s what I’ve found so far:

1923: Winifred Susan Beatrice

Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Coker of Atlanta welcomed a baby girl in February, 1923. Two months later, they wrote to local station WSB, owned by the Atlanta Journal, for help naming their daughter.

The station didn’t broadcast the request. Instead, station manager Lambdin Kay came up with “Winifred Susan Beatrice,” based on the call letters of the station.

1923: William Grady Moseley

Mr. and Mrs. George F. Pollock of Atlanta welcomed a baby boy in March, 1923. Two months later, they wrote to local station WGM, owned by the Atlanta Constitution, for help naming their son.

William’s name also wasn’t crowdsourced. The station came up with “William Grady Moseley,” based on the call letters of the station. (William was for the baby’s grandfather; Grady was for orator Henry W. Grady; Moseley was for station director Lass O. Moseley.)

1923: Jean…?

Ok, here’s our first real case of crowdsourcing.

R. R. Brown, pastor of the Omaha Gospel Tabernacle in Omaha, Nebraska, welcomed a baby girl on Saturday, April 21, 1923. He delivered a sermon by radio on Sunday, April 22. During the broadcast, he told listeners he’d “decided to let radio fans do the naming.”

The papers, reporting Brown’s call for baby names the following day, noted that “already he has received by telephone a number of suggestions. One of them was that he call her “Radioana.””

According to the 1930 Census, Brown’s three children were named Robert, Lois and Jean. Jean was born right around 1923.

I’m not sure whether her name came from a radio listener’s suggestion, though.

1926: Unknown

An unidentified couple wrote to radio station WOC in Davenport, Iowa, in October, 1926. They wanted radio listeners to help them name their baby girl.

The detail-deficient article didn’t reveal the outcome, but it did include a flippant flapper joke:

Wants Name From Fans article 1923

1927: Mary Lou

Proper crowdsourcing and a known name. Finally!

Lawrence and Ethel Webb Bartley of Whitesburg, Kentucky, welcomed a baby girl in January, 1927. Several weeks later, they wrote to a local radio station for help naming their daughter.

The request was broadcast. Listeners in 38 U.S. states and in Canada submitted more than 1,000 name suggestions, some of which were read on-air.

The Bartleys ended up naming their daughter Mary Lou.

In March, an op-ed writer commenting on the Bartley story praised the “innovation of appealing to radioland to name a new member of the family.” She went on to say, “We hope the custom of having radioland pick the baby’s name flourishes and spreads.”

[UPDATE, Feb. 2015: Was Mary Lou Bartley’s original first name Seroba?!]

1927: Robert Edward

Mr. Kenneth Smith of Des Moines, Iowa, welcomed a baby boy, his 8th child, in late 1927. He asked local radio station KSO for help naming his son.

He also offered “a fur robe to the radio listener who would suggest the best name.”

More than 200 names were suggested. The winning name, Robert Edward, was submitted by “Mrs. Thompson of Bedford.”

Baby Named By Radio Listeners

A prize? Some free advertising? Happened 84 years ago, but sounds utterly modern to me.

Sources:

  • “Baby Named by Radio Listeners.” Carroll Herald 11 Jan 1928: 9.
  • Rites are held for Mary Lou Bartley.” Mountain Eagle 19 Aug. 2009.
  • “Mrs. Beatrice C. Hale, ‘WSB Baby’ who was named by radio station.” Atlanta Journal-Constitution 3 Oct. 1985: D11.
  • “‘Old Reliable’ Christens Baby Via Radiophone.” Atlanta Constitution 15 May 1923: 6.
  • Pehkoff, Suzanne. “Naming the Baby.” Los Angeles Times 19 Mar. 1927: A4.
  • “‘Radioana’ Baby’s Name.” Spokane Daily Chronicle 23 Apr. 1923: 1.
  • “Radio Helps Name Baby.” Los Angeles Times 6 Mar. 1927: 2.
  • Radio Programming – Wikipedia
  • Ryan, Quin A. “Inside the Loud Speaker.” Chicago Tribune 6 Feb. 1927: D11.
  • “Wants Name from Fans.” Evening Independent [St. Petersburg] 11 Oct. 1926: 3-A.

