How popular is the baby name Cameron 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 Cameron.
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A baby boy born to Sandy and DeeJay Howell of North Carolina in July of 2017 was named Cameron Luuuke after Carolina Panthers players Cameron Newton (quarterback) and Luke Kuechly (linebacker).
Why did they put three u‘s in his middle name?
To “recognize the shout fans make every time the 2013 NFL Defensive Player of the year makes a big play.”
Here’s how Sandy explained the decision:
[DeeJay] was writing it on the birth certificate in the hospital. He was asking about the U’s. I said, ‘You can do two’ and said no more. He said, ‘What about three?’ I said whatever.
Cameron Luuuke’s five older siblings are named Dakoda, Jordan, Kayleigh, Aiden, and Carter.
Maryland’s Open Data website includes a small table of popular baby names. It’s based on data from 2011, so it’s a bit out of date, but it does include top-10 lists for several different racial/ethnic groups.
This is cool because New York City does the very same breakdown, and we happen to have the equivalent NYC baby name rankings (2011). So we ought to be able to compare and contrast the two sets of rankings, right?
Yeah, that’s what I thought…until I started looking more closely at Maryland’s data.
According to the SSA, these were the top 10 boy names in Maryland in 2011:
Mason
Jacob
Michael
Ethan
Ryan
William
Alexander
Noah
Daniel
Aiden (tied for 10th)
Jayden (tied for 10th)
But according to the state of Maryland, the top 10 boy names were quite different:
Rank
OVERALL
Asian & Pacific Isl.
Black
Hispanic
White
1
Aiden
Aiden
Jaiden
Christopher
Lucas
2
Christopher
Lucas
Aiden
Anthony
Mason
3
Jayden
Alexander
Christopher
John
Jackson
4
Mason
Muhammed
Cameron
Alexander
Jacob
5
Lucas
Ethan
Elijah
Daniel
John
6
Jacob
Nathan
Jeremy
Matthew
Aiden
7
Alexander
John
Michael
Brian
Alexander
8
Nathan
Andrew
Isaiah
Justin
Liam
9
Michael
Justin
Mason
Jaiden
William
10
Ethan
Jacob
Caleb
Kevin
Ryan
It isn’t totally implausible that Aiden and Jayden ranked 1st and 3rd in 2011, but Christopher in 2nd? Maybe if this were a dataset from thirty years ago, but not five years ago. The SSA indicates that Christopher ranked closer to 18th in the state that year.
And what’s with the two different spellings of Jayden/Jaiden?
Plus there are some sizable raw number discrepancies, such as:
Aiden: 588 babies (MD data) vs. 281 babies (SSA data for MD)
Christopher: 584 babies (MD data) vs. 256 babies (SSA data for MD)
Jayden: 498 babies (MD data) vs. 281 babies (SSA data for MD)
Mason: 463 babies (MD data) vs. 432 babies (SSA data for MD)
And now the girl names. According to the SSA, these were the top 10 girl names in Maryland in 2011:
Sophia
Olivia
Isabella
Madison
Ava
Emma
Abigail
Chloe
Emily
Elizabeth
According to the state of Maryland, though, the top 10 girl names in the state were these:
Rank
OVERALL
Asian & Pacific Isl.
Black
Hispanic
White
1
Sophia
Sophia
Chloe
Sophia
Sophia
2
Isabel
Chloe
London
Emily
Isabel
3
Chloe
Isabel
Layla
Allison
Abigail
4
Ava
Caitlin/Kate
Madison
Isabel
Olivia
5
Madison
Hannah
Kennedy
Ashley
Ava
6
Olivia
Olivia
Aaliyah
Angelina
Riley
7
Emily
Sara(h)
McKenzie
Natalie
Madison
8
McKenzie
Abigail
Zoe(y)
Genesis
Emily
9
Abigail
Emily
Payton
Gabrielle
McKenzie
10
Riley
Lillian/Lily
Taylor
Kimberly
Chloe
Not only does Isabel magically replace Isabella in the Maryland data, but McKenzie and Riley rank 8th and 10th — even though the SSA says they should be closer to 77th (!) and 28th.
Not to mention the raw number discrepancies, such as:
Sophia: 503 babies (MD data) vs. 367 babies (SSA data for MD)
McKenzie: 325 babies (MD data) vs. 71 babies (SSA data for MD)
Riley: 298 babies (MD data) vs. 118 babies (SSA data for MD)
Intriguing parallels between the MD data and the NYC data do exist. In both locations, Elijah and Isaiah were in the top 10 for African-American boys only, and London, Aaliyah, and Taylor were in the top 10 for African-American girls only.
But if we can’t trust the data, we can’t draw any meaningful conclusions.
Labels like “Caitlin/Kate,” “Sara(h),” “Zoe(y)” and “Lillian/Lily” suggest that variant names were combined here and there. I suspect this is also what happened with Isabel/Isabella, Sophia/Sofia, Aiden, Jayden, MacKenzie, Riley, and maybe even Christopher (perhaps Maryland merged all the “Chris-” names?). What are your thoughts on this?
How has the ratio of Biblical names to non-Biblical names changed over time (if at all) among the most popular baby names in the U.S.?
This question popped into my head recently, so I thought I’d take a look at the data. We’ll do boy names today and girl names tomorrow.
