Marjorie: Baby Name of the DayMarjorie appears in many a nursery rhyme. Maybe it’s time to return this name to actual nursery schools, too.

Thanks to Lola and JNE for suggesting our Baby Name of the Day.

MARGERY DAW

Jack stars in several childhood staples, along with fellow water-fetcher Jill, Marys Quite Contrary and the one with the lambs, Polly, Peter, Tom, and Simon. The list goes on.

Open any copy of Mother Goose, and odds are you’ll find “See Saw Margery Daw.”  First published in the eighteenth century, some version of the rhyme is likely far older – and, of course, open to interpretation, like all nursery rhymes.

And, like the names of her fellow fictional children, Margery would’ve been fairly common at one point.

Saint Margaret of Antioch escaped from the belly of a dragon, or so the legend goes. Crusaders brought the story – and the name – back to England, where it became Margery. While it’s tough to imagine Margaret as a trendy name, that was the case many centuries ago.

MARGERY KEMPE

Speaking of the distant past, way back in the fifteenth century, a real-life Margery penned The Book of Margery Kempe.

While memoirs feel commonplace, even saturated, by twenty-first century standards, they were rare in her day. It’s sometimes called one of the earliest autobiographies. Except Margery wrote in the third-person, detailing her pilgrimages to distant lands, and a wide range of religious experiences.

It’s a fascinating story, but I can’t tell if her fame would’ve helped the name, hurt it, or simply reinforced how very popular it had become.

MARJORAM

Getting from Margaret to Margery seems relatively straightforward. Middle English gives us Mary from Maria, Lucy from Lucia, and Cecily from Cecilia. Ending feminine names with an ‘ee’ sound was the norm.

What explains the spelling switch, from -gery to -jorie?

Turns out it’s the herb, marjoram. And as for that word, its origins are unclear, but probably trace back to India.

The thirteenth century Marjorie of Carrick, mother of Scotland’s Robert the Bruce, used the spelling. In turn, Robert gave the name to his firstborn daughter.

FALL AND RISE

By the 1700s or so, this name had faded – in all spellings. When it was rediscovered a century later, the -jorie form dominated. While Marjorie spent several years in the US Top 20, and even more in the Top 200, Margery barely made it into the Top 300.

The spelling helped us see this as a distinct name from Margaret, too.

Notable women by the name abound, including:

  • Silent film star Marjorie Daw. That’s her real first name, though her surname at birth was House.
  • Velveteen Rabbit author Williams.
  • Crime writer Allingham, best known for creating detective Albert Campion.
  • Socialite and businesswoman Marjorie Merriweather Post is remembered for her extensive art collection, still on display today, and even more so for the Florida estate she built: Mar-a-Lago.

MARJORIE MORNINGSTAR

Then there’s novelist Herman Wouk’s creation, the title character in Marjorie Morningstar. His bestselling 1955 novel became a successful movie just a few years later. It starred a young Natalie Wood as Miss Morningstar. Born into a traditional Jewish family, it’s the story of a young woman’s attempt to carve out an independent – and somewhat rebellious – path of her own.

Maybe that’s what cements this name in the 1950s, rather than the 1920s and 30s where it clearly belongs. Though the name remained in the US Top 100 into the 1940s.

MARGIE

Many of those girls would’ve been mid-century Margies.

Because if not Morningstar, then it’s My Little Margie that makes this name feel stuck in the ’50s. From 1952 to 1955, the public followed young Margie Albright’s madcap capers, first on radio, then on television. The show owes much to I Love Lucy, but is mostly forgotten today.

Other fictional characters answered to various forms of the name.

That meant, of course, that Marge was squarely in mom name territory when we first met Homer and Marge Simpson in 1987, as a short on The Tracey Ullman Show. She of the towering blue hair might be the most prominent Marge for most would-be parents today.

READY FOR REVIVAL

There’s a super-spooky Marjorie in a recent season of American Horror Story, and Mimi Kennedy plays a wise, supportive Marjorie – usually called Marge – on long-running sitcom Mom.

Despite this, the name enjoyed a brief renaissance, returning to the US Top 1000 from 2013 to 2017.

What do you think of Marjorie?  Is this name ready for revival?

Originally published on June 24, 2009, this post was revised substantially on March 11, 2020.

Marjorie: Baby Name of the Day

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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24 Comments

  1. PS I forgot to say that the flapper actor shown at the top of Marjorie looks very much like my grandmother in her 20’s class pictures!

  2. I adore the name Marjorie. It was my Nana’s name. I’m partial to substantial sounding names, names with a certain strength and dignity, and to me, Marjorie has these in spades. It also reminds me of the garden, both because Nan was a master gardener and because of the herb, marjoram.

  3. ..hi.. my name is MARJoRiE..
    ..JORIE and Majoe is my nickname..
    ..x) sHocks,,my name is so old..hehe
    anY waY im proud that my nAme is Marjorie 🙂

  4. my name is marjorie ! hihi
    i have no idea that my name is so old .
    but they say it is kind of unique ..
    and they call me jorie .
    its kind of pretty cool .
    like a baby . haha

    1. Jorie is a neat, modern nickname for such an old name – thanks for mentioning it!

  5. My name is Marjorie! I go by M.J. instead, though. I was named after my grandmother! I didn’t have any idea it was such an old name, either. Going back to the Medieval times and all. It sounds interesting. Thanks for sharing! =]

  6. i love the name Margerie! .. but spelt as ‘Margerie’, though. i think that particular spelling is the nicest, maybe it has something to do with the ‘ie’ at the end – that makes it a little more feminine, almost French, just in my opinion. i don’t think it’s too old fashioned, or old-lady like! in fact, i can see it in a classy young lady, a lady of a vintage, jazzy sort of nature. i could imagine a waitress in a small jazz cafe in the urban streets with brown shapely hair and a delicate figure serving weary gentlemen and women some well-brewed coffee during they’re lunch breaks. i could imagine a Margerie to be well-mannered but still a sharp and witty enough woman to be dangerously obscure at will, and at word play. cheeky, but elegant!

    hrmm, or possibly i just have an overly vivid imagination.

  7. My husband’s aunt is called Margie, and for a few years I assumed it was short for Marjorie — but no, she’s just Margie. [Lovely woman, just turned 60 on Monday.]

    I’ve always loved Margaret, and Margie as a nn is cute, but I’ve never warmed to Margery/Marjorie — the ‘jury’ sound puts me off.

  8. I’ve never ever considered Marjorie/ Margery at all, and I have to say, as I was reading this post, the appeal of her got higher and higher 🙂 For some odd reason she reminds me of jam and Britain, but she is quite feminine in a rather ‘reserved’ way, and very spritely indeed, as previously proposed!

    She’s lovely 🙂