How popular is the baby name Walt 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 Walt.
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The curious name Corky first appeared in the U.S. baby name data in the late 1920s:
1930: unlisted
1929: 8 baby boys (and 5 baby girls) named Corky
1928: 7 baby boys named Corky [debut]
1927: unlisted
1926: unlisted
Where did it come from?
The funny pages!
Walt and Phyllis Wallet of the comic strip Gasoline Alley welcomed a baby boy in early May, 1928.
Soon after his birth, the couple started brainstorming for names. Over the course of the next few weeks, they settled on Corkleigh — Phyllis’ maiden name — as the baby’s legal name, and Corky as his nickname.
Notably, Gasoline Alley was one of the first comic strips in which the characters aged over time. In the 1940s, Corky’s older brother Skeezix (whose real first name was Allison) welcomed his own children, Chipper and Clovia, both of whom also influenced U.S. baby names.
The name Corky has never been very popular, but it did see more usage in the 1950s than in any other decade — possibly because of the 1951 films Gasoline Alley and Corky of Gasoline Alley. In both movies, Corky was played by actor Scotty Beckett (who, several years earlier, had appeared in A Date with Judy with Jane Powell).
What are your thoughts on Corky as a baby name?
Sources:
Gasoline Alley comic strip (in the St. Joseph Gazette, via Google Books)
Women’s History Month is almost over, so let me squeeze in a post about Fifinella, a rare-but-real name with ties not only to the pioneering female aviators of WWII, but also to Walt Disney, Roald Dahl, Tchaikovsky, and a champion British racehorse.
Fifinella began as a children’s Christmas play. It was co-written by Englishmen Barry Jackson and Basil Dean, with music by Norman Hayes. Fifinella was first performed at the Liverpool Repertory Theatre in December of 1912.
“Fifinella” the Christmas play
The play — sometimes called “Fluffy Nellie” — “included 14 scenes and a harlequinade.” It was also adapted into the book Fifinella, a fairy frolic (1912) by Basil Dean’s then-wife Esther Van Gruisen.
The next year, an English thoroughbred horse was born to dam Silver Fowl and sire Polymelus. The chestnut filly, owned by newspaper proprietor Sir Edward Hulton, was named Fifinella.
Fifinella the racehorse
Fifinella went on become the last horse to win both the Derby and the Oaks in a single year, 1916.
That’s the same year English author and former Royal Air Force (RAF) pilot Roald Dahl was born — reason enough, apparently, for him to want to use Fifinella in his very first children’s book The Gremlins (1943), “a story drawing on RAF folklore which held that little creatures were responsible for the various mechanical failures on aeroplanes.”
The gremlins are convinced by a pilot named Gus to make peace with the RAF and join forces with the British to combat a more sinister villain; Hitler and the Nazis. The gremlins are then re-trained by the RAF to repair British aircraft instead of destroy them.
In the book, fifinella isn’t a name, but a noun that refers to a female gremlin. (Baby gremlins are called “widgets.”)
The book was put out by Walt Disney Productions and Random House. Walt Disney had wanted to make the book into a movie, but the movie never happened.
The gremlins “did live on in the form of military insignias,” though.
Walt Disney himself granted at least 30 military units permission to use gremlins as mascots/insignias during WWII, and even “assigned several artists to create these one-of-a-kind designs on a full-time basis.”
Units with gremlin mascots included the 17th Weather Squadron of San Francisco, the Royal Netherlands Military Flying School, and the Royal Canadian Air Force ‘Sky Sweepers.’
But the most famous gremlin mascot, Fifinella, belonged to the Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASP), a paramilitary unit of 1,000+ women who flew non-combat flights in order to free male pilots for combat service.
Fifinella the WASP mascot
(She had been an unofficial mascot of the Women’s Flying Training Detachment (WFTD), which in August of 1943 merged with another group of female pilots to become the WASPs, even before permission was granted.)
The WASPs put Fifinella’s image on everything from patches to letterheads to matchbook covers. The Fifinella mascot even made an appearance in a mid-1943 LIFE article about the WASPs.
After the WASPs were disbanded in late 1944, ex-WASPs created the Order of Fifinella, a group that was both social (e.g., organizing reunions) and political (e.g., working to gain recognition as veterans).
