How popular is the baby name Loleatta in the United States right now? How popular was it historically? Find out using the graph below! Plus, check out all the blog posts that mention the name Loleatta.
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These baby names are one-hit wonders in the U.S. baby name data. That is, they’ve only popped up once, ever, in the entire dataset of U.S. baby names (which accounts for all names given to at least 5 U.S. babies per year since 1880).
There are thousands of one-hit wonders in the dataset, but the names below have interesting stories behind their single appearance, so these are the one-hits I’m writing specific posts about. Just click on a name to read more.
As I discover (and write about) more one-hit wonders in the data, I’ll add the names/links to this page. In the meanwhile, do you have any favorite one-hit wonder baby names?
The rare name Loleatta has emerged just once in the U.S. baby name data, in the late 1970s:
1979: unlisted
1978: unlisted
1977: 5 baby girls named Loleatta [debut]
1976: unlisted
1975: unlisted
Where did it come from?
Disco singer Loleatta Holloway (whose first name is pronounced like “Lolita”). She’d been putting out music since the early ’70s, but her first big hits — “Dreamin’,” “Hit and Run,” and “Ripped Off” — each reached the #3 position on the U.S. dance charts during 1977.
She scored her first #1 dance hit a few years later with “Love Sensation” (1980), which was later memorably sampled on another #1 hit, “Good Vibrations” (1991) by Marky Mark and the Funky Bunch.
Bird Segle Mcguire (b. 1865) – U.S. Delegate and representative from Oklahoma.
Bland Ballard (b. 1761) – soldier and statesman.
Bluma Appel (b. 1919) – Canadian philanthropist.
Bolling Hall (b. 1767) – U.S. Representative from Georgia.
Bourke Blakemore Hickenlooper (b. 1896) – U.S. Senator from Iowa. (Previously the Governor of Iowa.)
Brazilla Carroll Reece (b. 1889) – U.S. Representative from Tennessee.
Bunnatine “Bunny” Greenhouse (b. circa 1944) – Halliburton whistleblower.
Burgoyne Diller (b. 1906) – abstract painter.
Burrhus Frederic “B.F.” Skinner (b. in 1904) – American psychologist, author and inventor.
Calouste Gulbenkian (b. 1869) – Armenian philanthropist.
Calvary Morris (b. 1798) – U.S. Representative from Ohio.
Camoralza Hagler Spahr (b. 1826) – Politician from Ohio.
Canvass White (b. 1790) – American civil engineer.
Carpoforo Mazzetti Tencalla (b. 1685) – Painter/sculptor from Switzerland.
Catulle Mendès (b. 1841) – French writer.
Cedella “Ciddy” Marley Booker (b. 1926) – mother of Bob Marley.
Chamintney Stovall Thomas (b. 1899) – Alabama Women’s Hall of Fame inductee.
Cherubusco Newton (b. 1848) – U.S. Representative from Louisiana.
Chesselden Ellis (b. 1808) – U.S. Representative from New York.
Chichester Bell (b. 1848) – Chemist from Ireland.
Chittenden Lyon (b. 1787) – U.S. Representative from Kentucky.
Chloethiel Woodard Smith (b. 1910) – architect and urban planner.
Ciallagalena “Lena” Cobb Williams (b. circa 1900) – from Faubourg Tremé (New Orleans).
Clairève Grandjouan (b. 1929) – Archaeologist from France.
Claricia (13th century) – German illuminator:
Cleanth Brooks (b. 1906) – Literary critic and Yale professor.
Collingwood Schreiber (b. 1831) – Canadian surveyor and engineer.
Comfort Sands (b. 1748) – merchant, banker and politician.
Cornthwaite Ommanney (b. 1736) – grandfather of Erasmus, below.
Cotton Tufts (b. 1734) – U.S. physician.
Coventry Patmore (b. 1823) – English poet and literary critic.
Craphonso Thorpe (b. 1983) – professional football player. (“Craphonso” is a combination of his father’s given names, Craig and Alphonso.)
Cree Summer Francks (b. 1969) – Actress and musician. (Her brother is Rainbow, below.)
Crispus Attucks (b. circa 1723) – first of five civilians killed in the Boston Massacre.
Cydnor Tompkins (b. 1810) – U.S. Representative from Ohio.
D-Cady Herrick (b. 1846) – politician from New York.
De La Mancha “Mancha” Bruggemeyer (b. 1865 in England) – Chicago judge.
Delarivier Manley (d. 1724) – (female) English novelist.
Delazon Smith (b. 1816) – Senator from Oregon.
deLesseps Story Morrison (b. 1912) – mayor of New Orleans, Louisiana from 1946 to 1961.
Delloreese Patricia Early (b. 1931) – American actress (stage name Della Reese).
