Source: http://www.ssa.gov/cgi-bin/babyname.cgi |
Have you ever noticed that your forename only seems to be found in “shall we say” individuals of a certain age? I run into this all the time with my first name of Diane.
I had
wondered if I had imagined this phenomenon and then I read How to Tell Someone’s Age When All You Know is Her Name.
Picture Mildred, Agnes, Ethel and
Blanche. Perhaps you imagine the Golden Girls or your grandmother’s poker game.
These are names for women of age, wisdom and distinction. The median living
Mildred in the United States
is now 78 years old.
Now imagine Madison, Sydney, Alexa
and Hailey. They sound like the starting midfield on a fourth-grade girls’
soccer team. And they might as well be: the median American females with these
names are between 9 and 12 years old.
The article
goes on to discuss the popularity of names over time and that by using such
data, based on the Social Security Administration data, you can narrow down the
peak time period for any name. Do
recognize that for any names that have had a consistent level of popularity
through time, such an analysis may not be as fruitful.
Let’s go
back to my name, Diane. First we go to
the Social Security Administration page, Baby Names,
select the tab “Popularity of a Name” and we put in the name Diane and 100
years. I then see a chart which runs
from 2004 back to 1914 (90 years) which lists the rank of the name Diane for
each year. Do note that only the most
popular 1000 names are listed. So, if
your name is unusual it may not show up for every year. For example, my son’s name is only listed for
1914-1996 and then falls off the list. For
my daughter, her list starts in 1971, though there are gaps, and the run on her
name ends in 1999 before falling off the list.
Now back to Diane. Here is a chart created by my Excel guru (aka my husband) which plots the ranking of my name (1 is the highest rank and 1000 is the lowest rank in terms of popularity) against year. Note that the peak rank years for the name Diane are from the early 1940s through the early 1960s. Let’s just say that my birth year falls squarely within this range !> and reinforces that when I typically meet a Diane, they are of “my generation."
I checked
my Mother’s name, my father’s name, which were and are quite popular names
though their popularity was greater around the time of their birth. I also checked my sister’s names and the
names of some other family members and overall I found that many of our names
and our birth dates correlated quite well with the charts of the popularity of
these names.
So, if you
are researching someone born in 1914 or later, and need to narrow a probable
birth date (or age), you might get some help by examining the available data on
the popularity of their forename.
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