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Baby born during Cyclone Rene, named Rene

hurricane

In February of 2010, Tropical Cyclone Rene brushed past American Samoa in the South Pacific. The storm came closest to the U.S. territory on February 13.

The night before, a baby girl was born at American Samoa’s LBJ Tropical Medical Center.

The hospital’s emergency team had been camping at the hospital in preparation for the cyclone that night.

The head of the delivery department, Dr. John Ah Ching, says the mother came in with complications and having all the necessary staff present may have saved the baby’s life.

I don’t know the baby’s full name, but she was “named after Cyclone Rene,” according to my source.

P.S. The Lyndon Baines Johnson (LBJ) Tropical Medical Center, which was named after the first and only U.S. president to visit American Samoa, opened in June of 1968. “The first admitted patient was a baby about to be delivered. He received the name Lyndon.”

Sources:

Image: Adapted from Hurricane Elena by NASA (public domain)

What gave the baby name Tracee a boost in 1973?

Tracee Joy Silberstein on lap of mom Diana Ross (1973)
Tracee Joy Silberstein (b. 1972)

According to the U.S. baby name data, the name Tracee more than doubled in usage from 1972 to 1973:

  • 1975: 95 baby girls named Tracee
  • 1974: 138 baby girls named Tracee [rank: 918th]
  • 1973: 313 baby girls named Tracee [rank: 536th]
  • 1972: 124 baby girls named Tracee [rank: 978th]
  • 1971: 99 baby girls named Tracee

What caused that spike?

A celebrity baby named Tracee Joy.

She was born in October of 1972 to Diana Ross, former lead singer of The Supremes, and music executive Robert Ellis Silberstein.

Tracee’s birth was mentioned in the newspapers in late 1972, but, more importantly, photos of her family (which included older sister Rhonda Suzanne) were featured in Ebony magazine in January of 1973.

Today, Tracee — known professionally as Tracee Ellis Ross — is an actress best known for her role as Dr. Rainbow “Bow” Johnson on the sitcom Black-ish (2014-2022).

What are your thoughts on the name Tracee? (Do you like this spelling, or do you prefer Tracy?)

P.S. Diana Ross’ three other (biological) children are named Chudney Lane, Ross Arne, and Evan Olav.

Sources:

Image: Clipping from the cover of Ebony magazine (Jul. 1973)

Popular baby names in Monaco, 2024

Flag of Monaco
Flag of Monaco

In 2024, the Western European microstate of Monaco welcomed 721 babies — 322 baby girls and 399 baby boys. All but one were born in the maternity ward of Monaco’s single public hospital, the Centre Hospitalier Princesse Grace. (The odd one out was born at home.)

Notably, only 202 of them were born to residents of Monaco. The other 519 were born to parents from outside the Principality. About 60% of the non-resident parents came from the French communes of Menton, Roquebrune-Cap-Martin, and Beausoleil.

So, what were the most popular names among the (mostly French) babies born in Monaco last year? Rose and Jules.

Here are Monaco’s top 5+ girl names and top 5+ boy names of 2024:

Girl names

  1. Rose
  2. Victoria
  3. Emma
  4. Louise
  5. Angelina
  6. Lina

Boy names

  1. Jules
  2. Léo
  3. Lorenzo
  4. Noah
  5. Liam
  6. Louis
  7. Raphaël

Some of the names above must have been tied (for a pair of “top 5” lists to contain 6 and 7 names, respectively), but the official news release didn’t indicate where the ties were.

In 2023, the top names in Monaco were Louise and Théo.

Sources:

Image: Adapted from Flag of Monaco (public domain)

What happened to the baby name Osama in the early 2000s?

Islamic terrorist Osama bin Laden (1957-2011)
Osama bin Laden

According to the U.S. baby name data, the name Osama — which had been rising slowly since the 1970s — saw a steep drop in usage following the turn of the century:

  • 2003: 11 baby boys named Osama
  • 2002: 11 baby boys named Osama
  • 2001: 37 baby boys named Osama
  • 2000: 54 baby boys named Osama
  • 1999: 65 baby boys named Osama
  • 1998: 47 baby boys named Osama

What made the name less popular?

Its association with Osama bin Laden, founder and leader of the militant Islamist terrorist organization al-Qaeda.

In 2001, Al-Qaeda carried out the September 11 terrorist attacks, during which 19 terrorists hijacked four commercial airliners inside the United States. Two of the planes were flown into the Twin Towers in New York City, one was flown into the Pentagon in Virginia, and the final plane — initially aimed at a government building in Washington, D.C. — crash-landed in rural Pennsylvania. The four coordinated attacks killed a total of 2,977 people.

The ensuing search for Osama bin Laden lasted until mid-2011, when he was finally found (and killed) in Pakistan by the U.S. military.

Osama bin Laden (who was born in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, in the late 1950s) was named after Usama ibn Zayd, a companion of the Islamic prophet Mohammed. The name Usama/Osama means “lion” in Arabic. (The spelling Usama dropped out of the U.S. baby name data entirely after 2001, notably.)

Sources: Osama bin Laden – Wikipedia, Manhunt for Osama bin Laden – Wikipedia, SSA

Image: Adapted from Hamid Mir interviewing Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri 2001 by Hamid Mir under CC BY-SA 3.0.