How popular is the baby name Elsie 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 Elsie.
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In late December, not long after a short stay in New Orleans, my husband and I took a road trip through several states. Along the way I spotted some interesting place-names, mostly in Utah:
Little America, Wyoming – named after a local hotel whose name was inspired by the “Little America” exploration base in Antarctica.
Jackpot, Nevada – a casino town cleverly named to attract business.
Pahranagat Valley, Nevada – named for the local Native American tribe. Theories about the meaning include: “watermelon,” “squash,” “people of the marshy spring,” “put their feet in the water.”
Hurricane, Utah – named by an early settler whose buggy-top was blown off by a gust of wind. Locals pronounce it hurrakin.
Browse, Utah – possibly named for a 1930s Forest Service research study of local plants used as food by browsing animals.
Kolob Canyons, Utah – named after LDS star/planet Kolob.
Kanarraville, Utah – named after Piute chief Canarrah (or Quanarrah).
Farr West, Utah – named after Mormon pioneers Lorin Farr and Chauncey West. It was also reminiscent of the name of an earlier Mormon town: Far West, Missouri.
Elsinore, Utah – named after Helsingør, Denmark (known as Elsinore in English).
Loa, Utah – named after Mauna Loa, the volcano in Hawaii.
Elsinore caught my eye because it seemed like a mashup of the names Elsie and Eleanor. Even though it’s never appeared in the SSA data, records suggest that several hundred people in the U.S. have been named Elsinore. (Here are the graves of various Elsinores buried in California, Florida, Pennsylvania, Washington, Minnesota, and, yes, Utah.) The usage might be attributable to Shakespeare, who set Hamlet in a castle in Elsinore.
Source: Carlson, Helen S. Nevada Place Names: A Geographical Dictionary. Reno: University of Nevada Press, 1974.
A few weeks ago, I got an email from a reader looking for lists of old-fashioned double names. She was aiming for names like Thelma Dean, Eula Mae, and Gaynell — names that would have sounded trendy in the early 1900s. She also mentioned that she’d started a list of her own.
So I began scouring the interwebs. I tracked down lists of old-fashioned names, and lists of double names…but I couldn’t find a decent list of double names that were also old-fashioned.
I loved the idea of such a list, though, so I suggested that we work together to create one. She generously sent me the pairings she’d collected so far, and I used several different records databases to find many more.
I restricted my search to names given to girls born in the U.S. from 1890 to 1930. I also stuck to double names that I found written as single names, because it’s very likely that these pairings were used together in real life (i.e., that they were true double names and not merely first-middle pairings).
Pairings that seemed too timeless, like Maria Mae and Julia Rose, were omitted. I also took out many of the pairings that feature now-trendy names — think Ella, Emma, and Lucy — because they just don’t sound old-fashioned anymore (though they would have a few decades ago).
The result isn’t exhaustive, but it’s a decent sampling of real-life, old-fashioned double names. I’ve organized them by second name, and I also added links to popularity graphs for names that were in the SSA data during the correct time period (early 1900s).
I spotted plenty of other combinations that just didn’t happen to be written as single names in the records, so here’s a handy dandy little table to cover some of the other existing combinations…
In the girls’ top 10, Ella replaced Chloe (now 11th).
In the boys’ top 10, Lucas, Henry and Charlie replaced Alexander (11th), Mason (14th) and Max (now 16th).
According to a survey of birth notices in The Warrnambool Standard, the top baby names in the Victorian city of Warrnambool were Georgia/Grace/Evelyn/Elsie (4-way tie) for girls and Lenny (!) for boys.
UPDATE, Jan. 2019: The Victoria website has since updated the 2017 data/rankings. The ordering is now slightly different on both sides and, notably, Chloe bumped Ella out of the top 10.
The baby name Marcheta wouldn’t have become trendy back in the 1920s if not for a newfangled invention: radio.
Marcheta debuted in the U.S. baby name data in 1923:
1927: 25 baby girls named Marcheta
1926: 41 baby girls named Marcheta
1925: 46 baby girls named Marcheta
1924: 57 baby girls named Marcheta
1923: 14 baby girls named Marcheta [debut]
1922: unlisted
1921: unlisted
One year later, usage peaked.
The obvious explanation is the song “Marcheta: A Love Song of Old Mexico” (1913) written by Victor Schertzinger. Except the song was published ten years too early. Also, it was a flop.
A decade later, though, the radio had been invented and the song was revived.
By the end of 1922, “Marcheta” was a hit. Millions of copies were sold in the early-to-mid 1920s, and various artists recorded the song, including Elsie Baker and Olive Kline in 1922.
Victor Schertzinger went on to become a successful motion picture director, but he never used “Marcheta” in one of his movies. In fact, I don’t believe the song was ever used in a movie.
But it had an impact on the movies, because in 1924 the otherwise rare name Marcheta was used in not once but twice as the name of a lead character in a film:
Marcheta, character played by Estelle Taylor in the movie Tiger Love
Marcheta, character played by Derelys Perdue in the movie Untamed Youth
Because of this, there’s no telling how much of Marcheta’s usage in 1924 was due to radio and how much was due to cinema.
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