How popular is the baby name Edmund 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 Edmund.

The graph will take a few moments to load. (Don't worry, it shouldn't take 9 months!) If it's taking too long, try reloading the page.


Popularity of the baby name Edmund


Posts that mention the name Edmund

Baby name story: Becket Wilberforce

Conservative journalist Matt Lewis welcomed his second son on November 12.

The baby’s name? Becket Wilberforce Lewis, in honor of St. Thomas Becket (1118-1170) and British politician William Wilberforce (1759-1833).

“[M]y wife and I agreed on interesting names that were also significant. Since I’m a writer, a lot of people think Samuel Beckett, but the first name is after Thomas Becket.”

Lewis considers William Wilberforce is among his heroes. “He led the movement to abolish the slave trade in Great Britain, and is a prime example of a statesman who used the political process to bring about positive change in the world,” he said.

Becket’s older bother, Burke, was named for British politician Edmund Burke (1729-1797).

Lewis suggests in “3 political heroes as admirable as Lincoln” that, if he and his wife have a third son, he might be named Bonhoeffer after German theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer (1906-1945).

P.S. The surname Wilberforce can be traced back to the place name Wilberfoss, which is a village eight miles east of York. Wilberfoss is made up of the elements Wilberg, an Old English feminine name, and foss, Old English for “ditch.”

Sources:

Pilgrim surnames for Thanksgiving

Painting "Signing the Mayflower Compact 1620" (1899) by Jean Leon Gerome Ferris

Thanksgiving is almost here!

I’ve already posted about Pilgrim names and Pilgrim baby names, so this year let’s try Pilgrim surnames. Would any of them make good baby names?

Here are the 37 surnames of the 41 men who signed the Mayflower Compact:

  1. Alden (John Alden)
  2. Allerton (Isaac Allerton, John Allerton)
  3. Billington (John Billington)
  4. Bradford (William Bradford)
  5. Brewster (William Brewster)
  6. Britteridge (Richard Britteridge)
  7. Browne (Peter Browne)
  8. Carver (John Carver)
  9. Chilton (James Chilton)
  10. Clarke (Richard Clarke)
  11. Cooke (Francis Cooke)
  12. Crackstone (John Crackstone)
  13. Doty (Edward Doty)
  14. Eaton (Francis Eaton)
  15. English (Thomas English)
  16. Fletcher (Moses Fletcher)
  17. Fuller (Samuel Fuller, Edward Fuller)
  18. Gardiner (Richard Gardiner)
  19. Goodman (John Goodman)
  20. Hopkins (Stephen Hopkins)
  21. Howland (John Howland)
  22. Lester (Edward Lester)
  23. Margeson (Edmund Margeson)
  24. Martin (Christopher Martin)
  25. Mullins (William Mullins)
  26. Priest (Degory Priest)
  27. Rigsdale (John Rigsdale)
  28. Rogers (Thomas Rogers)
  29. Soule (George Soule)
  30. Standish (Myles Standish)
  31. Tilley (Edward Tilley, John Tilley)
  32. Tinker (Thomas Tinker)
  33. Turner (John Turner)
  34. Warren (Richard Warren)
  35. White (William White)
  36. Williams (Thomas Williams)
  37. Winslow (Edward Winslow, Gilbert Winslow)

Some aren’t too appropriate (I’m looking at you, Crackstone!) but I think many of the others — Martin, Warren, Brewster, Fletcher, Lester — would be great options for Thanksgiving Day babies.

Which of the above surnames would you be most likely to use as a first name?

Source: Mayflower Compact signatories – Wikipedia

More WWI names: Allenby, Joffre, Pershing, Tasker

French General Joseph Joffre (1852-1931)
Joseph Joffre

The highest-debuting baby names of 1918 were Foch and Marne, for French general Ferdinand Foch and the Second Battle of the Marne. But Foch and Marne weren’t the only WWI-related baby names to debut in the U.S. baby name data during the 1910s. Here are four more…

Allenby

  • 1920: unlisted
  • 1919: unlisted
  • 1918: 6 baby boys named Allenby [debut]
  • 1917: unlisted
  • 1916: unlisted

The name Allenby, which appeared in the baby name data only once, comes from British Field Marshal Edmund Allenby (1861-1936). He was given command of the Egyptian Expeditionary Force (EEF) in mid-1917.

