How popular is the baby name Priscilla 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 Priscilla.

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Popularity of the baby name Priscilla


Posts that mention the name Priscilla

Babies named for the story “Flavilla”

cemetery

Flavilla Doane Loring was just 13 months old when she died on October 12, 1847.

She and I never knew one another (of course), and we aren’t related in any way. Yet I’ve known about her for decades.

I grew up on Cape Cod, which is that “hook” part of Massachusetts. The Cape gets notoriously touristy in the summers. So, when I went places as a kid, I took as many non-road shortcuts as possible to avoid having to walk alongside the backed-up tourist traffic.

One of those shortcuts was through the peaceful Pine Grove Cemetery, which allowed me to bypass the busy intersection of North Main Street and Route 28 in South Yarmouth.

Even back then I had a thing for names, so I often stopped to read the headstones. It didn’t take long for me to discover Flavilla.

She’s buried next to her parents, Capt. John Loring and Hannah Loring, and three of her siblings: William, John, and Hannah. (I later learned that young John had drowned at the age of 3 in nearby Bass River.)

John, Hannah, William…these were names I recognized.

But Flavilla? Totally new to me.

I remember staring it, trying to make sense of it.

That’s a name? Really?

It wasn’t like any name I’d ever seen before. The closest thing I could come up with was Priscilla, the name of one of my father’s aunts. But even that was a stretch.

How did she get a name like that? Where did it come from? What does it mean?

I felt like an archaeologist who’d just dug up some curious little artifact. I was eager to identify it, figure it out, give it some context.

I couldn’t, though. Not back then. The Internet hadn’t become particularly useful yet, and our modest town library didn’t offer much by way of research materials.

But now I can…

The origin of Flavilla

It may look made-up, but Flavilla is legitimate name. And a very old one at that.

It was used by women in ancient Rome, where it was a feminine form of the name Flavius, which was based on the Latin word flavus, meaning “golden” or “yellow.” (The original bearer of the name Flavius was likely a blond.)

The name has since been attached to a species of butterfly with yellow wings:

Butterfly species "Nica flavilla"
Butterfly species “Nica flavilla

But none of this explains why a 19th-century New England couple gave this fanciful, non-Biblical name to their daughter.

The Flavilla trend

I checked Flavilla Doane Loring’s family tree for possible namesakes, but didn’t find anything conclusive.

While doing the research, though, I did spot a few other Flavillas — all born in the 1800s.

This made me wonder whether the name Flavilla wasn’t simply a trendy name back in 19th-century America.

Turns out, it was:

  • The first Flavillas I found were born in the 1760s.
  • After that, usage increased.
  • Usage peaked in the 1840s and 1850s.
  • After that, usage decreased.
  • The last Flavillas I found were born in the 1930s.

I’m not quite sure what made Flavilla stylish in the mid-1800s (beyond sound), but I think I know what sparked the trend in the first place: a story.

“The Story of Flavilla”

The Fatal Effects of Fashionable Levities: The Story of Flavilla” first appeared in the London periodical The Adventurer in January of 1754.

Text from "The Story of Flavilla" (1754)
Text from the middle of “The Story of Flavilla”

The protagonist was a young woman, Flavilla, whose questionable behavior ended up costing her dearly. Here’s a line from the last paragraph: “May every lady, on whose memory compassion shall record these events, tremble to assume the levity of Flavilla.”

The author, 18th-century English writer John Hawkesworth, may have chosen the name Flavilla because of the romantic sound, or because of the consonance with “fashionable levities.”

The story was reprinted (under various titles) in story and essay collections for decades to come. It eventually made its way to the States — either in The Adventurer or in one of the subsequent compilations — and that’s about the time we start seeing the first baby Flavillas.

Bitten by the name bug

For years, Flavilla’s name remained a mystery to me.

But I never stopped wondering about it.

Whenever I cut through the Pine Grove Cemetery, I would stop at the Loring family plot just so I could see her name one more time.

Stumbling upon Flavilla’s name is what motivated me to start really paying attention to names.

It’s what got me hooked, you could say.

I started checking name books out of the library. I started visiting other graveyards. I started scanning news articles, phone books, encyclopedia entries — any chunk of text that might contain an interesting name.

And, many years later, I started this blog. :)

Sources:

Images:

How popular are A-endings for girl names?

Did you notice that all five of the five most popular girl names in the nation right now have a-endings?

