Hope: Baby Name of the DayIt’s a forward-looking virtue name that signals a new day dawning.

Our Baby Name of the Day is Hope.

PANDORA AND PAUL

You’ve heard of Pandora’s box.

In Greek myth, the gods made a woman, and named her Pandora. They gift her with a box, and instruct her to never open it. Inevitably, she gives in to curiosity – and all the evils of the world fly out. But Pandora slams the lid shut, leaving just one thing inside – elpis, or hope.

The concept appears throughout the Bible, too. The most famous passages comes from the New Testament.

Paul tells us:

And now these three remain: faith, hope and love. But the greatest of these is love.

Another story gives us three sisters with the names Faith, Hope, and Love, daughters of Sophia – wisdom. Legend tells that they were martyred, and they’ve been revered as saints since ancient days.

FULL OF PROMISE

In Old English, hopian referred to a spiritual concept. One should trust in God’s word. Similar words exist in other languages in the same era, like German hoffen. The exact origins of the term remain shrouded in mystery.

By the 1200s, it shed some of its theological meaning. It became a synonym for wish.

It implies that all is not lost; that things will work out for the best. File it with the most enduring of virtues.

And maybe it feels literary, too, thanks to so many poetic references. Emily Dickinson called it “the thing with feathers,” and Alexander Pope wrote that it “springs eternal.”

PURITANS … AND YUPPIES

But none of this makes it a given name.

In fact, the legendary sister-martyrs? Some speculate that they never lived at all. Instead, inscriptions on tombs referred to the Christian virtues. Later generations simply misunderstood them as given names.

Instead, the Puritans typically get credit for embracing the name first. While plenty of Puritans answered to everyday names like Mary and John, more extreme choices like Humility circulated, too.

Hope fits right in.

HOLLYWOOD’S HOPE

US name data begins in 1880, and shows Hope consistently ranked in the Top 1000 – but never higher than #300, and often closer to #500 or so.

Philadelphia socialite Hope Montgomery married Edgar Scott in 1923, in the society wedding of the year, covered in detail by the media. It didn’t move the name – though it did inspire the Philip Barry play High Society, which later became the movie The Philadelphia Story, starring Katharine Hepburn.

But it didn’t budge Hope. Instead, the name started to climb in the 1960s.

Why? In 1957, newcomer Hope Lange earned an Best Supporting Actress Oscar nomination for her role in Peyton Place. The name jumped – just a bit – going into 1958.

But Lange remained in the public eye, first in film roles, then earning two Emmy Awards as the lead in television series The Ghost and Mrs. Muir.

Around the same time, soap opera Guiding Light introduced us to Hope Bauer. The character appeared on Another World, too. Her biggest story lines wouldn’t come for another decade or so, since she was a child when the character debuted.

Similarly, Days of Our Lives introduced a child name Hope in 1974, but it wasn’t until the 1980s – and her romance with Bo Brady – that the character became widely known.

And that’s what sparked the name’s real rise.

SOAP HOPE

In 1983, Beauregard “Bo” Brady rode into fictional Salem on his motorcycle. He rescued her from a conniving boyfriend. But then the boyfriend struck back, kidnapped her, and … well, it’s a soap opera. No one lives happily ever after.

But the pair did become a wildly popular supercouple, right up there with General Hospital’s Luke and Laura. Even if you never watched any soap opera, odds are that the names sound vaguely familiar.

Hope jumped from #430 in 1983 to #294 in 1994.

SMALL SCREEN

Television has continued to boost the name.

In 1987, smash hit thirtysomething defined a decade with young urban professionals Michael and Hope Steadman.

Add in at least two more soap opera characters, and it was enough to catch parents’ attention.

It reached #193 in 1995, and peaked at #143 in 1999.

MAINSTREAM FAVORITE

The name stayed in the Top 200 – and the spotlight – at the beginning of the 2000s.

In 2008, soccer goalkeeper Hope Solo was part of the women’s gold-medal winning team at the Beijing Olympics.

Raising Hope debuted in 2010, the tale of a single father named Jimmy Chance. If you think Hope Chance is a crazy name for a daughter, well … she started out as Princess Beyonce. The show ran four seasons.

It’s the name of Emma’s daughter on Once Upon a Time, too.

ENDURING VIRTUE

As of 2018, Hope ranked #255.

Some virtue names feel like antiques – think Mercy or Temperance. Others sound modern, like Truly and Journey.

Hope strikes the perfect balance. It’s feminine, but frills-free; clearly a word name, but one with history galore. It’s not quite classic, but certainly qualifies as a timeless traditional.

What do you think of Hope? Would you consider the name for a daughter?

First published on December 31, 2014, this post was revised and re-published on April 8, 2020.

About Abby Sandel

Whether you're naming a baby, or just all about names, you've come to the right place! Appellation Mountain is a haven for lovers of obscure gems and enduring classics alike.

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4 Comments

  1. My grandmother’s name was Hope. She was born in 1920. My niece’s middle name honors her. My grandmother once commented she didn’t like her name because people made fun of her by saying things like “I hope, I hope, I hope.” Things like that. Apparently there’s also a hymn called “whispering hope” That she really didn’t like.

    Other than the usual problems with word names I think it’s a great name, mostly because my grandma was a great person.

    Incidentally she had a baby sister named Faith, who died in infancy.

  2. What an absolutely perfect name of the day for this week! This particularly crazy 2020 Easter reminds us of the importance of hope more than ever. And I love the name Hope (it will forever remind me of Homeward Bound though, lol).

  3. We chose Hope for our baby girl back in 2009, shortly after finding out her gender. I love Emily Dickinson, and the poem you mentioned is my absolute favorite. We shared the name with our families, and the reactions were startling. The vast majority hated it. The main objection was that she would undoubtedly be called Hopie. It was all rather ridiculous. In the end, though, we settled on Annabel Hope for her.

  4. Hope is my youngest neice’s middle name, a beautiful choice. (If she’d been born one day later, I would’ve insisted she be named Sara, as she would’ve shared my birthday. 🙂 )