How popular is the baby name Nehemiah 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 Nehemiah.

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Popularity of the baby name Nehemiah


Posts that mention the name Nehemiah

Baby boy almost given 26 alphabetical names

In late 1886, a farmer from Buckingham named Jenkins tried to have his newborn son christened with 26 alphabetical given names:

Abel Benjamin Caleb Daniel Ezra Felix Gabriel Haggai Isaac Jacob Kish Levi Manoah Nehemiah Obadiah Peter Quartus Rechab Samuel Tobiah Uzziel Variah Word Xystus Yariah Zechariah

“[O]nly with the greatest difficulty could the clergyman dissuade the farmer from laying such an incubus upon it, and get him to content himself with the first and last of the names proposed.”

(The clergyman who baptized Ann Bertha Cecelia Diana Emily Fanny Gertrude Hypatia Inez Jane Kate Louise Maud Nora Ophelia Quince Rebecca Starkey Tereza Ulysis Venus Winifred Xenophon Yetty Zeus Pepper must not have minded as much.)

Of the 26 boy names proposed by farmer Jenkins, which do you like best?

Source: “River Reports.” The Anglers’ Journal 13 Nov. 1886.

Ono Titchiner’s curious name

Ono Titchiner was born in south London the late 1730s. He became a carpenter, married a woman named Sarah in 1764, had several children, and passed away in 1799. He was buried somewhere on the grounds of St. Giles’ Churchyard in Camberwell.

Ono’s headstone was intact at least until the mid-1880s, when, according to one source, it could be “plainly read from the public footpath which crosses the churchyard.” (I’m not sure if it’s still there.)

Nothing was written about Ono’s curious name while he was alive, but plenty has been written about it since.

The earliest explanation for “Ono” I could find was in the 1875 book Ye Parish of Camberwell, in which a footnote explains:

Mr. Ono Titchener came by his Christian name in rather a peculiar way. When taken to be christened, the clergyman was about to make a mistake in his name, and his sponsors were proceeding to put the Rev. gentleman right, by remarking, leisurely, “Oh, no.” — “Ono,” remarked the too impetuous parson, “I baptize thee in the name of the Father,” &c.

The story was eventually picked up by the papers. Over the next few decades, it ended up traveling all over the world.

Here’s one version, published in 1885 in a New Zealand newspaper:

With reference to a note upon the subject of curious names that appeared in the St James’ Gazette recently, a correspondent writes:— Possibly there is no stranger baptismal name than one which may be seen in Camberwell churchyard on an old tombstone which is sacred to the memory of a certain Mr Titchener. There is a tradition, and I believe a well-founded one, to the effect that, at the christening of Mr Titchener, the god-parents were unable to agree upon a name for the child. One suggested one name; and another exclaimed, “O no!” and suggested another; and this kind of thing went on for so long that at last the officiating clergyman, declaring that in spite of themselves the sponsors had come to a unanimous decision, baptized the victim Ono.

Here’s another version, published in 1900 in a New York newspaper:

Ono Titchiner, of Peckham, was named under the following circumstances: On arriving at the church his name was not settled upon, and when the clergyman said: “Name this child,” one of the friends said “John,” and another said: “Oh, no,” meaning not John; and as no one else spoke the clergyman thought that was his named and baptized him Ono.

And here’s another, published in 1909 in a Utah newspaper:

“An example of a curious Christian name may be found,” says a correspondent, “nearer your offices than most of the cases you have printed. The facts are these. The father of a boy baby wished him to be christened Thomas. The mother favored the name of Robert. When they arrived at the church the matter was still undecided. The father informed the curate that the child’s name was Thomas. “Oh, no” gasped the mother distressfully. The curate regarding the woman as the ruling spirit promptly baptized the infant Ono.”

So is the “oh no” explanation legit?

It’s plausible, I suppose. Naming errors caused by confusion and miscommunication weren’t unheard of back then. (Remember the baby girl named Robert?)

But I doubt it’s legit. More likely it was just a made-up story that grew into a rumor that got twisted a bit more with every retelling (similar to what happened to Return).

The real source?

I’m guessing the Bible, in which the word “Ono” — the name of both a town and a valley — appears several times, mostly in the Book of Nehemiah.

