How popular is the baby name Gramaphone 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 Gramaphone.

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 Gramaphone


Posts that mention the name Gramaphone

Baby name story: Tara Gabriel Galaxy Gramaphone

John Paul Getty II and Talitha Pol on their wedding day in Rome (Dec. 1966)
John Paul Getty II and Talitha Pol

Most of us have heard of J. Paul Getty, who was one of the wealthiest people in America during his lifetime. But most of us have probably not heard that one of his grandchildren was named “Gramaphone” (a misspelling of gramophone).

This particular grandchild was the son of Eugene Paul Getty, who later went by John Paul Getty II, and his second wife, Dutch fashion model and socialite Talitha Pol. (They married in late 1966; you can see a corresponding uptick in the usage of the name Talitha the following year.)

The couple were the toast of Europe’s glamour-hippie set, jetting to exotic spots with the likes of Mick Jagger. “J. P. II’s whole young-adult life,” says [family friend Stuart] Evey, “was Marrakech and the Rolling Stones.”

To French fashion designer Yves Saint Laurent, the pair epitomized “the youthfulness of the sixties”:

Talitha and Paul Getty lying on a starlit terrace in Marrakesh, beautiful and damned, and a whole generation assembled as if for eternity where the curtain of the past seemed to lift before an extraordinary future.

In 1968, Paul and Talitha couple welcomed their only child, a son.

They named him Tara Gabriel Gramaphone Galaxy Getty.

In 1971, Talitha died of a heroin overdose. Her death occurred “in the 12-month period that also saw the deaths of Edie Sedgwick, Jimi Hendrix, Jim Morrison, and Janis Joplin.”

(Tragedy struck John Paul II’s family again in 1973 when his eldest son, John Paul III, was kidnapped by the Calabrian mafia.)

Tara Gabriel Galaxy Gramaphone Getty has long since dropped both “Gramaphone” and “Galaxy” from his full name.

Today, he and his wife Jessica live in South Africa on the Phinda Game Reserve. They have three kids named Orlando, Caspar, and Talitha.

Update, Aug. 16th: In 1976, Keith Richards (of The Rolling Stones) and model Anita Pallenberg welcomed a son they named Tara in honor of late friend (and Guinness heir) Tara Browne, who’d died in 1966. Paul and Talitha had been part of the same social set during the ’60s…was their son named with Tara Browne in mind as well?

Sources:

Image: Adapted from Wedding of John Paul Getty Jr. and Talitha Pol (Rome, 1966) (public domain)

Babies named for the Telegraph

telegraph key

Have you ever wanted to send a telegram?

This weekend is your last chance…if you’re in India.

The state-owned Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited (BSNL), which has been offering telegram service in India since 1855, will be discontinuing the service on July 15th.

This news reminded me that I’d come across people born in the U.S. named Telegraph and Telegram.

The electrical telegraph started being used commercially in this country in the mid-1840s, and that’s about the time we start seeing babies named Telegraph:

  • Telegraph Miggins, female, born about 1845 in Virginia
  • Telegraph Hill, male, born in 1849 in Massachusetts
  • Telegraph Goodman, male, born about 1856 in California
  • Telegraph “Telly” Bland, male, born in 1859 in California
  • Telegraph Greer, male, born about 1860 in Mississippi
  • Telegraph Price, female, born in 1871 in Alabama
  • Telegraph Messersmith, male, born in 1878 in Kentucky
  • Telegraph Morris, male, born about 1885 in Kentucky

So far, I’ve spotted only two Telegrams:

  • Telegram Tucker, male, born about 1868 in Georgia
  • Telegram Sherman Walton, male, born in 1877 in Ohio

And, in case you’re interested, here’s a baby named Gramaphone

Source: Kurup, Deepa. “Telegram dead, start mourning.” Hindu 14 Jun. 2013.

Image: Adapted from Morse Key by Lauren.mcalary under CC BY-SA 4.0.