How popular is the baby name Leonard 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 Leonard.

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 Leonard


Posts that mention the name Leonard

Baby name story: Jesse Roper

USS Roper
USS Roper

This has to be the craziest birth story I’ve ever heard.

It was early 1942. Joseph and Desanka Mohorovicic and their daughter Visna, 2, were moving from Yugoslavia (recently invaded by the Axis) to the United States.

The family had traveled together as far as Cape Town, South Africa, but were split up when Desanka was refused passage on a ship to the U.S., possibly because she was 7 months pregnant. So she and Visna stayed behind while Joseph went ahead to New York, where he was to work as an attaché of the Yugoslav Consulate.

Desanka and Visna embarked a month later on the U.S. steamship City of New York.

They were near the end of their voyage when, on March 29, about 40 miles east of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, the City of New York was hit by a torpedo. It was under attack by German submarine U 160. The ship fired back, but when a second torpedo hit it began to sink. Dozens of crewmen and passengers were killed.

The survivors crowded onto lifeboats. The ship’s doctor, Dr. Leonard Hudson Conly, wisely followed Desanka and Visna onto their lifeboat. (He fractured two ribs while boarding, though.)

That night, Desanka went into labor. Dr. Conley had no anesthesia to offer her (or use for himself) and few medical instruments to work with. The lifeboat was being tossed about by 15-to-20-foot waves. It was dark, it was cold, and everyone was soaked with seawater. And, of course, at least one enemy U-boat was nearby.

Despite all this, Desanka gave birth to a baby boy in the wee hours of March 30.

“I didn’t have to wash the baby,” Dr. Leonard Conly would later say. “The sea did that for me.”

The destroyer USS Roper soon arrived to rescue the survivors and transport them to Norfolk, Virginia. The baby was later named Jesse Roper Mohorovicic after the rescue vessel, which had been named in honor of naval officer Jesse M. Roper (1851-1901).

Here’s a photo of the Mohorovicic family, minus Joseph.

Sadly, Jesse Roper Mohorovicic passed away just a few years ago, in 2005. (He was buried at sea.) But a few months before he passed, a grandson was born. One of the baby’s middle names? Roper, just like grandpa.*

Sources:

  • “Baby Born in Lifeboat Named for Rescue Ship.” New York Times 12 April 1942: 13.
  • Battle of the Atlantic: Birth in a Boat.” Time 13 Apr. 1942.
  • Cressman, Robert. The Official Chronology of the U.S. Navy in World War II. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press, 2000.
  • Hickam, Homer H. Torpedo Junction: U-Boat War Off America’s East Coast, 1942. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press, 1996.
  • Moritz, Owen. “WWII ‘Lifeboat Baby’ Dies at 63.” New York Daily News 15 Aug. 2005.
  • “‘Place of Birth’ Question Stumps Parents of ‘Lifeboat Baby.'” Pittsburgh Press 1 May 1942: 24.
  • Sea burial for grown ‘Lifeboat Baby’
  • “Wounded Doctor Delivers Baby as Waves Toss Lifeboat.” Evening Independent [St. Petersburg, FL] 2 Apr. 1942: 3.

Image: The National Archives, via NOAA

*Update, 2/4/2020: I recently received an email from Jesse’s daughter, Caroline, who let me know that her son’s full name is Jesse Roper Rees. (His grandfather’s New York Daily News obituary had him listed as “Joseph Roper Mohorovic Rees.”) Thank you, Caroline!

Baby name story: Auden

On February 23, 1950, a pregnant woman from Connecticut was in New York City to hear the New York Philharmonic perform Leonard Bernstein’s Symphony No. 2, The Age of Anxiety, under the direction of Bernstein himself.

The symphony had been inspired by Wystan Hugh “W. H.” Auden’s Pulitzer Prize-winning poem “The Age of Anxiety” (1947).

As the woman rode home on the train that night, her labor pains began. She made it to the hospital just in time for the birth.

What did she name her baby girl? Auden.

Sources:

  • Dempsey, David. “In and Out of Books.” New York Times 2 Apr. 1950: 184.
  • Downes, Olin. “Bernstein Offers His Own Symphony.” New York Times 24 Feb. 1950: 26.

Reduplicated names: Asher Asher, Owen Owen

oystercatcher birds

I find it interesting that some people are given forenames that exactly match their surnames. A few historically significant examples include:

(Ford Madox Ford and Horst P. Horst don’t count. They were born Ford Hermann Hueffer and Horst Paul Albert Bohrmann.)

There are also many forename/surname sets out there that are partially reduplicated, such as:

  • Alastair McAllister, Australian harpsichord builder
  • Aleksandr Aleksandrov, Soviet cosmonaut
  • Anders Andersen, Norwegian politician
  • Antonis Antoniadis, Greek soccer player
  • Damiano Damiani, Italian film director
  • David Davidson, Canadian baseball player
  • Donagh MacDonagh, Irish writer
  • Donald MacDonald, Canadian politician
  • Dru Drury, British entomologist
  • Filip Filipovic (several people)
  • Fiodar Fiodarau, Soviet physicist
  • Friðrik Friðriksson, Icelandic film director

Have you ever met someone whose first name and last name were identical (or nearly so)? Do you like these sorts of names?

P.S. The name Thomas McKean Thompson McKennan (which belonged to a guy who served as U.S. Secretary of the Interior for a few weeks in 1850) is as close to a double double as I’ve ever seen!

Image: Adapted from Two Variable Oystercatchers standing close to each other (public domain)

[Last update: October 2024]