Extinct Names That Are Never Ever Coming Back
Names lists from a century ago contain hundreds of extinct baby names that can be downright surprising. You would think we’ve heard them all, but no, names like Square and Burdella are new, even to us.
It may seem contrary to the 100-year-rule — the idea that names come back into style approximately once every century — but not every name makes its return. (And we have trouble believing many of these names were actually stylish to begin with!)
After carefully combing through the data, we identified over 200 extinct names — each given to five or more babies in 1920 — that we hope will never be revived. These include cringe-worthy vintage inventions like Bunice and Darthula, as well as hilarious word names such as Trellis and Bland (yes, you read that right).
These are the 100-year-old 1920s names that are never ever (ever) coming back:
Extinct Re-spellings
If you thought Kaytelynne had it bad, I’d like to introduce you to Girtrue. And Earma. And Irl. These were some of the most kre8tif spellings we found on the 1920 baby names list — made worse by the fact that most of these names are hopelessly out of style, even in their conventionally-spelled versions.
Aurthur: 9 boys
Bennette: 6 boys
Birt: 13 boys
Earma: 14 girls
Elease: 74 girls
Emogene: 131 girls
Evertt: 27 boys
Gearldean: 6 girls
Girtrue: 7 girls
Harryette: 8 girls
Irl: 16 boys
Luceal: 14 girls
Murl: 29 girls
Olevia: 42 girls
Ople: 18 girls
Randle: 18 boys
Rease: 6 boys
Rosevelt: 54 boys
Surprising Gender-Bends
You’ve heard of boys named Sue, but how about girls named Robert and Jim, or boys called Daisy and Alice? These parents took gender-bending to a whole new level, proving any name can be unisex if you really want it to be.
Alice: 28 boys
Beatrice: 21 boys
Carl: 45 girls
Daisy: 10 boys
Dave: 6 girls
Donald: 46 girls
Elsie: 22 boys
Emma: 10 boys
Guy: 10 girls
Jim: 10 girls
Lola: 11 boys
Mary: 195 boys
Nancy: 6 boys
Richard: 54 girls
Robert: 205 girls
William: 205 girls
Outmoded Feminizations
Taking a cue from some of the top names of the day — Josephine, Pauline, and Geraldine — some parents tried to feminize other classic boy names. Charlesetta and Walterine just don’t have the same effect.
Arthurine: 9 girls
Charlesetta: 9 girls
Hermina: 59 girls
Lugene: 12 girls
Melvina: 136 girls
Nedra: 75 girls
Vincentina: 9 girls
Walterine: 9 girls
Wilburta: 9 girls
Body Talk
It is truly unfortunate to be named after any part of the body, even an appendage as inoffensive as the pinkie toe. We hope Colon is just a tragic misspelling of Colin, but there’s no good reason to use Oral nowadays.
Colon: 32 boys
Dimple: 75 girls
Dimples: 6 girls
Fanny: 222 girls
Oral: 84 boys
Oralee: 23 girls
Pinkie: 94 girls
Hairy Names
A word to the parents of 1920 — your baby’s hair is subject to change. He’s not going to be Harless or a Baldo forever, and those Curly locks could very well straighten out. Who knows, your Blondine may eventually turn into a Brunette! So please, don’t name your baby after her haircut.
Baldo: 7 boys
Blondell: 24 girls
Blondine: 8 girls
Brunette: 10 girls
Curlie: 11 girls
Curly: 7 boys
Harless: 14 boys
Food and Drink Names
We love a food name as much as the next person (Olive? Yes! Plum? Adorable!) but they come with guidelines. Fruit, spice, and herb names are best, although some are best avoided (we’re looking at you, Lemon). There were some interesting edible names on the 1920s list, perhaps the worst of which is Mayo — because no child should ever be named after a condiment.
