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Home > Just for Kids
> What's In a Name? > African American
Names
Many
African Americans who were slaves were not given a last
name, only a first name. If they were given a last name,
it was the name of their master's. Therefore, Phillis
Wheatley's name tells a lot about the time in which
she lived, and gives clues to her life. Wheatley, the
first Black poet published in America, was named Phillis
after the name of the slave ship Phillis that brought
her from Africa to America. Wheatley was the last name
of her master and mistress, William and Susannah Wheatley.
Unfortunately Phillis never wrote down what her original
name was, and so it is lost to us today.
Many
slaves didn't receive a last name until they were freed.
Sometimes a slave took (or kept) the last name of their
former master, or took a common name from the area in
which they lived. Some African Americans adopted the
names of famous Americans such as Washington, Jefferson,
Jackson, or Clay, or from those who helped African Americans
at the time, such as the 19th century abolitionist John
Brown. According to Stuart Berg Flexner in his book
Listening to America, many African Americans
took the last name of Howard in honor of General Oliver
Otis Howard, who was a Union general in the Civil War
and head of the Freedman's Bureau from 1865-1874, and
also the founder and early president of Howard University.
The name Howard became so popular a name with African
Americans at the time, that in the 1980s about one-third
of all Howards in the United States were African American.
Listed below are the most common African American surnames
in the United States:
| 1. Johnson (the most common surname
for African Americans since 1830) |
6. Jackson |
| 2. Brown |
7. Davis |
| 3. Smith |
8. Harris |
| 4. Jones |
9. Robinson |
| 5. Williams |
10. Thomas |
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