Last year, Houston — the most populous city in the state of Texas — welcomed over 61,800 babies.
What were the most popular names among these babies? Emma and Liam, according to provisional data released in late December, 2022, by the Houston Health Department’s Bureau of Vital Statistics.
Here are Houston’s top 10 girl names and top 10 boy names of 2022:
Girl Names
Emma
Olivia
Camila
Mia
Isabella
Sophia
Sofia
Ava
Amelia
Charlotte
Boy Names
Liam
Noah
Mateo
Sebastian
Dylan
Daniel
Ethan
Santiago
Elijah
Oliver
Interestingly, Houston’s top girl name of 2021, Charlotte, slipped all the way down to 10th place in 2022.
According to the U.S. baby name data, the name Jana has seen two distinct spikes in usage: the first in the early 1960s, the second in the late 1970s.
The initial spike pushed the name up to it’s highest-ever usage (in terms of numbers of babies):
1963: 1,311 baby girls named Jana [rank: 240th]
1962: 1,311 baby girls named Jana [rank: 242nd]
1961: 1,459 baby girls named Jana [rank: 226th]
1960: 980 baby girls named Jana [rank: 295th]
1959: 938 baby girls named Jana [rank: 296th]
What caused it?
A Twilight Zone character named Jana (pronounced JAY-nuh).
She was featured in the episode “The Lateness of the Hour,” which aired in December of 1960.
Jana (played by actress Inger Stevens) was a young woman who lived with her parents, plus a number of humanoid robots. Her father, an inventor, had created the robots to take care of the family’s every need. This arrangement pleased Jana’s parents, but made Jana feel increasingly uncomfortable. She eventually demanded that her father dismantle the robots and that the three of them start leading normal lives. He did, but — as usual with The Twilight Zone — this led to a disconcerting plot twist…
We’ll take a look at the name’s second spike next week. In the meanwhile, what are your thoughts on the name Jana? (How would you pronounce it?)
Hall of Fame baseball player Rickey Henderson wasn’t named after an earlier baseball player (as Ryne Sandberg was), but after a rock-and-roll singer.
His mother, Bobbie, was a Ricky Nelson fan and named her son after the actor-turned-musician.
Here’s the story:
Henderson was born on Christmas Day, 1958 in Chicago — more specifically, in the back seat of a ’57 Chevy. His father’s name was John L. Henley.
When Bobbie and John brought their newborn son home, they hadn’t chosen a name for him.
“The only name on my birth certificate,” Henderson said, “was Henley, no first name.”
Bobbie…eventually decided on Rickey Nelson Henley for her son. To this day, Henderson has no idea why his first name is spelled with an E.
After Rickey’s father passed away, his mother married a man named Paul Henderson.
Rickey Henderson went on to play major league baseball for 24 seasons. He currently holds the MLB records for both career stolen bases (set in 1991) and career runs (set in 2001).
The variant spelling Davey peaked in usage that year as well.
David itself — already very popular (and still rising) — also saw an uptick:
1957: 82,404 baby boys named David [rank: 3rd]
1956: 81,645 baby boys named David [rank: 4th]
1955: 86,304 baby boys named David [rank: 2nd]
1954: 79,561 baby boys named David [rank: 5th]
1953: 76,119 baby boys named David [rank: 5th]
(It finally reached #1 in 1960, though it dropped back down to #2 the following year.)
What was influencing these names?
Frontiersman David “Davy” Crockett — or, to be more precise, Walt Disney’s fictionalized version of Davy Crockett.
The real Davy Crockett (1786-1836) was a Tennessee-born soldier and politician who died during the Texas Revolution, at the Battle of the Alamo. Outside of Tennessee and Texas, he was a “relatively obscure” historical figure.
In the early 1950s, animator and entrepreneur Walt Disney decided to build an amusement park. To fund the project, he made a deal with the ABC network to create a weekly anthology show called Walt Disney’s Disneyland. It was Walt’s first television series.
The initial hour-long episode aired in October of 1954. It began with Walt talking directly to viewers about Disneyland, which was then under construction in Anaheim. While describing Frontierland, Walt mentioned “the first coonskin Congressman,” Davy Crockett. Soon after, viewers saw Davy Crockett himself (played by Texas-born actor Fess Parker) singing “The Ballad of Davy Crockett”:
The first episode to feature a Crockett storyline was “Davy Crockett, Indian Fighter,” which was broadcast in mid-December. The second, “Davy Crockett Goes to Congress,” aired in January of 1955. The third and final episode, “Davy Crockett at the Alamo,” followed in February. All three were filmed largely in the Great Smoky Mountains, and each one featured that catchy theme song.
Three episodes and a single song were all it took to make the King of the Wild Frontier an overnight sensation among U.S. children. (Which is doubly impressive when you consider that, in 1955, only about half of American homes had a television set.)
“Davy Crockett“
In April of 1955, Life magazine reported that the Crockett craze — “unexpected even by the watchful Walt Disney” — had resulted in “a corresponding frenzy in commercial circles.”
Dozens of manufacturers are hustling to turn out more than 200 items, from baby shoes to wallets, which might conceivably be connected with Crockett’s life. By June they will sell to the retail tune of $100 million — just about the largest merchandising feat of its kind.
Other Davy Crockett products included comic books, trading cards, toy rifles, toy holsters, toy guns, toy powder horns, shirts, pants, jackets, pajamas, bathing suits, bath towels, bedspreads, lunchboxes, mugs, plates, jigsaw puzzles, guitars, and records.
Speaking of records, renditions of the Davy Crockett theme song by Bill Hayes, Fess Parker, and Tennessee Ernie Ford ended up ranking 6th, 22nd, and 24th (respectively) on the list of top-selling records of 1955, according to Billboard.
But the most coveted Davy Crockett item of all, of course, was the coonskin cap.
At the height of the fad in the summer of 1955, coonskin caps sold upward of 5,000 a day. […] A shortage in coonskins caused furriers to resort to muskrat, rabbit and fox skins to produce the caps.
To capitalize on the Crockett craze, Walt Disney not only rebroadcast all three TV episodes (in April and May), but also combined the episodes into a feature-length film, Davy Crockett: King of the Wild Frontier, released in late May.
Then — after the Disneyland theme park opened in July, and The Mickey Mouse Club premiered in October — Walt revived Davy (who had technically been killed at the Alamo in episode three) and created a pair of prequel episodes: “Davy Crockett’s Keelboat Race” (which aired in November) and “Davy Crockett and the River Pirates” (December). These were likewise turned into a movie, Davy Crockett and the River Pirates, released in July of 1956.
Crockett-obsessed American families ended up spending more than $300 million on Davy Crockett merchandise during the mid-1950s. (That’s about $3.4 billion in 2023 dollars.)
While dozens of these families chose to name their baby boys Davy — which is why the name increased in usage more than sixfold in 1955 — very few, if any, went for Crockett, which remained absent from the baby name data throughout the 1950s.
What are your thoughts on the name Davy? Would you use it? (How about Crockett?)
P.S. If you’re wondering about Fess Parker’s first name, it was passed down from his father, who’d been named in honor of Ohio politician Simeon D. Fess.
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