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Vintage Boy Names: Grover and Friends
Vintage Boy Names: Grover and Friends
Nov 23, 2024 2:11 PM

  Spoiler alert: we’re talking about the final season of Girls below!

  Ready for a cardinal rule of baby naming? Names go in and out of style. Every few years, something old feels new again. And a name that was once all the rage teeters on the edge of extinction. Good-bye, Gary. Hello, Otis.

  The Girls series finale gave us a baby name that might signal the next new wave for boys. While it’s not a neat formula, there are plenty of examples of vintage boy names that feel current today.

  Twenty years ago, Jasper and Felix made few shortlists. Otis had tumbled out of the US Top 1000 entirely. Now Jasper and Felix feel like mainstream favorites, and Otis is shifting from daring hipster pick to an alternative to mega-popular Oliver.

  Pop culture plays an important role in helping parents re-consider long neglected names, so the Girls name could prove influential. And the fact that Lena Dunham and her fellow writers chose it? I suspect names like this are trending in their own lives.

  Let’s take a closer look at Girls’ Grover, along with some other so-far-out that they might – just might – be ready to be back in – names for boys. None of these appear in the current US Top 1000, but there’s good reason to think a younger generation of parents could cautiously consider them.

  

Vintage Boy Names That Sound New

Barnaby – Zachary peaked in the 1990s, a form of the New Testament Zacharias heard in English since the Middle Ages. Barnaby shares the same rhythm as Zachary, and similar roots, too – it developed in Medieval England as a form of the Biblical Barnabas. But Barnaby remains rare in the US, given to fewer than five boys in 2015. That could make it the perfect overlooked pick for many parents. It ranks Number 289 on Nameberry.

  Chester – A presidential and place name, Chester comes with jazzy nickname Chet. (Though musician Chet Baker was born Chesney.) Or maybe that’s country-cool Chet, as in Atkins. A favorite a century ago, Chester has long been reserved for cartoon cheetahs. But if Dexter can feel edgy and cool, why not Chester? It fares better in England, as well as on Nameberry, where the name ranks Number 233.

  Grover – If you’ve followed Girls, you’ll know that Hannah chose the name Grover because water-skiing instructor/baby daddy Paul–Louis once mentioned that he liked the name. Like Chester, Grover fits with popular –r ending boy names like Asher and Hunter. Friendly Grover gained some attention ten years ago from novel/movie The Nanny Diaries. The Percy Jackson series also features the name. But is it enough to overcome the Sesame Street association?

  Homer – Speaking of pop culture associations, Homer Simpson seems an unlikely namesake. But ages before we visited Springfield, this name payed homage to a towering figure of Ancient Greece. Homer authored the Odyssey and the Iliad. American parents put it in the Top 100 during the late 1800s. It just sneaks into Nameberry’s Top 1000 today, though it remains rare as a given name. Richard Gere named his son Homer in 2000; Anne Heche did the same in 2002.

  Ira – If Ezra has become a new favorite, how about Ira? An Old Testament name revived during the Reformation, Ira was another 1800s favorite that fizzled late in the twentieth century. But that could change – there’s a small, but noticeable, uptick in the number of boys named Ira in the last few years. Credit to long-standing NPR host Ira Glass, maybe?

  Linus – Like Grover and Homer, there’s a strong pop culture association for Linus. He’s Charlie Brown’s blanket-toting buddy. The numbers suggest parents are already re-considering this one. Hollywood gave us handsome characters in Sabrina and the Ocean’s Eleven franchise called Linus. Another sign of this ancient name’s revival? Berries put Linus at Number 228.

  Orson – Unlike many of these names, Orson has never been a chart-topper. But from medieval tales to modern creatives, Orson’s history has kept it familiar. Paz Vega named her firstborn Orson in 2007; Lauren Ambrose chose the name the same year. From the Latin ors, for bear, it combines a cuddly, outdoorsy meaning with a modern, surname sound. It ranks a respectable Number 191 on Nameberry.

  Roscoe – Parents have embraced Arlo and Otto. Why not fellow o-ending boy name Roscoe? It’s doubled in use since the 1990s, but remains well below its peak several generations back. An English place name with Norse roots, Roscoe feels small-town and country – but that’s not a bad thing for a baby name in 2017. If Daisy and Milo are mainstream, Roscoe belongs, too.

  Rufus – Rufus shares Roscoe’s down-home style, but also benefits from indie singer-songwriter Rufus Wainwright. The dad on Gossip Girl answered to the name; so does a figure in the Harry Potter series. There’s also British actor Rufus Sewell. The meaning makes this name perfect for a red-head, but it has tons of potential based on sound alone. Rufus ranks Number 227 on Nameberry, but remains underused in the US.

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