Joffre

  • 1919: 7 baby boys named Joffre
  • 1918: 35 baby boys named Joffre
  • 1917: 37 baby boys named Joffre
  • 1916: 16 baby boys named Joffre
  • 1915: 14 baby boys named Joffre
  • 1914: 6 baby boys named Joffre [debut]
  • 1913: unlisted

The name Joffre, which debuted in 1914 and peaked in 1917, was inspired by French General Joseph Joffre (1852-1931). He was commander-in-chief of the French Army during World War I.

The Social Security Death Index (SSDI) tells me that two of those 1917 babies were named Joffre Pershing and Joffre Haig, and that another Joffre Pershing was born in 1918.

American General John Pershing (1860-1948)
John Pershing

Pershing

  • 1920: 28 baby boys named Pershing
  • 1919: 103 baby boys named Pershing [rank: 595th]
  • 1918: 295 baby boys named Pershing [rank: 334th]
  • 1917: 53 baby boys named Pershing [rank: 882nd]
  • 1916: unlisted
  • 1915: 10 baby boys named Pershing [debut]
  • 1914: unlisted

The name Pershing, which debuted in 1915 and peaked in 1918, was inspired by General John Pershing (1860-1948). He was the only person promoted to the highest rank in the U.S. Army — General of the Armies — during his lifetime (in 1919).

No doubt scores of other baby boys were named “John Pershing,” such as John Pershing Williams, born in August of 1917 to Mr. and Mrs. W. J. S. Williams of Scioto County, Ohio.

Tasker

  • 1920: unlisted
  • 1919: 8 baby boys named Tasker
  • 1918: 7 baby boys named Tasker [debut]
  • 1917: unlisted
  • 1916: unlisted

The name Tasker comes from General Tasker Bliss (1853-1930). He was the Chief of Staff of the U.S. Army from 1917 to 1918.

Not surprisingly, the WWI names above fell out of favor after the early 1920s. But the last three did reappear in the U.S. baby name data in the early ’40s, during WWII. Pershing returned in 1940, while Joffre and Tasker came back in 1942.

What are your thoughts on these names?

Source: “Namesake Son for General Pershing.” Portsmouth Times 26 Oct. 1917.

Woman dies climbing mountain she was named for (Nanda Devi)

Nanda Devi (in India)
Nanda Devi

In 1948, American mountaineer William “Willi” Unsoeld saw Nanda Devi — the second-highest mountain in India, and the 23rd-highest peak in the world — for the first time.

“I had a dream about Nanda Devi,” he later recalled. “I dreamed of having a daughter to name after the peak.”

And that’s exactly what happened. He married Jolene Bishoprick (who would later represent Washington state in Congress, incidentally) and together they had four children: Krag (boy), Regon (boy), Nanda Devi (girl, b. 1954) and Terres (girl).

The Nanda Devi peak was named for local Himalayan goddess Nanda Devi, whose name can be interpreted as either “goddess Nanda” or “joy goddess.” Nanda and devi are Hindi for “joy” and “goddess,” respectively.

William went on to become one of the first climbers to reach the top of Mount Everest via the peak’s western ridge, in May of 1963 — 10 years after Sir Edmund Hillary’s famous ascent. He lost nine toes during the climb.

In July of 1976, William, daughter Nanda (then 22) and several others set out to climb Nanda Devi via a new northwestern route.

[Nanda] felt almost mystical about the climb she was about to undertake. “I can’t describe it,” she said, “but there is something within me about this mountain ever since I was born.”

But two months after they started the trek, just 1,500 feet below the summit, Nanda died from an “abdominal ailment, complicated by high altitude.”

Her father buried her on the mountain. He later said: “She now lies an eternal part of her namesake.”

Sources:

  • Lochtefeld, James G. The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism: N-Z. New York: Rosen Publishing Group, 2001.
  • “Mountain claimed her life, but climbing fulfilled dream.” Spokesman-Review 21 Sept. 1976: 22.
  • “Named for Peak, She Dies in Conquer Try.” Daytona Beach Morning Journal 18 Sep. 1976: 1A+.
  • Sharma, K. K. “‘I Am Going to Die,’ Whispered Nanda Devi on the Mountain She Regarded as Her Own.” People 4 October 1976: 30.
  • Nanda Devi – Wikipedia

Image: Adapted from Mt. Nanda Devi at dusk by Sumod K Mohan under CC BY-SA 4.0.