Almond: 13 boys
Brownie: 30 girls
Cherry: 34 girls
Cola: 14 girls
Curry: 18 boys
Lemon: 25 boys
Mayo: 36 boys
Mescal: 8 girls
Peachie: 10 girls
Rice: 8 boys
Romaine: 73 girls
Word Names
Inspirational and symbolic word names are right on trend now, but parents of the 1920s didn't quite get the concept when they chose these seemingly random word names. Trigger and Boss, meet Tennis and Boots. We wouldn’t blame you if you said these names make you Wanna Hurl.
Boots: 8 girls
Clearance: 14 boys
Cluster: 5 boys
Coy: 241 boys
Crit: 5 boys
Deforest: 26 boys
Ether: 6 boys
Eureka: 5 girls
Fairy: 70 girls
Glee: 14 girls
Hurl: 6 boys
Icy: 21 girls
Luster: 37 boys
Meta: 92 girls
Metro: 32 boys
Pebble: 11 girls
Tennis: 5 boys
Trellis: 6 girls
Toy: 17 girls
Verbal: 9 girls
Wanna: 13 girls
Wave: 6 girls
Wealthy: 7 girls
Welcome: 5 girls
Wing: 5 boys
Shape and Color Names
The moms and dads who chose these names for their children clearly weren’t thinking outside the 12-color crayon box.
Brown: 36 boys
Gold: 5 boys
Orange: 20 boys
Oval: 34 boys
Pink: 17 boys
Square: 5 boys
Occupational Names
Many of the occupational names we see today are aspirational, like Pilot and Knight, or obsolete terms we no longer associate with professions, such as Fletcher and Sawyer. But in the 1920s, mainstream jobs were also used as baby names. In 1920 you were actually more likely to meet babies named Author and Colonel than Archer and Cooper.
Author: 42 boys
Barber: 7 boys
Butler: 24 boys
Captain: 5 boys
Colonel: 37 boys
Commodore: 12 boys
Doc: 27 boys
Doctor: 17 boys
Farmer: 9 boys
Lawyer: 16 boys
Lieutenant: 9 boys
Miner: 5 boys
Plummer: 10 boys
President: 5 boys
Squire: 15 boys
Close Calls
These names are so close to words that just shouldn’t be baby names. Was Ferol feral, Loney lonely, or Loring boring? Not necessarily, but these parents were asking for it.
The blender wasn’t invented until 1922, making Blenda a forgivable offense. Thankfully by 1923 Blenda was entirely extinct. But the pencil had been around for centuries and 1920s parents were still naming their children Pencie and Wencil, for some reason.
Algie: 16 girls
Blenda: 7 girls
Bubber: 6 boys
Clorine: 17 girls
Dicy: 12 girls
Ferol: 10 girls
Graple: 5 girls
Leafie: 6 girls
Loney: 10 girls
Loring: 29 boys
Lousie: 5 girls
Pencie: 5 girls
Pleas: 17 boys
Stancil: 5 boys
Velva: 118 girls
Wencil: 5 boys
Wirt: 18 boys
From the Looks of It
Beauty standards are traumatic enough without being named after one.
Beauty: 16 girls
Everlean: 14 girls
Everleaner: 6 girls
Fair: 5 girls
Little: 22 boys
Littleton: 9 boys
Shorty: 6 boys
Tiney: 14 girls
Tiny: 58 girls
Place Names
Seen here: many Midwestern state names — perhaps the least common part of the country to name your child after (although Indiana Jones did a great deal for his name).
A few of these choices, such as Argentina and Melbourne, have potential for modern resurrection, but a name like Palestine would be too politically charged.
Argentina: 8 girls
Armenia: 9 girls
Australia: 9 girls
Brazil: 5 boys
Burma: 12 girls
Frenchie: 8 girls
Illinois: 6 girls
Kansas: 7 girls
Maryland: 9 girls
Melbourne: 42 boys
Missouri: 30 girls
Nebraska: 6 girls
Palestine: 6 girls
Philippine: 6 girls
Like a Virgin
Naming your daughter Madonna sends a very different message in our post-1980s world, but the rest of these names are too strongly tied to abstinence to be used on modern babies.
Hyman and Hymen were common among Jewish immigrants as Anglicizations of Chaim — not, as it may seem, in reference to the hymen — but today either spelling is an absolute no-go. Inocencia is still occasionally heard in Latino communities.
