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This may not be an English language question, but I've always wondered. In Sweden, it is very unusual to have surnames that can also be used straight up as first names. In fact, I can think of no such examples. But in English speaking countries, it seems to be rather common. List of examples:

Barry Lyndon – Lyndon Johnson
Dylan Thomas – Thomas
John Adams – Adam
Thomas Jefferson – Jefferson Davis
William Henry Harrison – Harrison Ford
John Tyler – Tyler
Chester A Arthur – Arthur

(Yes, I used a list of US presidents as reference). With the exception of James Madison, whose surname is sometimes used as a female name, I cannot think of many other such surnames which are used as female first names. Is this the case? Is the tradition to use only male names as surnames, or reuse surnames as male first names?

Of course, nowadays, people improvise a lot more, but speaking from a historical perspective.

As a side note, in Sweden we used to have the -- rather curious -- tradition of giving surnames to children based entirely on the father's first name. E.g.:

Johan Davidsson's son was named Nils Johansson
Nils Johansson's son was named Bertil Nilsson
Bertil Nilsson's son was named Karl Bertilsson

(Yes, two 's', as in "Johan's son") Something that surely makes genealogical research difficult. These surnames are used today as well. Either way, it seems to loosely be based on the same principle of using male names as surnames.

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It's amusing that all of the people on the left you chose as having surnames that can be first names, also have first names that can be surnames! There are plenty of people surnamed John, Dylan, Williams, Barry and Chester. – RoundTower Oct 23 '11 at 7:58
I find Lyndon, Jefferson, Harrison and Tyler all rather odd examples of "surname used as first name", and Thomas and Arthur unremarkable examples of "first name use as surname". "Adams" is a patronymic, just like your Swedish examples (and Thomas probably is as well). – Colin Fine Oct 24 '11 at 16:42
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Barry Lyndon is an odd case, because "Barry" is not his given name but his original surname. "Barry" was very rare as a personal name before WWI. – Colin Fine Oct 24 '11 at 16:50

5 Answers

up vote 4 down vote accepted

Naming has a large arbitrary and cultural component and so is subject to the same structures as fashion. It seems for many centuries the only choices for Western Europe were Christian saint's names and for men mostly just the apostles.

But fashions change. It seems like in 19th c. Americans, the fashionable source was Old Testament prophets with z's and k's (Ezekiel, Zebulon, Zachariah).

And lately (early 21st c) American girls are named after president's last names (the aforementioned Madison, plus Kennedy, Reagan, Taylor (this is the answer to one of the questions). This is simply a current fashion trend mostly likely to be replaced soon from some new set.

One subtle pattern in English speaking areas for at least the past two centuries is to name a boy using the maiden name of the mother, usually a second or third boy since the first got the full name of the father (with Jr. or III appended).

As trends go, people sometimes follow the external view of the phenomenon (last names for first), which accounts for Jefferson Davis or (much later) Harrison Ford, whose mother's maiden names did not supply their first names. That these first names are the last names of famous people (American presidents) probably helped in their choice.

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Very interesting, but my question is if this naming convention is restricted to masculine names only? – TLP Oct 23 '11 at 14:47
The particular convention, as an identifiable thing which is not particularly common or current, is as stated: a boy's first name is from the mother's maiden name. It doesn't say anything about girls' names; I haven't heard of such a convention nor do I see one currently. So I'd venture that yes, this is restricted to boys. But as I intimated, conventions change like fashion. All I can say is that I don't expect any girl to ever be called 'Nixon' or 'Van Buren'. – Mitch Oct 23 '11 at 15:29
If you could incorporate the gender aspect in your answer, it could be a possible answer to my question. It seems a popular opinion here that surnames that can be used as female names today should be considered, which I do not agree with. – TLP Oct 23 '11 at 17:23
@TLP: I'm not sure what to incorporate in addition to what's already there about gender. I don't see what it is you disagree with in the other answers. – Mitch Oct 23 '11 at 19:25
Yes, I am a bit surprised that so many people seem to have a hard time understanding it. I don't think it's a hard concept to grasp at all. I'm not sure how to express myself any clearer. – TLP Oct 23 '11 at 21:44
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If you look at this list of the top 100 girl names in the USA in 2011, I think you will find the following as not entirely uncommon family names:

Madison, Addison, Lily, Avery, Ashley, Brooklyn, Taylor, Alison, Riley, Aubrey, Peyton, Lauren, Sydney, Morgan, Mackenzie, Brooke, Bailey, Payton, Paige.

For girls: total 19/100

Do the same for boys and you get:

Alexander, Mason, Andrew, Logan, James, Benjamin, Ryan, Jackson, Christian, Dylan, Landon, Tyler, Lucas, Issac, Brandon, Jordan, Owen, Carter, Connor, Adrian, Wyatt, Hunter, Cameron, Thomas, Charles, Austin, Henry, Colton, Cooper, Carson, Parker, Blake, Oliver, Cole.

For boys: total, 34/100.

Of course we can argue over the details, but I think this is at least reasonably accurate.

So there are certainly lots of female given names that are used as family names, but, based on this survey, the phenomenon is about half as common. (This is probably understandable given that in our culture, certainly in the past, women tend to give up their family names during marriage.)

