I didn't realize I had missed so many Saturday Night Genealogy Fun posts of late. I'm happy to be able to post for this week's challenge from Randy Seaver!
Here is your assignment, if you choose to play along (cue the Mission: Impossible! music, please!):
1. We all have many names (given, middle, surname, nickname) in our ancestry, whether we know all of them or not.
2. Do you have a name that runs in your family? Is there a first name — or nickname — that keeps repeating generation after generation in your tree? Share the name, the pattern, and your best guess as to why it stuck.
3. Share your information about your repeating name in your >own blog post, in a a comment on this blog post, or in a Substack post, Facebook Note, or some other social media system. Please leave a comment on this post so others can find it.
Thank you to Linda Stufflebean for this idea.
I have not found any major patterns of repeating names in my family on either side. My fifth(?)-great-grandfather Hananiah Gaunt had a son named Hananiah Selah Gaunt, and if I remember correctly he had a son named Hananiah, for three generations of that name. My fifth-great-great-grandfather's grandfather was also a Hananiah. That makes four generations with one skipped.
My adoptive great-great-grandfather, Cornelius Godschalk Sellers, named his son Cornelius Elmer (who went by Elmer). Elmer named his first son Cornelius Howard; the child died at the age of 2, and no one else has been named Cornelius since that I know of. Cornelius Godschalk had an uncle named Cornelius, but that man didn't name any of his sons Cornelius. So one collateral plus three generations.
My mother's family was Ashkenazi Jewish, and they have a tradition of not naming after a living relative, so while family members were still practicing Jews I have found no consecutive generations with the same name. What you will often find, however, is that a name skips a generation. So my great-great-grandmother was Esther Leah (Schneiderman) Gorodetsky, and four of her children named their first daughter Esther Leah. There would have been a fifth Esther Leah, but when it came down to finalizing the name, Morris' wife said she didn't want her daughter to be yet another Esther Leah, so she was Esther Malka, with the Malke being for a deceased ancestor on the wife's side of the family. But I don't know of any Esther Leahs in succeeding generations.
An interesting lack of a continued name is that of my 3rd-great-grandfather Gersh Wolf Gorodetsky. I know of no descendants named after him. I don't know if that was because he was still alive when grandchildren were being born, so they wouldn't have used his name because of the tradition, or if he maybe wasn't such a nice person and not well loved by family members.
On the other hand, in my ex's Irish family, I have found the multigenerational name of Edmund. I have documented four of five generations where the first son was named Edmund (and in one generation, when that first son died as an infant, the next son was also named Edmund). (I consider it likely that the generation where I haven't found an Edmund is simply that I haven't found him yet.) My ex was the second son, and his older brother was indeed named Edmund. No one in my ex's generation named a son Edmund, though. I have heard rumors as to why that didn't occur, but as all of the relevant parties are still alive, it is not for me to say why that situation exists.

You found some good examples. Naming children after people doesn't happen much any more.
ReplyDeleteI think in particular that naming people for many generations doesn't happen much anymore. I know that it's still common among Jews who name after deceased ancestors.
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