How popular is the baby name Edith 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 Edith.
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The digital newspaper Berkeleyside recently published an article about real-life baby names inspired by various locations within (or near) the California city of Berkeley. The article mentioned the following names:
Ada (for Ada Street)
Addison (for Addison Street)
Adeline (for Adeline Street)
Ashby (for Ashby Avenue)
Bay (for San Francisco Bay)
Berkeley
Cedar (for Cedar Street)
Edith (for Edith Street)
Ellis (for Ellis Street)
Linden (for Linden Avenue)
Parker (for Parker Street)
Rose (for Rose Street)
Sibley (for Sibley Volcanic Regional Preserve, in Oakland)
Tilden (for Charles Lee Tilden Regional Park)
Equally interesting, though, was the inclusion of Berkeley’s top ten baby names overall “between 2023 and 2024” (which I’m assuming means 2023 and 2024 combined), according to data from the City of Berkeley’s Office of Vital Statistics. The names were ordered alphabetically:
Angel
Dylan
Julian
Liam
Luna
Mateo
Mia
Noah
Oliver
Zoe
I’ve never posted rankings for the city of Berkeley before, but I regularly post rankings for the nearby county of Sonoma — here’s 2023, and here’s 2024.
On September 14, 1901, U.S. Vice President Theodore Roosevelt ascended to the presidency following the assassination of William McKinley.
Days later, he moved into the White House with his wife, Edith, and their six children: Alice, Theodore III, Kermit, Ethel, Archibald, and Quentin.
Seventeen-year-old Alice — the only child born to Roosevelt’s late first wife — was intelligent and photogenic, but also spoiled and rebellious. Dubbed “Princess Alice” by the press, she was in the headlines nearly as often as her father was during his presidency. Her antics included smoking cigarettes in public, driving a car without a chaperone, sneaking alcohol into dry parties, attending (and betting on) horse races, and carrying a pet garter snake (named Emily Spinach) in her purse.
Her father was quoted as saying, “I can be President of the United States, or I can attend to Alice. I can’t do both!”
Three events drew particular attention to Alice:
Her debutante ball, which was held in the White House on January 3, 1902.
Her travels through Asia, from July to October, 1905. (She accompanied Secretary of War William Howard Taft on a diplomatic trip that featured stops in in Hawaii, Japan, the Philippines, Hong Kong, China, and Korea.)
Her wedding to Ohio Congressman Nicholas Longworth, which was held in the White House on February 17, 1906.
Alice Roosevelt (in 1906)
Among the things named in honor of Alice were a color (Alice Blue), several songs (e.g., “Alice Roosevelt March“), and hundreds of babies:
Hastings, Catherine M. “Edith Kermit Roosevelt: First Lady, First Mommy.” Inventing a Voice: The Rhetoric of American First Ladies of the Twentieth Century, edited by Molly Meijer Wertheimer, Rowman & Littlefield, 2004, pp. 45-57.
In the mid-20th century, Alvin Joseph Miller and Lucille Rose Miller (née Kahnke) of Waseca, Minnesota, had 22 children — 15 girls and 7 boys.
Here are the names of all 22 siblings:
Ramona Mary (born in 1940), who became a Franciscan nun
Alvin Joseph, Jr. (b. 1942)
Rose Ann (b. 1943)
Kathleen Edith (b. 1945)
Robert Vincent (b. 1946)
Patricia Jean (b. 1947)
Mary Lucille (b. 1948), nicknamed “Marylu”
Diane Margaret (b. 1949)
John Charles (b. 1950)
Janet Irene (b. 1951)
Linda Louise (b. 1953)
Virginia Therese (b. 1954)
Helen Rita (b. 1955), who wrote a book about growing up in a large family
Arthur Lawrence (b. 1956)
Dolores Maria (b. 1957)
Martin Peter (b. 1959)
Pauline Carmel (b. 1960)
Alice Callista (b. 1961)
Angela Mary (b. 1962)
Marcia Marie (b. 1963)
Gregory Eugene (b. 1964)
Damien Francis (b. 1966)
Eight of the children had been born by April of 1950, when the Miller family was interviewed for the U.S. Census:
The Miller family (1950 U.S. Census)
Alvin and Lucille raised their children on a 300-acre farm that included a seven-bedroom farmhouse. Here’s how Diane (#8) described her childhood:
I remember a lot of rides in the wheelbarrow from the granary to the barn. I remember a lot of grinding feed, a lot of egg washing and packing, a lot of sitting by the wood stove in the basement, singing songs as we candled eggs.
Which of the names above do you like most?
P.S. Thank you to Destiny for letting me know about the Miller family a few months ago! (Destiny also told me about the Jones family of West Virginia.)
Last year, Statistics Sweden ominously announced that it would “stop producing name statistics.”
It neglected to mention that the country’s baby name data would continue coming out every year — that the names were simply going to be handled by a different government agency (the Swedish Tax Agency) going forward.
I wanted to be annoyed about this deception, but my annoyance evaporated after I learned that the Swedish Tax Agency had released all of the country’s 2023 baby name data — meaning that we could finally check out Sweden’s rare and unique names (yay!).
So, without further ado, let’s take a look…
Sweden welcomed 100,051 babies in 2023. What were the most popular names among these babies? Vera and Noah.
Here are Sweden’s top 50 girl names and top 50 boy names of 2023:
The top names of 2022, Astrid and William, dropped to ninth place and third place, respectively.
The boys’ top 100 included Ture (53rd), Vidar (55th), Loke (71st), and Bill (97th).
The girls’ top 100 included Tuva (66th), Stina (75th), Lo (78th), and Eira (81st).
Farther down on the girls’ list I spotted Madicken, which was given to 15 babies last year. Swedish author Astrid Lindgren featured a fictional 7-year-old girl named Margareta “Madicken” Engström in several of her children’s books. (Lindgren had named the character after a childhood friend, Anne-Marie, whose nickname was Madicken.)
And what about the names at the other end of the spectrum? Here’s a sampling of the more than 8,000 names that were bestowed just once in Sweden last year:
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