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The SSA itself, where that site's statistics come from in any case, allows you to view up to the top 1000 names for a birth year. I doubt your results would be much different - if anything, maybe more male names would be surnames - but by not looking at all thousand, you're missing a few exciting surnames-turned-girls'-names like Chanel and Armani ;) – aedia λ Oct 23 '11 at 5:31
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"not entirely uncommon", you say, but A) those seem like some pretty rare surnames, B) I see that many of the names can be given to boys as well, which makes them completely invalid in any comparison. – TLP Oct 23 '11 at 13:07
As such, I do not believe I can accept an answer that relies on the female version of unisex names, names invented in recent years (when naming customs have been made significantly more liberal), and also, quite frankly, surnames which are obscure. – TLP Oct 23 '11 at 14:42
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@TLP, oi! Whose surname are you calling rare and obscure? Taylor is the third most common in England. – Peter Taylor Oct 23 '11 at 15:46
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@TLP Your question was "are all English surnames made first names masculine?" Clearly the answer is no. Looking at the girls' names list I gave again, 75% of them are quite common as family names, especially if you factor in minor spelling variants (Ashleigh for Ashley, Allison for Alison etc.) I have known people with all but three of these family names. The only unisex names I see are Avery, Taylor, Riley, Morgan and Payton. And where I live, these are predominantly female names. Remember also that the source was based on statistical data of names girls are actually called. – Fraser Orr Oct 23 '11 at 15:47
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The short answer is no, surnames used as first names are not given exclusively to males. The majority, however, seem to have been used that way until recently. This seems to be in the process of changing now with the increasing flexibility in naming practices.

Examples of established female first names that are also found as common surnames are Grace and Rose (which have been used for centuries), Ruby (which came into popularity during the Victorian era) and Kennedy (which was popularized in recent decades).

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Many English and Gaelic surnames, especially place names, have become well-established names for girls: Ashley (1970s), Beverly (1904), Blair (1980s), Cassidy (1980s), Courtney (1970s), Evelyn (1800s), Kimberly (1950s), Lindsay (1970s), Lynn (1940s), Shelby (1935).

Behind the Name lists most of these names as both masculine and feminine. However, it'd be misleading to call them “unisex” names. Only Courtney and Lynn have ever been among the top 250 boys' names in the US. To put that in perspective, Mary was among the top 250 boys' names in the early 20th Century, and I doubt you'd consider that one “unisex.”

In contrast, all of these names except Blair have been among the top 100 girls' names, several in the top 10. Notably, Evelyn has been a common girl's name since the 19th Century, but it has not cracked the boys' top 1,000 since the 1930s.

In some cases (like Beverly and Blair) it appears that a surname became an uncommon but established boys' name, which then transitioned to a popular girls' name. In most cases, however, it looks like the name simply never became well-established until parents started giving it to girls. And in a few cases (like Cassidy and Kimberly), the name took off with girls first, never really taking hold among boys.

No, surnames aren't strictly for boys' given names, and they haven't been since at least the 1950s.

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To put it another way, there may have been a time when surnames and place names were generally considered more appropriate for boys – but that was before the Baby Boom. – Bradd Szonye May 12 at 11:32
When you say Mary was in the top 250 for boy's names, wasn't that as a middle name? It's still common in Holland, and probably in Germany too (possibly in Scandinavia too). – Cerberus May 12 at 21:58
@Cerberus Yes, it looks like that's the case. The BTN and SSA data must not distinguish between first and middle names, which is unfortunate, as the two have different “rules” of acceptability. I mention Mary mainly to caution that you need to be careful about interpreting historical name records: Once you get out of the top 100–200 boys' names, there's no guarantee that you're actually talking about a masculine name anymore. Pearl is another good example, e.g., Pearl Zane Grey. – Bradd Szonye May 12 at 22:52
This applies to modern names too. In Holland, short names are all the rage, for boys and girls. Boys are all called Fin and Sem and whatnot, which have no history or connotation at all: just random monosyllables. A girl was named Eh last year...luckily, she was unique. – Cerberus May 13 at 4:40
@Cerberus Yes, baby naming is a matter of fashion! And just like clothing fashions, gender preferences can change radically. – Bradd Szonye May 13 at 5:12

Madison (as mentioned) is an interesting case. You can even view the scene in the movie Splash where it happened. The mermaid newly-turned-human has a name not pronouncable by humans, so she must choose a new name. She (and Tom Hanks with her) look up and see the street sign "Madison Avenue". So that becomes her name. And subsequently it became one of the most popular names for baby girls in the US.

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This is not an answer to the question; a comment would be more appropriate. – onomatomaniak Oct 23 '11 at 13:46
@onomatomaniak It is relevant to the case of the Madison name being a recent invention, though. And as such, perhaps not a good example of an exception to the traditional naming practices. – TLP Oct 23 '11 at 16:59
I wonder in the list of common girl's names also last names given by Fraser, were any of them already common girl's names 50 years ago? Lily/Lilly, possibly Paige. Any others? – GEdgar Oct 23 '11 at 17:16
@GEdgar That is a good point. – TLP Oct 23 '11 at 17:34

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