De Sacia Mooers (b. 1888) – Silent film actress from Michigan.
Dingle Foot (b. 1905) – British barrister and politician. (His first name was his maternal grandmother’s maiden name.)
Diocletian “Dio” Lewis (b. 1823) – early exercise advocate, from New York. (He wrote about the importance of physical training for both sexes in The Atlantic in 1862.)
Donelson Caffery (b. 1835) – U.S. Senator from Louisiana.
Dunkinfield Henry Scott (b. 1854) – English paleobotanist who established the class Pteridospermeae.
Falconer Madan (b. 1851) – Librarian of the Bodleian Library of Oxford University. (His granddaughter was Venetia Burney, below.)
Felissa Rose Esposito (b. 1969) – Actress.
Feramorz Little (b. 1820) – mayor of Salt Lake City, Utah from 1876 to 1882.
Filippo “Lippo” Lippi (b. 1406) – Italian painter.
Fiorello Henry LaGuardia (b. 1882) – U.S. Representative from New York. (Later the Mayor of New York.)
Fitzedward Hall (b. 1825) – Sanskrit scholar and OED contributor.
Fitz-Greene Halleck (b. 1790) – poet.
Foxhall A. Parker (b. 1821) – U.S. Navy officer during the American Civil War. (His father was also a Foxhall, and he had a brother named Dangerfield.)
Ghillean Tolmie Prance (b. 1937) – British botanist and ecologist.
Ginery Twichell (b. 1811) – U.S. Representative from Massachusetts.
Glendy Burke – mayor of New Orleans, Louisiana in 1865. The Stephen Foster song Glendy Burke is about a steamboat that was probably named for the mayor.
Godlove Stein Orth (b. 1817) – U.S. Representative from Indiana.
Gouverneur Morris (b. 1752) – U.S. Senator from New York.
Goyn A. Sutton (b. 1816) – mayor of Springfield, Illinois from 1860 to 1864.
Grantzberg Hart (b. 1961) – musician.
Green Berry Raum (b. 1829) – U.S. Representative from Illinois.
Green Clay (b. 1757) – Kentucky politician.
Grlenntys Chief Kickingstallionsims (b. 1986) – Alabama State University basketball player.
Iley Lawson Hill (b. 1808) – from Ohio. One of the longest-living “Real Daughters” of the American Revolution, she died in 1913 at the age of 104.
Isagani R. Cruz (b. 1945) – Filipino writer.
Isambard Kingdom Brunel (b. 1806) – English engineer who created the Great Western Railway, along with a number of steamships, bridges and tunnels.
Ithamar Conkey Sloan (b. 1822) – U.S. Representative from Wisconsin.
Itimous Thaddeus Valentine (b. 1926) – U.S. Representative from North Carolina.
Itti Kinney Reno (b. 1862) – writer from Tennessee.
Jacobena Angliss (b. 1896) – Australian philanthropist.
Jacquemin (15th century) – brother of Jeanne d’Arc.
Jacquetta Hawkes (b. 1910) – British archaeologist and writer.
Ja Hu Stafford (b. 1834 in North Carolina) – early Arizona settler. His name was originally Jehu. He also went by “J. Hugh.”
Jascha Heifetz (b. 1901) – Lithuanian violinist.
Jawaharlal Nehru (b. 1889) – First Prime Minister of India. Served for 4 terms, from 1947 until 1964.
Jeduthun Wilcox (b. 1768) – U.S. Representative from New Hampshire.
Jeh (pronounced “Jay”) Charles Johnson (b. 1957) – politician from New York. His name “comes from a Liberian chief his grandfather met on a U.N. mission” according to the Washington Post.
Jettabee Ann Hopkins (b. 1905) – radio scriptwriter from Nebraska.
Jetur Rose Riggs (b. 1809) – U.S. Representative from New Jersey.
Jouett Shouse (b. 1879) – lawyer, newspaper publisher, and politician.
Kindred Jenkins Morris (b. 1819) – mayor of Nashville, Tennessee from 1869 to 1871.
Kirkpatrick Macmillan (b. 1813) – Scottish blacksmith who invented the pedal bicycle (circa 1840).
Kirtland Irving Perky (b. 1867) – U.S. Senator from Idaho.
Kittredge Haskins (b. 1836) – U.S. Representative from Vermont.
Kroum Pindoff (b. 1915) – Canadian philanthropist (originally from Bulgaria).
Lascelles Abercrombie (b.1881) – British poet and literary critic.
Le Gage Pratt (b. 1852) – U.S. Representative from New Jersey.
LeBreton Dorgenois – mayor of New Orleans, Louisiana in 1812.
Leonidas Lent Hamline (b. 1797) – U.S. philanthropist.
Lianella Carell (b. 1927) – Italian film actress.
