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Old names

(53 Posts)
watermeadow Sat 03-May-25 17:02:25

My name was extremely common when I was born but, like most from that era, it hasn’t been used since.
Lately, when I finish an email, Apple takes it upon himself to correct it from Ann to Anna.
I am now obsolete! Does this happen with other by-gone names?

Romola Sun 04-May-25 19:35:45

My name was also very common, lots of us in my year at school. My parents must have thought a bit harder when my two sisters were born as they have lovely less usual though not peculiar names. Am I jealous? Yes!
I bet there are plenty of us on Gnet called Jenny, Sarah, Jane or Susan. (Most of my friends have those names!) And a sprinkling of Dianas and Christines as well.
My great-aunts were Violet, Marjorie, Clara (sisters) also Joan and Ruth on another side.
My late DH and his brother had slightly weird names, MiL was rather arty. But now that DH is gone, I have to write our surname on Christmas cards etc to distinguish myself from all the others with my first name.
As for the men in my family, they're mostly called James, John, Peter, Robert, William, David, Tim(othy) including the younger generation.

MaizieD Sun 04-May-25 19:34:43

I was surprised when a woman I went to ante natal classes with called her baby George. It was my grandfather's name!

I think they do go around and come back into fashion.

Blossoming Sun 04-May-25 19:23:43

My given name has never been common.

Calendargirl Sun 04-May-25 19:07:00

My friend’s little GD is Ada.

Sorry, I think it’s an awful name to saddle a child with.

Another is called Cora. And Edie.

They are ‘hard sounding’ names.

👎

My opinion only, of course.

watermeadow Sun 04-May-25 18:24:45

Of course names come and go. What shocked me was being autocorrected on my iPad.

M0nica Sun 04-May-25 15:53:23

Yes, and in time so will all the names we have and so on ad infinitum.

nanna8 Sun 04-May-25 10:27:26

They’re coming back, though, the old names. We have got a great grandson named Frederick, Freddie for short. Never thought to hear that one again. I like the biblical names like Aaron, Leah etc - we’ve got them in different parts of the family , they never seem to date.

Mt61 Sun 04-May-25 10:26:12

Grandma70s

One of my names is Katherine, though it is not the name I am known by. My DIL is also called Katherine, spelt the same way. It seems to be a name that doesn’t go out of fashion.

Names from my youth that aren’t much used nowadays are Valerie, Judith, Anne, Margaret (although I do know of a child called Margaret), Brenda, Janet, Patricia, Rosemary - I could go on and on. Boys’ names don’t seem to change so much. There are still young boys named Edward, James, Stephen, or David. But I don’t know of any called Derek, John, Donald or Eric.

Names popular in my grandparents’ generation but unpopular in that of my parents or mine are now popular again - for example Charlotte, Emily, Harriet. When I was a child in the 1940s, my best friend was called Harriet, which was very unusual then. Now there are Harriets all over the place!

Especially Donald 🤣

Witzend Sun 04-May-25 10:25:38

Some of the ‘old lady’, ‘old man’ names do make me cringe and feel sorry for the poor little babies. But then the parents don’t have my memories of dried-up, whiskery old great-aunts, nor of bristly old great-uncles in ancient tweedy jackets smelling of pipe smoke, and often a knitted tie with the remains of his breakfast egg on it.

Witzend Sun 04-May-25 10:20:32

BlueBelle

Well Simon Cowels young son is called Eric *

One of my grandmothers was Pheodora glad I wasn’t called after her I have a great grandad Moses Providence and a great great grandma Zebadiah

When my youngest voluterered in a school in Africa there were some wonderful names one chap was Ringostar there was an Innocent and the best one I thought was Nomore

At a hotel in Lagos (Nigeria) the waiter serving our table had a name badge saying ‘Mortality’, poor chap!

Margiknot Sun 04-May-25 09:47:55

In my grandparents generation there was a Daisy May Jack Phylis Arthur Belle Winefred Nora Wynn, Gladys Susan William. Daisy Jack and May seem to have come back.