First, let’s set some parameters. For these posts, “Biblical” names are personal names (belonging to either humans or archangels) mentioned in the Bible, plus all derivatives of these names, plus any other name with a specifically Biblical origin (e.g., Jordan, Sharon, Genesis). The “most popular” names are the top 20, and “over time” is the span of a century.
For boy names, the ratio of Biblical names to non-Biblical names has basically flipped over the last 100 years. Here’s a visual — Biblical names are in the yellow cells, non-Biblical names are in the green cells, and a borderline name (which I counted as non-Biblical) is in the orange cell:
Popular boy names over time: Biblical (yellow) vs. non-Biblical. Click to enlarge.
Borderline name: Jerry (can be based on the Biblical name Jeremy/Jeremiah or on the non-Biblical names Jerome, Gerald, Gerard)
It felt strange putting an overtly Christian name like Christopher in the non-Biblical category, but it doesn’t appear anywhere in the Bible, so…that’s where it goes.
Here are the year-by-year tallies:
Year
Top 20 names given to…
# Biblical
# Non-Biblical
1914
40% of baby boys
5 (25%)
15 (75%)
1924
43% of baby boys
6 (30%)
14 (70%)
1934
43% of baby boys
7 (35%)
13 (65%)
1944
47% of baby boys
7 (35%)
13 (65%)
1954
46% of baby boys
11 (55%)
9 (45%)
1964
42% of baby boys
11 (55%)
9 (45%)
1974
38% of baby boys
11 (55%)
9 (45%)
1984
36% of baby boys
14 (70%)
6 (30%)
1994
27% of baby boys
14 (70%)
6 (30%)
2004
19% of baby boys
14 (70%)
6 (30%)
2014
14% of baby boys
14 (70%)
6 (30%)
But there’s a huge difference between sample sizes of 40% and 14%, so let’s also take a look at the 2014 top 100, which covers 42% of male births.
By my count, last year’s top 100 boy names were half Biblical, half non-Biblical:
The Commonwealth of Virginia, on the east coast of the United States, is the 12th most populous state in the nation.
Every year, Virginia welcomes approximately 100,000 babies.
What were the most popular names among these babies in 2013 specifically? Emma and William, according to the Virginia Department of Health’s Division of Health Statistics.
Here are Virginia’s top 15+ girl names and top 15 boy names of 2013:
Girl names
Emma
Olivia
Sophia
Ava
Abigail
Isabella
Charlotte
Emily
Madison
Elizabeth
Harper
Chloe
Mia
Hannah
Lillian
Amelia
Avery
(Why 17 names? According to my source, “There are some ties among the top 15 names by group, so some lists are longer.”)
Boy names
William
Noah
Liam
Mason
Jacob
Jackson
Ethan
Elijah
James
Michael
John
Aiden
Alexander
Benjamin
Gabriel
…But that’s not all!
Virginia (just like New York City, in the nearby state of New York) also breaks down its baby name rankings by race/ethnic group.
In 2013, the population of Virginia was roughly 69.6% White (58.0% non-Hispanic White), 22.5% Black, 12.8% Hispanic, 7.7% Asian, and 0.2% Native American. While the state did not release baby name data for Asians and Native Americans, it did release data for the three larger groups.
Here are the top 15+ girl names and 15+ boy names for Virginia’s White babies:
Girl names, White
Boy names, White
1. Emma 2. Olivia 3. Sophia 4. Abigail 5. Charlotte 6. Ava 7. Isabella 8. Emily 9. Madison 10. Harper 11. Elizabeth 12. Lillian 13. Avery 14. Hannah 15. Amelia 16. Addison
1. William 2. Liam 3. Jackson 4. James 5. Noah 6. Jacob 7. Mason 8. John 9. Benjamin 10. Ethan 11. Alexander 12. Luke 13. Lucas 14. Henry 15. Michael 16. Logan
Here are the top 15+ girl names and 15+ boy names for Virginia’s Black babies:
Girl names, Black
Boy names, Black
1. Aaliyah 2. London 3. Madison 4. Serenity 5. Ava 6. Nevaeh 7. Olivia 8. Skylar 9. Kennedy 10. Londyn 11. Trinity 12. Taylor 13. Faith 14. Makayla 15. Layla 16. Gabrielle 17. Mariah 18. Naomi 19. Arianna 20. Jordyn
1. Elijah 2. Jeremiah 3. Josiah 4. Jayden 5. Aiden 6. Christian 7. Noah 8. Isaiah 9. Mason 10. Michael 11. Cameron 12. Jordan 13. Ayden 14. Christopher 15. Caleb 16. Ethan
And, finally, here are the top 15+ girl names and 15+ boy names for Virginia’s Hispanic babies:
Girl names, Hispanic
Boy names, Hispanic
1. Genesis 2. Sophia 3. Isabella 4. Ashley 5. Mia 6. Emily 7. Sofia 8. Camila 9. Allison 10. Brianna 11. Kimberly 12. Amy 13. Samantha 14. Melanie 15. Victoria 16. Alexa 17. Ariana 18. Emma 19. Andrea 20. Nicole
1. Daniel 2. Christopher 3. Jacob 4. Anthony 5. David 6. Angel 7. Dylan 8. Mathew 9. Joshua 10. Michael 11. Jonathan 12. Liam 13. Gabriel 14. Sebastian 15. Kevin 16. Justin 17. Adrian 18. Christian 19. Lucas 20. Brandon
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