Sources:

  • Bax, Alfred Ridley. Allegations for Marriage Licences Issued by the Commissary Court of Surrey Between 1673-1770. Norwich: Goose & Son, 1907.
  • Blanch, William Harnett. Ye Parish of Camberwell. London: E. W. Allen, 1875.
  • “Good Baptismal Stories.” Massena Observer 4 Oct. 1900: 6.
  • “How Ono Got His Name.” Deseret News 17 Mar. 1909: 4.
  • “Latest Locals.” Star [New Zealand] 7 Oct. 1885: 3.

Image: Adapted from 1661 Cemetery Manchester-by-the-Sea MA by M2545 under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Baby name story: Federal Constitution

The U.S. Constitution
The U.S. Constitution

Jonathan and Patience Sprague of Douglas, Massachusetts, welcomed a baby boy on October 16, 1790.

They named him Federal Constitution Sprague.

Why?

Well, he was born a year after the U.S. Constitution went into effect. (It had been was created in 1787 and ratified in 1788.)

As one source put it, “Federal Constitution Sprague evidently had a father to whom the new nation meant something. He was interested evidently in the document for which he named his son.”

Yes, evidently. :)

None of Federal Constitution’s 13 siblings, nine full siblings and four half-siblings, got a name as notable (or as patriotic) as his:

  1. Sarah
  2. Nehemiah
  3. Mercy
  4. Federal Constitution
  5. Amy
  6. Daniel
  7. Preserved
  8. Lee
  9. Patience
  10. Jonathan, Jr.
  11. Almira
  12. Philinda
  13. Elias
  14. Emeline

F.C. ended up having a dozen children, ten from his first marriage and two from his second, but didn’t pass his unique name down to any of them:

  1. Amy
  2. Edward
  3. Nathan
  4. William
  5. Lafayette
  6. Betsey
  7. James
  8. Philander (twin)
  9. Philinda (twin)
  10. Elias
  11. Newton
  12. Della

I’ve also found a handful of other people named Constitution (or some variation thereof). Most were born in France in the 1790s, around the time France adopted several new constitutions during the French Revolution. Several other Constitutions were from countries in South America. One was born in New South Wales in 1855, the year of the New South Wales Constitution Act.

Sources:

  • Crane, Ellery Bicknell. Historic homes and institutions and genealogical and personal memoirs of Worcester County Massachusetts. New York: Lewis Publishing Company, 1907.
  • Sprague, Augustus B. R. Genealogy in part of the Sprague Families in America. Worcester, MA: Augustus B. R. Sprague, 1902.

Image: Archives.gov

Baby names for the end of the world?

Mayan god Bolon Yokte' (middle)

You guys know the world is ending in two weeks, right?

At least, that’s how popular culture has misinterpreted the ending of the 13th b’ak’tun of the Mesoamerican Long Count calendar on December 21, 2012.

If your due date is December 21, why not commemorate the date with an “end of the world”-inspired baby name?

No, I’m not suggesting you go with something ridiculous like Armageddon or Apocalypse. (Though I have seen both used as names. Examples: Armageddon James Margerum, born in England in 1833, and Ulysses Apocalypse Johnson, born in California in 1992.)

Instead, try a name with a less obvious “end of the world” connection. Perhaps one of these:

  • Maya – the Mesoamerican Long Count calendar is most commonly associated with the Maya
  • Jeremiah – inspired by Maya
  • Nehemiah – inspired by Maya
  • Deedee – short for doomsday
  • Ann – short for annihilation
  • Catherine – inspired by cataclysm
  • Calypso – inspired by apocalypse
  • Arma – short for armageddon
  • Armand – inspired by armageddon
  • Armando – inspired by armageddon
  • Gideon – inspired by armageddon
  • Don – short for armageddon

Or try one of the dozens of names that happen to contain the word “end” (short for “end of the world,” of course).

  • Aviendha
  • Brenda
  • Brendan
  • Enda
  • Ender
  • Endia
  • Erendira
  • Glenda
  • Glendon
  • Glendora
  • Gwendolen/Gwendolyn
  • Henderson
  • Hendrik/Hendrick
  • Hendrika
  • Hendrix
  • Kendall
  • Kendra
  • Kendrick
  • Lavender
  • Legend
  • Mendel
  • Nagendra
  • Penda
  • Pendleton
  • Rajendra
  • Rosenda
  • Rosendo
  • Surendra
  • Townsend
  • Vendela
  • Wendell
  • Wendy
  • Zenda
  • Zendaya

What other “end of the world” baby names can you think of?

[Latest update: 2/2023]