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The most common names the year you were born: Boomer edition

The most common names the year you were born: Boomer edition

Between 1946 and 1964, nearly 76 million babies were born during what historians call the Baby Boom. Their parents named them with a confidence that felt like common sense at the time, drawn from scripture, royalty, the movies, and the radio. The result was a generation in which five Marys or four Michaels in a single classroom was entirely ordinary.

The names below come from the SSA records, the most authoritative source for American naming data, cross-referenced with decade analysis published by Newsweek and reporting from HistoryFacts.

Find your year below.

Note: We’re defining Boomer as the generation born between 1946 and 1964 for this article. 

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Born in 1946

Girls: Mary. Boys: James. Mary had held the top spot since 1880. The last year of the old guard, before a song changed everything.

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Born in 1947

Girls: Linda. Boys: James. Jack Lawrence wrote a song called “Linda” in 1946 about Linda Eastman, the one-year-old daughter of his attorney, who would later become Linda McCartney. The song made Linda the most popular ever in a single year, with 5.48 percent of baby girls receiving it.

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Born in 1948

Girls: Linda. Boys: James. Linda Ronstadt, Linda Hamilton, and Linda Blair were all born during this surge.

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Born in 1949

Girls: Linda. Boys: James. James had held the top spot for boys since 1940 without interruption. No single cultural event explains the dominance.

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Born in 1950

Girls: Linda. Boys: James. The Korean War began in June 1950.

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Born in 1951

Girls: Linda. Boys: James. The SSA records show no challenger came close to displacing either name this year.

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Born in 1952

Girls: Linda. Boys: James. The last year of James’s twelve-year run.

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Born in 1953

Girls: Mary. Boys: Robert. Robert had reigned from 1924 to 1939 and returned.

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Born in 1954

Girls: Mary. Boys: Michael. Michael’s reign began here. Newsweek, Michael held the number one spot a record 44 times over the last 100 years.

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Born in 1955

Girls: Mary. Boys: Michael. Television was in its first decade of mass adoption. Church attendance had peaked. Both influences pushed parents toward names that combined faith, tradition, and cultural familiarity.

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Born in 1956

Girls: Mary. Boys: Michael. Little Richard released “Tutti Frutti” in 1955, and Richard climbed the charts. The culture was shifting. The naming conventions were not yet.

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Born in 1957

Girls: Mary. Boys: Michael. Queen Elizabeth II ascended to the throne in 1952 and Elizabeth climbed the girls’ top five. Mary and Michael held firm.

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Born in 1958

Girls: Mary. Boys: Michael. da Vinci’s tour of the US in 1963 was lifting Lisa into contention.

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Born in 1959

Girls: Mary. Boys: Michael. The last year of the 1950s. Mary had held the girls’ top spot for most of the decade, linked to the cultural authority of the Catholic Church and the enduring popularity of actresses like Mary Pickford and Mary Martin.

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Born in 1960

Girls: Mary. Boys: Michael. John F. Kennedy won the presidential election in November. A new generation was about to take cultural control. The names had not yet followed.

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Born in 1961

Girls: Mary. Boys: Michael. The last year the name Mary held number one. A new naming era was arriving.

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Born in 1962

Girls: Lisa. Boys: Michael. Lisa displaced Mary for the first time. Nat King Cole’s “Mona Lisa” and the touring of Leonardo da Vinci’s painting in 1963 are credited with the name’s sudden rise from near-obscurity to the top of the charts.

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Born in 1963

Girls: Lisa. Boys: Michael. Kennedy was assassinated this year. Lisa Kudrow and Lisa Rinna were born during this spike.

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Born in 1964

Girls: Lisa. Boys: Michael. The Beatles arrived in February. Michael remained dominant for another 35 years.

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Wrap up 

Mary, James, Linda, Michael, and Lisa. Five names that took turns defining an entire generation. Some were shaped by songs, some by scripture, some by royalty, and some by an actress who showed up at exactly the right moment. If your name is on this list, you were not alone.

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