How did Princess Beatrice get her name?

Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie in June, 2013
Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie

While they were married, Prince Andrew and Sarah “Fergie” Ferguson had two daughters. The first was named Beatrice (b. 1988). The second was named Eugenie (b. 1990).

Beatrice would have been Annabel if her grandmother hadn’t objected. “Her parents’ desire to name her Annabel was vetoed by Queen Elizabeth, aware that this was also the name of a night club favored by the Fergie Set.”

Annabel’s is a members-only restaurant/nightclub in London. A recent review at View London notes that “[i]t’s not as Sloaney as it used to be.”

And Eugenie’s name? You’re not pronouncing it correctly. It’s YOO-genny, said the princess in an interview several years ago. She explained, “Whenever we used to meet foreign people who were struggling with it, my mum and I would help them by saying, ‘It’s like Use Your Knees.’ But whatever. I am now used to every pronunciation.”

Probably doesn’t help that, right after Eugenie was born, Buckingham Palace “requested the name be pronounced “U-jay-nay,” with a French inflection.”

Which name do you prefer, Beatrice or Eugenie?

Sources:

  • Farrell, Mary H.J., Jonathan Cooper, Terry Smith, Rosemary Thorpe-Tracey. “Bringing Baby Home.” People 16 Apr. 1990: 55-57.
  • “Fergie is returning home to baby-oh, dear! Now what will press say?” Chicago Tribune 26 Oct. 1988: 6.
  • Greig, Geordie. “Princess Eugenie: Little Princess Sunshine.” Telegraph 4 Mar. 2008.

Image: Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie by Carfax2 under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Old names vs. new names in Plymouth, Mass.

In the comment section of last week’s post on old & new French names, Bridgett came up with a great idea: Why not do the same thing for a U.S. city?

I checked the online editions of 8 or 9 U.S. city newspapers. Some had birth announcements, others had obits/death notices, the rest had neither. So I gave up on cities, switched to towns, and soon found some useful information for Plymouth, Massachusetts:

Male Births Male Deaths Female Births Female Deaths
Aidan
Alexander
Calvin
Connor
Jayden
John
Levon
Oliver
Patrick
Souheil
William
Zachary
Albert
Alfred
Carl
David
James
Joseph
Joseph
Paul
Steven
Ashlynn
Brianna
Grace
Isobel
Ivy
Kealyn
Leila
Lila
Marlee
Molly
Alice
Barbara
Beatrice
Deanna
Elizabeth
Elsie
Karin
Lorraine
Marilyn
Mirandy
Miriam
Rose
Virginia
Virginia

I couldn’t list two of the babies — Skyler Reece and Riley Paige — because I’m not sure about the gender in either case. (I would guess they’re both female, but who knows.)

Also, I should mention that the average age of those listed in the death announcements is 78.

Now it’s your turn: Which set do you prefer, the “old” names or the “new” names?

Also, if you know of a city newspaper that publishes both birth and death announcements online, I’d appreciate it if you would shoot me an e-mail. Thanks!

“Golden Girl” names: Blanche & Bea, Rose & Rue

"The Golden Girls"
The Golden Girls

Old is new again the world of baby names, so lets take a look at the names of TV’s Golden Girls:

  • Dorothy, played by Beatrice “Bea” Arthur
  • Rose, played by Betty White
  • Blanche, played by (Eddi) Rue McClanahan
  • Sophia, played by Estelle Getty

Only three of the names above — Sophia, Rose and Beatrice — managed to make the top 1,000 in 2006. (They ranked 9th, 350th and 966th, respectively).

Are any of the others due for a comeback? What do you think?

Image: Screenshot of The Golden Girls