Conception: 95 girls
Hyman: 269 boys
Hymen: 16 boys
Inocencia: 11 girls
Prudy: 7 girls
Madonna: 91 girls
Sister: 8 girls
Virgina: 29 girls
Terms of Endearment
As cute as it may be to call your daughter Sweetie or Honey on occasion, these pet names do not deserve a promotion to legal first name status.
Babe: 15 girls
Bambina: 5 girls
Doll: 10 girls
Girlie: 18 girls
Honey: 8 girls
Pet: 5 girls
Sweetie: 14 girls
Tootsie: 5 girls
Insulting Names
While most of these words were not insulting back in 1920, they cannot be used on a 21st century baby in good conscience.
Bossie: 5 boys
Cornie: 11 boys
Flake: 5 boys
Guido: 89 boys
Hoke: 16 boys
Pansy: 234 girls
Nimrod: 8 boys
Oddie: 10 girls
Rube: 19 boys
Nothing Special
Nowadays we like to give our kids names that speak to how great they are (in fact, Great was given to 5 baby boys in 2018), but certain parents in the 1920s preferred to remind their children that they’re part of the average. A name like Bland or Normal would serve to keep your ego in check.
Bland: 16 boys
Layman: 9 boys
Less: 7 boys
Normal: 8 boys
Other: 6 boys
Virtues
Virtue names have come a long way since the Prohibition Era — buttoned-up choices such as Prudence and Modest have given way to the more modern Serenity and Reverie. A couple of these name could still work as middles — Friend and Jolly, maybe Pleasant — but let’s say goodbye to Handy and Nicey. And we are not encouraging the revival of the anti-virtues of the ‘20s, including the vain Vanita and Philander (really).
Friend: 10 boys
Handy: 15 boys
Jolly: 9 boys
Modest: 5 girls
Modesta: 27 girls
Modestine: 6 girls
Perfecto: 8 boys
Philander: 11 boys
Pleasant: 21 boys
Prudence: 74 girls
Nicey: 6 girls
Vanita: 27 girls
Worthy: 14 boys
Almost There
These names resemble more familiar baby names, but somehow missed the mark.
Bunice: 11 girls
Chales: 6 boys
Charlcie: 15 girls
Cloyd: 73 boys
Flordia: 12 girls
Lessie: 325 girls
Ophie: 6 girls
Gay Pride
Any name beginning with Gay– is now off the table, but there was no such association with the LGBTQ community a century ago. The moms and dads of the 1920s got creative in their variations, spawning spinoffs like Gaynell and Gayland for their daughters and sons.
Gay: 57 girls
Gaye: 9 girls
Gaynell: 48 girls
Gaynelle: 30 girls
Gayland: 13 boys
Gaylen: 10 boys
Gaylon: 12 boys
Gaylord: 126 boys
Ruined by Pop Culture
We won’t hold it against these parents for choosing these names, since they couldn’t have predicted that Alf would become synonymous with an alien puppet or Garfield a lasagna-loving cat. But we do have some questions for the eleven sets of parents who named their daughters Cinderella, because they certainly knew better.
Alf: 26 boys
Cinderella: 11 girls
Elmo: 397 boys
Garfield: 104 boys
Gilmore: 18 boys
Hedwig: 128 girls
Kermit: 382 boys
Lassie: 26 girls
Lolita: 53 girls
Pocahontas: 6 girls
Santa: 71 girls
Simpson: 15 boys
Ventura: 22 boys
What Were They Thinking?
It’s difficult to imagine a world where anyone thought it was a good idea to name their daughters Girtha or Dardanella. And yet, these now-extinct names were given to a significant number of baby girls born in 1920.
Arbutus: 46 girls
Blossie: 8 girls
Blouncie: 8 boys
Burdella: 12 girls
Dardanella: 23 girls
Darthula: 8 girls
Earther: 8 girls
Floyce: 13 girls
Girtha: 18 girls
Lugardita: 5 girls
Thecla: 10 girls