Jaxjacky Sun 04-May-25 09:23:14

My paternal granny was Ada utbb

Usedtobeblonde Sun 04-May-25 08:20:01

One of my young friends has a niece named Ada.
I last knew an Ada when I was a child, many, many years ago.

jusnoneed Sun 04-May-25 08:18:05

I transcribe census and BMD records to go online and come across some unusual names, but also often see multiple families with 4/5/6 children who all have the same names as those in neighbouring houses. I often think it must of been very confusing for schools and when someone wanted to call young William/James or Emily/Sarah etc in from the street!

I don't come across many people with my name and in school days I only ever knew of one other. But one of my sons friends mum shares it and the young lad who is about to put a new heating system in for us has his mum with same name. I haven't heard it given to a youngster either.

Calendargirl Sun 04-May-25 07:26:38

Names that will never make a comeback, I think….

Gladys, Doris, Ena, Bertha, Ethel, Gertrude, Winifred, Phyllis.

No doubt many of you will come on and say, ‘Oh, my GD is called…..’

smile

Calendargirl Sun 04-May-25 07:23:02

I have never liked my name, but I now think it would make a good ‘second’ name.

It’s one syllable, and quite attractive in that context.

None of my offspring thought of that, however, when they named our GD’s.

Llamas99 Sun 04-May-25 07:14:05

My GGGF was named Peter Birthright.

BlueBelle Sun 04-May-25 05:29:59

Well Simon Cowels young son is called Eric *

One of my grandmothers was Pheodora glad I wasn’t called after her I have a great grandad Moses Providence and a great great grandma Zebadiah

When my youngest voluterered in a school in Africa there were some wonderful names one chap was Ringostar there was an Innocent and the best one I thought was Nomore

Macadia Sun 04-May-25 04:18:39

My.mum loved the name I have and was about to name my older sister that when my dad protested so she became a different acceptabe name and years later, I received the name he didnt like. He never called me by that name.

JamesandJon33 Sun 04-May-25 03:24:20

I never met one person with my name until I was thirteen, and not many thereafter. However now it is getting quite common.

Allira Sat 03-May-25 23:14:16

When today's Ediths, Lilies, Eves, Agneses etc become parents, they'll be naming their daughters Linda, Pamela, Jennifer, Anne, Margaret, Susan etc!

I did prefer the Saints' names we chose for our sons to the boys' names which are popular now, they're probably named after footballers.

Grammaretto Sat 03-May-25 22:46:15

My name once so common that 5 girls in my class shared it is non existent now.

My 10yr old DGD was given an old fashioned name after her gt gt grandmother and there are several in her school.

Grandma70s Sat 03-May-25 22:34:01

One of my names is Katherine, though it is not the name I am known by. My DIL is also called Katherine, spelt the same way. It seems to be a name that doesn’t go out of fashion.

Names from my youth that aren’t much used nowadays are Valerie, Judith, Anne, Margaret (although I do know of a child called Margaret), Brenda, Janet, Patricia, Rosemary - I could go on and on. Boys’ names don’t seem to change so much. There are still young boys named Edward, James, Stephen, or David. But I don’t know of any called Derek, John, Donald or Eric.

Names popular in my grandparents’ generation but unpopular in that of my parents or mine are now popular again - for example Charlotte, Emily, Harriet. When I was a child in the 1940s, my best friend was called Harriet, which was very unusual then. Now there are Harriets all over the place!

MiniMoon Sat 03-May-25 21:48:28

My name has never been popular. I have only ever met 2 other women with my name.
I was named after a great aunt. I somehow think it will never make a comeback.

M0nica Sat 03-May-25 17:32:51

But hasn't that always been so? How many Gertrudes are there today? When I was born (mid 1940s) No one would call a girl Ethel or Edith, there were almost no boys called Albert or Aubrey, or Frederick, not to mention Emily, Amelia.

Yet all those names are not uncommon nowadays. What goes around, comes around.