This example serves to point out that naming children after particular events that occur around the time of their birth or conception is a worldwide phenomenon. There are several examples of Hollywood celebrities who have claimed to have named their children after the places they were conceived. When the sociologist
Catherine Cameron did interviews of young parents in California several decades ago, she found that the largest number of girls named
April were born in January (do the math!). And of course the names
Noel and
Natalie go back to naming children after being born at
Christmas,
Pascal goes back to naming children after being born at
Easter, and
Tiffany goes back to naming children after being born at
Epiphany. The use of
Liberty as a girls' name is today general in the USA, but if you look at the SSA year by year top 1000 lists you will see that there were two years before 2001 when
Liberty made the list: 1918, the year when the USA's involvement in World War I was supposed to be "making the world safe for democracy", and 1976, the year the USA celebrated the Bicentennial of the American Revolution. I had a student a few years ago who told me her older sister was named
Liberty because she was born in 1976.