Lieven Gevaert (b. 1868) – Belgian philanthropist.
Lilialyce Akers (b. 1927) – first female professor at the University of Louisville.
Loammi Baldwin (b. 1744) – Engineer, politician, and American Revolutionary War soldier.
Lodowicke Muggleton (b. 1609) – English religious thinker.
Lodusky Jerusha Taylor (b. 1856) – from Minnesota. (The name Lodusky is based on the name of the 18th-century opera Lodoïska.)
Sunshine Hillygus (b. circa 1976) – associate professor at Harvard.
Susybelle Wilkinson Lyons (b. 1923) – U.S. philanthropist.
Tapping Reeve (b. 1744) – law professor, jurist and writer. Opened the first law school in the United States.
Tazewell Ellett (b. 1856) – U.S. Representative from Virginia.
Tench Coxe (b. 1755) – U.S. Delegate from Pennsylvania.
Theophylact Bache (b. 1735) – merchant.
Thorowgood Smith (b. 1744) – mayor of Baltimore, Maryland from 1804 to 1808.
Tilghman Mayfield Tucker (b. 1802) – U.S. Representative from Mississippi. (Previously the Governor of Mississippi.)
Tomlinson Fort (b. 1787) – U.S. Representative from Georgia.
Torquil Norman (b. 1933) – English philanthropist.
Trevanion W. Hugo (b. 1849) – mayor of Duluth, Minnesota from 1900 to 1903.
Trevenen Huxley (b. 1889) – Huxley brother (born after Julian, but before Aldous).
Turbutt Wright (b. 1741) – U.S. Delegate from Maryland.
Twentyman Wood of Connecticut received U.S. patent 19,275 in 1858. (His name reminds me of Twentynine Palms, California.)
Tzovfit Grant (born in 1964) – Israeli actress and TV show host. (Her first name is sometimes spelled Tzufit.)
Uncas Aeneas Whitaker (b. 1900) – U.S. philanthropist.
Uz McMurtrie (b. 1884) – Politician from Indiana.
Venetia Phair (née Burney, born in England in 1919) – Suggested the name for the planet Pluto when she was 11 years old. (Her grandfather was Falconer Madan, above.)
Verplanck Colvin (b. 1847) – lawyer, author and topographical engineer.
Verrazzani C. Bratton, Sr. (b. 1860) – Arkansas judge.
Vespasian Warner (b. 1842) – U.S. Representative from Illinois.
Victory Birdseye (b. 1782) – U.S. Representative from New York.
Volckert Petrus Douw (b. 1720) – mayor of Albany, New York from 1761 to 1770.
Voltairine de Cleyre (b. 1866) – Anarchist and feminist.
Waddy Thompson (b. 1798) – U.S. Representative from South Carolina.
Wallingford Constantine Riegger (b. 1885) – American composer.
Wambly Bald (b. 1902) – U.S. writer/columnist.
Waveney Bicker Caarten (b. 1902) – (female) English playwright.
Wealthy Babcock (b. 1895) – professor at the University of Kansas.
Wellington Webb (b. 1941) – mayor of Denver, Colorado from 1991 to 2003.
Wentworth Miller (b. 1972) – American actor.
Whitehead Hicks (b. 1728) – mayor of New York City, New York from 1766 to 1776.
Whitemarsh B. Seabrook (b. 1793) – South Carolina politician.
Wigbolt Ripperda (b. circa 1535) – Governor of Haarlem (in the Netherlands) while the city was under siege by the Spanish army during the Eighty Years’ War.
Wilmot Redd (d. 1692) – one of the (female) victims of the Salem Witch Trials of 1692.
Wingfield Bullock (d. 1821) – U.S. Representative from Kentucky.
Wyke Bayliss (b. 1835) – British painter.
Wynkyn de Worde (d. 1534) – French printer. (The surname refers to a location in France, not words on the page, unfortunately.)
Xenophon P. Huddy (b. 1876) – American lawyer. An early specialist in automobile law.
Xenophon Pierce Wilfley (b. 1871) – U.S. senator from Missouri.
Xiuhtezcatl (pronounced shu-tez-caht) Martinez (b. circa 2000) – Environmental activist.
Yellow Light Breen (born in the 1970s) – lawyer and senior VP of Bangor Savings Bank.
Zackquill Morgan (18th cen.) – founder of Morgantown, West Virginia. Son of Morgan Morgan.
Zadock Pratt (b. 1790) – U.S. Representative from New York.
Zealous Tower (b. 1819) – American soldier and civil engineer.
Zell Bryan Miller (b. 1932) – Senator from Georgia. (Previously the Governor of Georgia.)
Have you encountered any unusual or rare names lately? (In the phone book? In the paper? On TV?)
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