CA Baby Names
A Century of Change

SSA DATA SNAPSHOT
California Dreaming:
100 Years of Names
How parents reinvented identity through their daughters' names, from Victorian roots to the pop era.
Unfold History →
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1910: The Era of Tradition

In 1910, naming was a bow to the past. Mary sat on an untouchable throne, a classic choice for a society rooted in tradition.

Mary295
Helen239
Dorothy220
Margaret163
Frances134

Insight: The massive gap between #1 and #5 shows how much the classics dominated the early 20th century mindset.

The Boom Begins →
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1950: Mid-Century Modern

Post-war optimism brought a desire for the "New." The gap narrowed as parents began exploring a wider palette of modern sounds.

RankNameCount
1Rhonda191
2Kristine190
3Renee189
4Geraldine186
5Jan183

Finding: Only 8 points separate the top 5. This "fragmentation" shows that collective consensus was starting to dissolve.

The Multicultural Turn →
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1980: Diversity Surfaces

By 1980, California’s demographics were shifting. The entry of Blanca signaled the rising influence of Latino heritage in the public record.

RankNameCount
1Lori210
2Olivia209
3Blanca ★206
4Aimee201
5Barbara201

Trend: Olivia debuts at #2. A "sleeper hit" that would go on to dominate the world three decades later.

The Pop Revolution →
4 / 5

2000: The Celebrity Effect

Pop culture became the new religion. The "Britney effect" caused counts to explode, nearly tripling the top counts of previous decades.

Britney ✦390
Wendy390
Miranda384
Cindy382
Jaqueline371

Observation: The sudden peak at #1 reflects how global media influence began to override local community traditions.

Final Verdict →
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Legacy: A Century in Ink

One hundred years of data tells a story of a state that moved from tradition to diversity, and finally to celebrity.

EraTop Driver
1910sClassic Inheritance
1950sPost-War Optimism
1980sCultural Identity
2000sGlobal Pop Media

The CA.TXT dataset is the autobiography of the Golden State, written one baby name at a time.

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