How popular is the baby name Jennie 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 Jennie.
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In the late 1850s, during the Pike’s Peak gold rush, several settlements were established in western Kansas Territory — near the foothills of the Rocky Mountains — at the confluence of the South Platte River and Cherry Creek.
One settlement (on the bank of Cherry Creek) was named Auraria after the Georgia mining town of Auraria, whose name was derived from the Latin word aurum, meaning “gold.”
Another settlement (on the opposite bank of Cherry Creek) was named Denver City in honor of Kansas Territorial Governor James W. Denver (in the hope that Gov. Denver would select the town as the county seat of Kansas Territory’s vast Arapahoe County).
Most sources agree that the first baby to arrive in the Cherry Creek settlements was the son of Scottish immigrant and “hard-drinking mountain man” William McGaa and his half-Oglala wife Jennie Adams. The baby boy was born in Auraria on March 8, 1859. His name? William Denver McGaa.
The second baby, a girl, was also born in Auraria. She was welcomed by settlers Henry and Rosa Humbell in July of 1859. Her name? Auraria Humbell.
John Denver Stout
The fourth baby — and the first to arrive in Denver City — was a baby boy born to settlers David and Mary Stout on August 30. He was named John Denver Stout.
Two months later, on October 25, a baby boy born in Denver City to settlers Samuel and Marinda Dolman was named Richard Denver Dolman.
Three of these families — the McGaas, the Humbells, and the Dolmans — were awarded plots of land for naming their newborns after the nascent settlements. (I’m not sure why the Stouts were left out.)
P.S. Denver City (after absorbing Auraria in late 1859) became part of the newly organized Colorado Territory in 1861. It was named territorial capital in 1867. Colorado joined the Union in 1876, and residents of the young state voted to make Denver the permanent capital in 1881.
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…
Long before the Dionne family of Ontario welcomed quintuplets in 1934, the Bushnell family of Chicago welcomed sextuplets — way back in 1866!
On September 8, 1866, James Bushnell and Jennie Bushnell (née Charlton) welcomed three boys and three girls — and all six babies were born alive, remarkably.
Here are their names (birth order unknown):
Lucy
Laberto
Norberto James (d. 1934)
Alberto James (d. 1940)
Alice Elizabeth (d. 1941)
Alincia Lucy (d. 1952)
While all six did survive birth, two (Lucy and Laberto) died during early childhood due to illness.
After losing their home in the Great Fire of 1871, James, Jennie, and the four surviving children moved to western New York in 1872.
Alincia with one of her brothers
According to the longest-lived sibling, Alincia, the four of them weren’t told that they’d been part of a set of six until they were teenagers.
If you had sextuplets, three boys and three girls, what would you name them?
More old-timey name snark! This short article was published in a now-defunct Indiana newspaper in 1880.
The programmes of the school commencements—and our own High School is no exception to the rule—are made silly by “Nannies,” “Libbies,” “Kitties,” “Mamies,” and other pet names. No woman who drops the sensible “y” and spells her name with an “ie” termination will ever get beyond mediocre in any sphere. A pet name is for the household only. How everybody would smile if the male graduates insisted upon the same silly style, and were put down on the programmes as “Johnnies,” “Sammies,” “Jimmies,” etc. The literary nom de plume of a female author indicates to some extent the force of her mind; and we know just as well what to expect from the Lillie Linwoods and Mattie Myrtles as we do from the George Eliots. The former clearly foreshadows gush and twaddle, the latter suggests an idea of strength and common sense. You can scarcely pen a more suggestive satire against the helpfulness and independence of woman than to wrap her up in such terms of daily coddling and childish endearment as the pet names of Jennie, Nannie, Hattie, Minnie, Margie, Nettie, Nellie, Allie, Addie, Lizzie, and a host of others. How it lessens the dignity of any woman to be called by a baby name. For instance, persistently to call the two great chieftains of woman’s advanced status, Lizzie Cady Stanton and Susie B. Anthony, would crush, at one stroke, the revolution they have so much at heart. Under such sweet persiflage it would sink into languid imbecility, and furnish fresh food for laughter.
If I spelled my name “Nancie,” I would definitely use that “mediocre in any sphere” sentence as my Twitter bio.
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