Cowboy Names

  1. Dakota
    • Origin:

      Place-name; Sioux
    • Meaning:

      "friendly one"
    • Description:

      An early and still one of the most popular unisex names, also a place name and name of a Native American people in the northern Mississippi valley, which makes it a controversial baby name choice. While the popularity of Dakota is trending downward for both genders, it's one of those rare genuinely gender-neutral names that is used for nearly equal numbers of boys and girls.
  2. Dallas
    • Origin:

      Place name, surname and Irish
    • Meaning:

      "meadow dwelling, valley house, skilled"
    • Description:

      A laid-back cowboy name which feels both cool and gentle, Dallas has ranked in the US Top 500 since records began in 1880. Never super popular but surprisingly never out of style, Dallas is given to nearly 1400 boys in the US every year.
  3. Dusty
    • Flint
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "born near outcrop of flint"
      • Description:

        Flint is one of the new macho names on the rise today, part old-school tough guy, part rebel. You won't find a tougher, steelier-sounding name; it's part of a genre on the rise along with cousins Slate, Stone and Steel.
    • Ford
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "dweller at the ford"
      • Description:

        The long association to the Ford Motor Company doesn't stand in the way of this being a strong, independent, single-syllable name.
    • Gage
      • Origin:

        French
      • Meaning:

        "oath, pledge"
      • Description:

        Gage was part of the craze for one-syllable surnames, with associations to tasty green gage plums and the mathematical gauge.
    • Gentry
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "aristocracy"
      • Description:

        A distinctive surname that, despite its meaning, has a cowboy swagger, a la Autry.
    • Granger
      • Origin:

        English and French surname
      • Meaning:

        "worker of the granary; farmer"
      • Description:

        If you're seeking a solid but underused occupational name with a warm, friendly sound, and an earthy feel, Granger is one to consider. Associated with faming, grain, and the outdoors, it fits in with the likes of Colton, Sawyer, and Cooper, with a hint of classic George about it too.
    • Gunner
      • Origin:

        Scandinavian variation of Gunther
      • Meaning:

        "bold warrior"
      • Description:

        The kind of nouveau macho name favored by NRA-leaning parents. Killers' frontman Brandon Flowers gave it to his son in 2009. Gunnar is another spelling that makes the name a bit less militaristic.
    • Harvest
      • Origin:

        English word name
      • Meaning:

        "the season for gathering in agricultural crops"
      • Description:

        Harvest has been occasionally used as a name since the eighteenth century, originally as evenly unisex, though it tips a bit in the girls' direction in the contemporary US. Given the rise of such popular baby names as Harper and August, plus new word names from Heaven to True, Harvest sounds more possible now than ever.
    • Hiram
      • Origin:

        Hebrew
      • Meaning:

        "brother of the exalted one"
      • Description:

        Hiram is the kind of forgotten biblical name that adventurous parents who wish to move beyond David and Daniel are beginning to reconsider--even though it has bits of its old stiff-collared image clinging to it, along with a little hillbilly feel as well. The name belonged to an Old Testament king of Tyre who helped David and Solomon plan and build the temple in Jerusalem, and was a favorite in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, though a couple of well-known bearers dropped it--Ulysses S. Grant was orignially Hiram Ulysses Grant, but he didn't like having the initials H.U.G., and country singer Hank Williams was also born Hiram. With its definite funk factor, and its friendly nickname Hi, Hiram would make a distinctive choice.
    • Houston
      • Origin:

        Scottish
      • Meaning:

        "Hugh's town"
      • Description:

        Looking for a Texas name more distinctive than Austin and Dallas? Houston is a lanky, roguish place-name, right in style with its Texas accent and cowboy image.
    • Hoyt
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "long stick"
      • Description:

        Distinctive though somewhat abrupt, most prominently borne by country singer Hoyt Axton.
    • Huxley
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "inhospitable place"
      • Description:

        Huxley is definitely rising as a surname name, with its X that makes almost any name cooler. It debuted in the US Top 1000 in 2015. The modern nicknames Hux and Huck certainly don't hurt.
    • Hixon
      • Ira
        • Origin:

          Hebrew, Sanskrit
        • Meaning:

          "watchful one; wind"
        • Description:

          Succinct and sharp, Ira is one of the shortest Old Testament names, belonging to one of King David's thirty 'mighty warriors.' It was widely used in the US from the 1880s to the early 1930s (it was Number 57 on the Social Security list in 1881), but fell off completely in 1993, only to return in 2016. Currently, it is in the latter half of the US Top 1000, given to around 260 boys each year.
      • Isaiah
        • Origin:

          Hebrew
        • Meaning:

          "Salvation of the Lord"
        • Description:

          Isaiah, like brethren Isaac and Elijah, is a once neglected biblical name now firmly back in favor, already surpassing such long-popular Old Testament stalwarts as Aaron and Adam. Isaiah has ranked on the US Top 1000 list for boys every year but two, 1969 and 1970.
      • Jace
        • Origin:

          Hebrew, diminutive of Jason
        • Meaning:

          "the Lord is salvation"
        • Description:

          Jace may sound like only half a name -- it's usually pronounced like the first half of Jason though some may consider it a spelling-out of the initials J. C. -- but it's a popular choice for baby boys. Jace has been heard on such TV shows as Teen Mom 2 and Duck Dynasty.
      • Jacey
        • Jericho
          • Origin:

            Biblical place-name
          • Description:

            A biblical place name with trumpeting verve and strength.