Old New England Names from Maine

  1. Ezelda
    • Fern
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "plant name"
      • Description:

        Of all the botanicals, Fern has been one of the slowest to move back from the front parlor into the nursery, despite the appealing girl character in the children's classic Charlotte's Web. Fern was most popular from the turn of the last century through the 1940s, reaching a high of #152 in 1916. We can certainly see her rejoining the long list of popular greenery names.
    • Festus
      • Origin:

        Latin
      • Meaning:

        "joyous, festive"
      • Description:

        A name from the ancient world that may get a mixed reception today. On the one hand, festive! On the other hand, fester. In the Bible, Porcius Festus was a Roman official who rubbed up against St Paul. In modern times, this name has had more love in African countries than anywhere else.
    • Fia
      • Origin:

        Irish or Portuguese or Italian
      • Meaning:

        "wild or weaver"
      • Description:

        Fia may be most notable at this moment as the Anglicized version of the Irish Fiadh, one of the fastest-rising names in the Republic of Ireland. The meaning of Fia or Fiadh is sometimes given as "deer" but that's in the sense of a wild deer, as the name relates to the ancient word for wild.
    • Florie
      • Origin:

        Diminutive of Florence
      • Meaning:

        "blooming, flowering"
      • Description:

        Florence is back, and the adorable short form Florie (or Flory) is too. Or you could just name her Flora and be done with it.
    • Francelia
      • Francenah
        • Freedella
          • Gabriellen
            • Gillie
              • Gallie
                • Geneta
                  • Gibby
                    • Glynnie
                      • Hamlin
                        • Origin:

                          German
                        • Meaning:

                          "little home-lover"
                        • Description:

                          One you might like for its cozy meaning, but there is that Pied Piper rat connection.
                      • Hildred
                        • Origin:

                          English
                        • Meaning:

                          "battle advice"
                        • Description:

                          Part Hilda, part Mildred, but unfortunately not the good parts of either.
                      • Hollis
                        • Origin:

                          English
                        • Meaning:

                          "near the holly bushes"
                        • Description:

                          Hollis is a rugged, gentle and quietly used name, given to over 200 boys and 150 girls each year in the US. In 2023, it became one of the newest entries to the US Top 1000, where it fits in with the surnames-as-first-names trend, and other familiar choices like Ellis, Silas, and Holden.
                      • Holten
                        • Homerine
                          • Hosea