  1. Isabella
  2. Sophia
  3. Emma
  4. Olivia
  5. Ava

Just how trendy is this end-sound? (I say “sound” to cover names like Hannah and Nevaeh, which don’t end with a, but sound like they do.) Looking at SSA data for 2010, here’s what I came up with:

EndingNamesBabies
-a7,210670,605
-ah1,72093,358
-eh236,649
-e3147
-agh16
TOTAL:8,956770,765

These 770,765 babies represent 43.8% of all the babies on the SSA’s 2010 list. (The a-endings alone represent 38.1%.)

Let’s compare this with, say, 80 years ago. Why 80? Because whenever I think of a-endings, I’m reminded of my grandmother’s family — 9 siblings total, 8 of which were girls, only one of whom had a name that ended with an a-sound (Priscilla). Most of them were born in the 1920s and 1930s, so let’s look at 1930:

EndingNamesBabies
-a2,034288,291
-ah376,459
-eh00
-eh00
-agh00
TOTAL:2,071294,750

These 294,750 babies represent 26.2% of all the babies accounted for on the SSA’s 1930 list. (The a-endings by themselves represent 25.6%).

So, from 26.2% to 43.8% for the end-sound, and from 25.6% to 38.1% for a-endings specifically. Quite a difference between then and now.

Where did the baby name Prisca come from in 1959?

Diplomatic daughter Prisca Bunau-Varilla (in 1960).
Prisca Bunau-Varilla

The pretty name Prisca — which is related to the more familiar name Priscilla — appeared in the U.S. baby name data for the first time in 1959:

  • 1965: unlisted
  • 1964: 5 baby girls named Prisca
  • 1963: unlisted
  • 1962: 5 baby girls named Prisca
  • 1961: unlisted
  • 1960: unlisted
  • 1959: 10 baby girls named Prisca [debut]
  • 1958: unlisted

The most high-profile Prisca around that time was teenager Prisca Bunau-Varilla, the stepdaughter of Hervé Alphand, French Ambassador to the U.S. from 1956 to 1965.

Hervé had married Prisca’s mother Nicole in mid-1958. Both Hervé and Nicole had divorced from their original spouses a year earlier. (Nicole’s first husband was French aviation pioneer Étienne Bunau-Varilla.)

Prisca started being mentioned in the news a few months later. In October, for instance, she brought her hula hoop to an embassy party so that everyone (including the Cuban Ambassador to the U.S.) could try “the exercise that’s sweeping the country.” In November, she invited some teenage friends to attend a supper honoring a group of traveling French movie stars in order to meet leading man Gérard Philipe. A few weeks later, she helped her mother entertain opera singer Maria Callas.

Diplomatic daughter Prisca Bunau-Varilla (in 1960).
Prisca Bunau-Varilla

For years, Prisca’s name continued to pop up in the newspapers. She was even featured in LIFE magazine twice (in 1959 and in 1960). This was largely thanks to her mother, a popular Washington hostess who became close to Jackie Kennedy in the early ’60s.

Do you like the name Prisca? Do you like it more or less than Priscilla? (Both are based on the Latin word priscus, meaning “ancient” or “old-fashioned.”)

Sources:

Images: Clippings from Life magazine (11 Jul. 1960)

What gave the baby name Pearlette a boost in 1962?

Pearlettes single "Duchess of Earl" (1962).
Pearlettes single

The rare name Pearlette has only popped up in the U.S. baby name data four times, and three of those times with minimal usage (5 baby girls). It did see slightly elevated usage the fourth year, though:

  • 1964: unlisted
  • 1963: unlisted
  • 1962: 7 baby girls named Pearlette [peak]
  • 1961: unlisted
  • 1960: unlisted

Why?

Because that was the year the Pearlettes, a four-member girl-group from Los Angeles, released their most successful song, “Duchess of Earl” [vid].

“Duchess of Earl” — an answer song to Gene Chandler’s 1961 “Duke Of Earl” — peaked at #96 on Billboard‘s Hot 100 chart in March of 1962.

The Pearlettes consisted of Lynda Galloway and Sheila Galloway (sisters), Mary Meade, and Priscilla Kennedy.

What are your thoughts on the name Pearlette?

Source: Whitburn, Joel. Joel Whitburn Presents Across the Charts, the 1960s. Menomonee Falls, WI: Record Research, 2008.