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Cleveland Evans: For Those Who Fear 'Gregory' May Disappear, Stay Wa

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  • Cleveland Evans: For Those Who Fear 'Gregory' May Disappear, Stay Wa

    CLEVELAND EVANS: FOR THOSE WHO FEAR 'GREGORY' MAY DISAPPEAR, STAY WATCHFUL

    Omaha World-Herald, Nebraska
    Sept 3 2013

    Peck, Maddux, Kinnear, Louganis, or Brady?

    Whom do you think of first when you hear "Gregory"?

    Gregory is the English form of the Greek Gregorios, "watchful,
    vigilant, awake." It was popular with early Christians because of
    several Gospel passages in which Jesus tells His followers to remain
    watchful and alert.

    Several early saints were named Gregory. Gregory the Wonderworker
    (213-270) was a bishop noted for his gentleness and success at
    converting pagans. Legend claims he dried up a swamp and moved a
    mountain by his spiritual power.

    St. Gregory the Illuminator (240-332) was an Armenian prince. His
    family fled political troubles to settle in Asia Minor. There, young
    Gregory became a Christian. As an adult he returned to Armenia and
    converted King Tiridates, the first monarch to make Christianity
    the official state religion. Krikor, the Armenian form of Gregory,
    was for centuries a common Armenian name.

    The most famous St. Gregory is Pope Gregory I, known as "Gregory the
    Great." A wealthy man who founded seven monasteries and then became a
    monk himself, Gregory was elected pope in 590. Credited with keeping
    the church strong despite barbarian invasions of Italy, he wrote
    several theology and history books widely read in medieval Europe.

    Gregorian chants are named after him.

    Gregory promoted the conversion of the Anglo-Saxons to Christianity,
    and so was especially revered in England. After his death in 604 he
    was proclaimed a saint. Thirty-two medieval English churches were named
    after him. His feast day, Sept. 3, was celebrated throughout England.

    English historian George Redmonds says Gregory was the 34th-most-common
    name for boys around 1380. Gregory's medieval popularity is also
    shown by how common Gregory is as a surname. In 2010, more than
    88,000 Americans had the last name Gregory, ranking it 312th. Gregg,
    Gregson and Greer families also had ancestors named Gregory.

    Gregory was also common in medieval Scotland, accounting for all the
    Scots named MacGregor. Somewhat surprisingly, Gregory was rare in
    medieval Ireland; there don't seem to be any Irish surnames based
    on it.

    In 1538, when nationwide baptismal records began in Eng­land, Gregory
    still ranked 35th. However, Gregory the Great's fame led many later
    popes to adopt the name. One of those popes, Gregory XIII, famous
    for calendar reforms, also sponsored plots to overthrow Protestant
    Queen Elizabeth I during his 1572-1585 papacy.

    It's no surprise the 1580s were the first decade in centuries that
    Gregory wasn't among the top 50 names for English boys. Though many
    non-biblical saint names fell in use after the Reformation, Gregory's
    decline was among the steepest. By the time English colonists settled
    North America in the 17th century, Gregory was rare as a baby name.

    In the 1850 U.S. Census, only 416 males had Gregory as a first name -
    and 23 percent were born in Ireland or Germany.

    In 1880, when Social Security's yearly baby name lists are started,
    Gregory ranked 967th. In six individual years between 1882 and 1891,
    it didn't even make the top thousand.

    As immigration increased the percentage of Catholics, Gregory slowly
    rose. In 1888, New Yorkers Samuel Peck and his Irish Catholic wife,
    Catherine, named their son Gregory.

    Gregory moved to San Diego, where his wife, Bernice, bore a son named
    Eldred Gregory in 1916. Eldred dropped his first name when he became
    an actor.

    Gregory Peck was the lead in "Days of Glory," his first film, in 1944.

    He was nominated for Oscars for "The Keys of the Kingdom" in 1944,
    "The Yearling" in 1946, "Gentleman's Agreement" in 1947 and "Twelve
    O'Clock High" in 1949.

    Though Gregory had been slowly rising since 1916, Peck's career
    skyrocketed it. Newborn Gregorys went up more than 90 percent in both
    1945 and 1946, and another 46 percent in 1947. Gregory ranked 152nd
    in 1944 and 33rd in 1947.

    After 1947, Gregory rose at a slower pace until ranking 21st in both
    1962 and 1963. More than 21,000 were born each of those years. Two
    of Peck's most popular films - 1961's "The Guns of Navarone" and his
    Oscar winner, 1962's "To Kill a Mockingbird" - contributed to the peak.

    Many baby boomer and Gen X Gregorys, partly inspired by Peck's fame,
    are now famous themselves. The late dancer Gregory Hines was born in
    1946. Rock star Gregg Allman, officially a Gregory despite his extra
    "g," was born in 1947.

    Actors Gregory Harrison, Greg Evigan, Greg Kinnear and Greg Vaughan
    were born respectively in 1950, 1953, 1963, and 1973.

    Thriller writer Greg Iles was born in 1960. Gregory Maguire (1954)
    is author of the revisionist Oz novel "Wicked," which inspired the
    popular musical.

    Athletic Gregorys include Olympic diver Greg Louganis (1960) and Greg
    Maddux (1966), the first pitcher to win baseball's Cy Young Award four
    years in a row. One of the youngest famous Gregs, former University
    of Nebraska at Omaha football player Greg "The Leg" Zuerlein (born
    in 1987), made the longest rookie field goal in NFL history last fall
    for the St. Louis Rams.

    For those born during the second half of the baby boom (1956-1964),
    the most famous Greg is fictional Greg Brady (played by Barry
    Williams), oldest son on TV's "The Brady Bunch," originally broadcast
    1969-1974. The Brady characters represent the perfect family to many.

    Since its 1963 peak, the name Gregory has steadily fallen. The 1,217
    born in 2012 ranked it 287th, lowest since 1934. A name with this long
    and distinguished a history, though, is unlikely to ever disappear.

    http://www.omaha.com/article/20130903/LIVING/130909870/1696


    From: Baghdasarian
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