According to the U.S. baby name data, the name Zuleyka nearly quintupled in usage in 2006:
Girls named Zuleyka (USA)
Girls named Zuleyka (PR)
2008
52
6
2007
116
7
2006
108
12
2005
22
.
2004
16
.
It also re-appeared in Puerto Rico’s baby name data after an absence of several years.
Why?
Because of the influence of Puerto Rican beauty queen Zuleyka (pronounced zoo-LAY-kah) Rivera, who was crowned Miss Universe in Los Angeles, California, in July of 2006.
The Miss Universe pageant doesn’t include a talent competition, but it does feature a national costume competition. Zuleyka’s costume was inspired by Atabey, the mother goddess of the Taíno people.
What are your thoughts on the name Zuleyka?
P.S. About a decade after winning the pageant, Zuleyka Rivera starred in the extremely popular music video for the song “Despacito” [vid] by Luis Fonsi and Daddy Yankee.
A 14-year-old country singer named Brennley Brown.
During the first half of 2017, Brennley appeared on the 12th season of reality competition TV series The Voice. She advanced to the top 8, but was eliminated during the semifinals.
In May, three of the songs that Brennley had performed on the show made consecutive single-week appearances on Billboard‘s Hot Country Songs chart. (The songs were “Long, Long Time” by Linda Ronstadt, “River” by Joni Mitchell, and “Anyway” by Martina McBride.)
The earliest decades of the Social Security Administration’s data tend to under-count actual usage but, in this case, the numbers from the Social Security Death Index (SSDI) look remarkably similar:
1918: 3 people named Eitel
1917: 6 people named Eitel
1916: 5 people named Eitel
1915: 7 people named Eitel
1914: 3 people named Eitel
Most of the Eitels born in the U.S during this time period had German surnames (e.g., Boettcher, Steuer, Gelhaus).
So, what was the influence?
Well, the German emperor, Kaiser Wilhelm II, had a son named Eitel. But this particular son wasn’t the crown prince, and he didn’t play a prominent role in World War I.
A German ship named after this son, however, was mentioned in the U.S. newspapers regularly during the war years.
The SS Prinz Eitel Friedrich sank 11 vessels in the Pacific and South Atlantic Oceans over the course of 3 months (from December of 1914 to February of 1915). Significantly, one of those vessels was the William P. Frye — the first U.S. ship to be sunk during World War I.
(early 1915)
In early March, the Prinz Eitel Friedrich — now low on supplies, and in need of repairs — headed for the then-neutral United States. It sailed into Newport News harbor in Virginia on March 10.
After several weeks, the ship was ordered to leave. But the ship’s captain, well aware that Allied vessels were lying in wait outside U.S. waters, chose to ignore the order.
So, on April 9, the ship was interned and moved (along with another interned German sea raider, the SS Kronprinz Wilhelm) to the Norfolk Naval Shipyard in Portsmouth, Virginia.
At first, the crew and officers of the two ships moved about freely in Portsmouth. The men, numbering roughly 1,000, were welcomed by the community:
In the afternoon they go to Virginia Beach, Ocean View and other nearby resorts. They smoke good cigars, eat the best, and appear to have plenty of money. […] The men have been taken into the homes of a number of citizens and entertained, and special services have been held for them in Protestant churches. They are made to feel at home.
But in October, after several incidents, their movements were restricted to their ships and a small section of land, for exercise.
On that land, the sailors did more than stretch their legs — they began building a miniature German village using scrap materials in the shipyard. Their village, dubbed “Eitel Wilhelm” (from the names of both ships), eventually featured about 50 buildings, most of which were small homes with brightly painted exteriors and picket fences.
Many of them have gardens, with cabbages, onions, corn, lettuce, and beets flourishing. Others have miniature chicken farms attached, and geese, ducks, and rabbits are also raised.
The “telegraph office” in Eitel Wilhelm (1916)
Eitel Wilhelm also featured replicas of other buildings, including a church, a windmill, a telegraph office, a police station, a mayor’s office, a gymnasium, and a working bakery that produced “authentic cakes and pastries.”
The German village became a tourist attraction, welcoming “thousands of visitors from the local community.” The sailors donated proceeds from the entry fee (10¢) and from the sales of various items (e.g., baked goods, postcards, hand-crafted toys) to the German Red Cross.
In August of the following year, President Woodrow Wilson signed into law the Naval Act of 1916, which called for enlarging the U.S. Navy. Officials at the Norfolk Naval Shipyard would need “to find space for […] new shops and dry docks” — meaning that the internees (and their village) would have to be relocated.
So the sailors disassembled Eitel Wilhelm, boarded their two ships, and departed for the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard.
Eitel Wilhelm, reconstructed in Philadelphia (late 1916)
Upon arriving on October 1, they re-erected their village, and it became a tourist attraction once again — but only for a matter of months.
In March of 1917, a couple of weeks before the U.S. entered World War I, the German sailors were transported by train to internment camps in the state of Georgia.
When the U.S. officially declared war on Imperial Germany in early April, the internees became prisoners of war, and the SS Prinz Eitel Friedrich and SS Kronprinz Wilhelm were seized by U.S. Customs officials (then transferred to the U.S. Navy).
I don’t know what became of the village of Eitel Wilhelm.
But I do know that the personal name Eitel (which has several possible etymologies) is rarely used in Germany these days, as it happens to coincide with the German adjective eitel, meaning “vain.”
What are your thoughts on the name Eitel?
P.S. Did you know that hundreds of babies were named after the ill-fated RMS Lusitania in 1915?
From 1948 to 1964, Brenda was one of the top 20 girl names in the United States. So it makes sense that, during this period, names like Brendalyn, Brendalee, and Labrenda started seeing enough usage to debut in the U.S. baby name data. (The SSA’s dataset only includes names given to at least five babies per gender, per year.)
But it doesn’t explain why the combo Brendalee saw stronger-than-expected usage in the early 1960s specifically:
1964: 14 baby girls named Brendalee
1963: 22 baby girls named Brendalee
1962: 12 baby girls named Brendalee
1961: 20 baby girls named Brendalee
1960: 24 baby girls named Brendalee (peak usage)
1959: 10 baby girls named Brendalee
1958: 6 baby girls named Brendalee
What accounts for this usage?
Pint-sized pop singer Brenda Lee (born Brenda Mae Tarpley in Georgia in 1944).
Brenda Lee was discovered by country singer Red Foley in early 1955, when she was just eleven. Soon after that, her first singles started coming out.
She went on to have a recording career that lasted multiple decades. More than a dozen of her singles ended up reaching the U.S. top 10 — most of them during the first half of the 1960s.
Her biggest hit was the song “I’m Sorry,” which peaked at #1 on Billboard‘s Hot 100 chart in the summer of 1960, when she was fifteen.
Here’s what it sounds like:
(Brenda finally scored a second #1 hit in late 2023, when her rockabilly holiday song “Rockin’ Around the Christmas Tree” rose to the top of the charts thanks to a cute music video created to celebrate the song’s 65th anniversary.)
What are your thoughts on the compound name Brenda Lee?
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