Here is the link to today's column:
https://omaha.com/life-entertainment/local/article_a83db17a-1afa-4b8a-b2a1-51d6a25c6885.html
As of today the Wikipedia entry on this name seems to believe that it was a masculine name almost never used for girls before the 1956 novel "Chocolates for Breakfast," whose teen heroine was named
Courtney, was published. However, during the 19th century there were actually more girls named
Courtney than boys in the USA, which makes it one of the first surnames turned into a given name to be more popular for women than men. There was a big regional difference in this, though --
Courtney was highly skewed toward girls in the South while being more common for boys in the North.
Courtney did recede for girls in the early 20th century, but it was only between the years 1912 and 1961 that it was regularly more common for boys than girls in the Social Security data. This of course does make
Courtney also very unusual in being a name which had been more common for females but then switched to being more common for males for a few decades. It was probably able to do this because it was fairly rare and its use for females in the 19th century was primarily a Southern phenomenon.
Interestingly, the actress
Courteney Cox, whose birthday prompted the column, was named after her mother, which is a very rare example of a mother and daughter having the same first name in the modern USA. Since Ms. Cox was born in Alabama, this does fit in with the original Southern use of the name for girls.
https://omaha.com/life-entertainment/local/article_a83db17a-1afa-4b8a-b2a1-51d6a25c6885.html
This message was edited 6/15/2025, 3:29 PM