State Capital Baby Names

  1. Hartford
    • Origin:

      English surname
    • Meaning:

      "deer ford"
    • Description:

      British habitational surname that calls to mind the Connecticut capital
  2. Fe
    • Origin:

      Spanish
    • Meaning:

      "faith"
    • Description:

      Relatively popular in Spain until the middle of the 20th century, this sweet and lively Spanish virtue name is also a Marian name, short for María de Fe. In Galician, it is sometimes also short for Fernanda, meaning "brave voyager".
  3. Columbus
    • Origin:

      Variation of Columbo or Columbia, Latin
    • Meaning:

      "dove"
    • Description:

      This is a big name, both in heritage and sound. On the right child, this could be inspired, but others may shrink from all the connotations. While your preferred nickname for this option might be Col (or Kit if you're connecting it to Christopher Columbus), you may end up with the slightly more cumbersome "Bus" as the short-form.
  4. Albany
    • Origin:

      Place-name
    • Description:

      A capital place-name possibility.
  5. Albany
    • Origin:

      Place-name
    • Description:

      Not yet on the place-name map, this name has Shakespearean ties via the Duke Of Albany character in King Lear.
  6. Atlanta
    • Origin:

      Place name
    • Meaning:

      "Atlantic Ocean"
    • Description:

      The capital of Georgia is far from the ocean, but got its name from the Western and Atlantic Railroad which ran through the city. Best known as a hub of industry and transport, and for its roles in the Civil War and Civil Rights Movement, it has never been popular as a baby name despite sounding like one. Its peak popularity was in 1995, the year before Atlanta hosted the Olympic Games.

  7. Juneau
    • Origin:

      Place-name
    • Description:

      Juneau could go either way as a name. The newfound fame of the movie heroine Juno knocks this unrelated though identical-sounding Alaskan name out of consideration for boys, for the moment. Though (male) writer Junot Diaz may put the sound-alike name back in the running for boys.
  8. Providence
    • Origin:

      English
    • Meaning:

      "divine protection or care"
    • Description:

      A Puritanical virtue name and also a place name, belonging to the state capital of Rhode Island and several other towns and cities in the US.
  9. Lansing
    • Origin:

      Dutch and English surname
    • Meaning:

      "son of Lans; family of Wlanc"
    • Description:

      Lansing is perhaps best known as the state capital of Michigan, which was named after the town of Lansing, New York. The original Lansing was named in honor of John Lansing Jr., a Chancellor of New York and mayor of Albany. He was of Dutch parentage.
  10. Boston
    • Dover
      • Origin:

        British place-name
      • Description:

        Two-syllable place-names are stylish, and this one is attached to a British city noted for its white chalk cliffs, but there are a couple of minuses: associated with the fish, Dover sole, and also rhymes with the doggy Rover.
    • Saint
      • Origin:

        American word name
      • Meaning:

        "Saint"
      • Description:

        Saint went quickly from word to celebrity baby name to accepted baby boy name and now to baby girl name. And there's nothing historically or etymologically gendered about Saint, so why not?
    • Concord
      • Origin:

        Word name
      • Description:

        With its ties to tranquil Walden Pond, and harmonious meaning, this could be a modern virtue name.
    • Topeka
      • Origin:

        Place name from Kansa
      • Meaning:

        "place of potatoes"
      • Description:

        The name of the capital city of Kansas and the county seat of Shawnee County, which is thought to come from a Kansa word meaning "good place to grow potatoes".
    • Columbia
      • Origin:

        Latin
      • Meaning:

        "land of Columbus"
      • Description:

        Columbia is a rarely used name with many associations. From the eighteenth century it has been used as a female personification of the United States, often appearing as a flag-draped patriotic figure. And as such it's inspired a plethora of place and company names, from the District of Columbia to Columbia University to Columbia Records, and songs like "Columbia, Gem of the Ocean." A character called Columbia appears in The Rocky Horror Picture Show.