This was not just in the 1980s. If you check the year by year Social Security list, you will find
Sarah on the top 1000 list for boys several times between 1881 and 1909, with its highest ranking being #654 in 1899. Then it's on the top 1000 again between 1978 and 1989, with the highest rank within that period being #789 in 1984.
But these are highly unlikely to be
real male Sarahs. The people who enter records into the Social Security system are fallible human beings like the rest of us. They sometimes make mistakes in typing in the sex or gender code on an application. Most extremely popular female names will also show up on the male lists before 1990 because of these errors.
Jennifer is on the top 1000 boys' list between 1967 and 1989.
Jessica is on the top 1000 boys' list between 1977 and 1991.
Lisa is on the top 1000 boys' list between 1960 and 1975. Note that these periods are precisely when those names were overwhelmingly popular for girls. So it's just that there were so many girls being given these names that the % who had their sex code wrongly entered were enough to get the name onto the boys' list.
After around 1991, partly perhaps because accuracy increased, and partly because the % of total births accounted for by the top names went down so that even the same % of errors wouldn't result in enough numbers to make the top 1000, you get many fewer examples of this. But it is really unlikely that a lot of parents in the 1980s were naming sons
Sarah. The "boys" named
Sarah on those lists are almost surely girls whose sex code was wrongly entered.
This message was edited 9/21/2008, 8:28 PM