Finally, one last Fifinella reference: In late 1945, Austrian tenor Richard Tauber recorded an English version of “Pimpinella – Florentine Song” (1878) by Russian composer Piotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky. One of the many lyrical changes he made was replacing the name Pimpinella with the name Fifinella. (Here’s Richard Tauber singing Fifinella.)
So the name Fifinella has been around for at least a century. It’s been associated with theater, literature, sport, war, feminism and music. Has it ever been used as the name of a human being?
Yes, but rarely. I’ve only found a handful of Fifinellas, and all of them were born outside the United States:
Fifinella Downes (later Clarke), Australia
Fifinella “Fif” Beatrice Evans, d. 2007, England
Fifinella Flavell, b. 1923, England
Fifinella Hill (later Gratwick), Australia
Fifinella Lewis, b. 1914, Ireland
Fifinella Mallard (later Newson), 1901-1969, England
Fifinella Charlotte Agatha Nelson, d. 1947, Australia
Fifinella Patricia Russell (later Ceret), b. 1927, Ireland
Fifinella Silcox (later Mccluskey), b. 1948, England
So it’s definitely an unusual name. It’s also quite whimsical, and it has a ton of nickname potential (Fifi, Fina, Nell, Nella, Nellie).
Do you like it? Would you ever consider using Fifinella as a baby name?
Sources:
Merkin, Ros. Liverpool Playhouse: A Theatre and Its City. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2011.
Merryman, Molly. Clipped Wings: The Rise and Fall of the Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASPs) of Word War II. New York: New York University Press, 1998.
Images:
Adapted from Fifinella Patch (via The Portal to Texas History)
The strip, called Gasoline Alley, debuted in newspapers in late 1918. (And it’s still being published today, amazingly.)
In mid-May, 1949, Gasoline Alley characters Skeezix and Nina Wallet welcomed a baby girl. Nina gave birth in a taxicab on the way to the hospital, in fact.
On the newborn’s left hand was a birthmark in the shape of a four-leaf clover.
Soon after the birth, the couple started looking for a name. On May 25th, they discussed Lucky, Cloverette and Cloverine. On May 26th, they discussed Clover, Clorine, Chloe, Clovis, and Clovia. Finally, on May 27th, Skeezix told his adoptive father, Walt, that they’d settled on Clovia.
Clovia doll
And Clovia wasn’t just a comic strip character — for a time, she was also a doll.
In mid-1949, a few weeks after Clovia’s introduction, Clovia dolls — which featured the character’s lucky birthmark — became available in retail stores. (Dolls based on comic strip babies were trendy in the 1940s.)
The name Clovia remained in the U.S. baby name data through the 1950s, but usage petered out in the 1960s.
The Chicago Railroad Fair, which lasted from 1948 to 1949, commemorated 100 years of railroading in Chicago.
Dozens of railroads and railroad equipment manufacturers participated in the fair, which featured exhibits, reenactments, rides, musical shows, parades, and more.
One exhibit was an entire “Indian Village” created by the Santa Fe Railroad.
The village included tipis, hogans, a pueblo, an arts and crafts building, a medicine lodge and a trading post. (Here’s a map.)
The Santa Fe Railroad even brought in Hopi Indians from a reservation in Oraibi, Arizona, to live in the village and perform for fairgoers.
On September 23, 1949, a baby was born to Hopi parents Clara and Robert Lucas — described as a “blanket embroiderer” and a “doll maker,” respectively — in their one-room dwelling in the pueblo. (Their two older daughters were living there as well.)
The baby girl was named Seeva Fair Lucas. The name Seeva was derived from the Hopi word for railroad (one source says the full word is sivavö) and the middle name Fair effectively makes her name “Railroad Fair” — after the Chicago Railroad Fair.
Seeva’s parents also noted that the initials “S.F.” were a nod to the Santa Fe Railroad.
After the fair ended, the Lucas family returned to Arizona. Several newspapers mention Seeva’s 10th birthday party in 1959, and she attended high school in Holbrook, Arizona, in the mid-1960s.
(And here’s a cool fact: The Chicago Railroad Fair was one of the things that inspired Walt Disney in 1948 to draw up plans for the “Mickey Mouse Park” that eventually became Disneyland!)
Albert, Roy and David Leedom Shau. A Concise Hopi and English Lexicon. Philadelphia: John Benjamins Pub. Co., 1985
“Papoose Born at Fair Given Railroad Name.” Chicago Tribune 24 Sep. 1949: 12.
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