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Loeta
My mother was named Loeta. My only sister is named Loeta. We know nothing of the history of the name. My mother was born in Missouri in 1920. Her father died soon after her birth and he named her. We know nothing of our grandfather except for one
old photo of him. He looks like an American Indian. Missouri was where a lot of the tribes were forced to go in the late 1800s. His name was Tom Hill. The name will die
when my sister goes. All of her brothers saved the name Loeta for her to use, but she
had all sons. I would have liked to have named my daughter Loeta, but we saved it for
my sisters future children.
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Hi Warner! It's exciting to correspond with another relative of a Loeta. I hope you see this.My grandmother was named Loeta, born in Idaho - also in 1920. Maiden name Whitten. She was not native, but a member of different European settler lines going back to the Winthrop fleet in 1630. She did not know the origin of her name, other than thinking it may be Spanish from her family's time in California. I have come to believe that is incorrect.Loeta is an uncommon name indeed, and there doesn't seem to be a definitive answer about it. I can tell you these things:- The first Loeta that shows up in US census records does so in 1809.- Loeta is similar (shares sounds etc) to several other names that were more popular in 1920 - Leota, Louise, Louella, Lola. This means it could simply be an invented name based off of name sounds popular at the time.- Use of Loeta seems to be higher in the western US. Why this is, I'm not sure. There was something about the name that appealed to demographics there more than elsewhere.- My grandmother was named after a relative born in 1893, Loeta Ursul. (No idea why it's recorded as Ursul and not Ursula, and if it is indeed supposed to lack the A.) Loeta's sister was named Ulrica Marguerite. Two unusual names. Knowing that they were unusual for their time, I looked into some kind of literary connection, thinking their mother or father was likely to be an imaginative reader. Ulrica could potentially be traced back to a family member reading Ivanhoe (published in 1820). Loeta could be traced back to 'Queen Loeta and the Mistletoe: A Fairy Rhyme for the Fireside', written and illustrated by George Halse, published 1857. It's reasonable to say that someone who read this as a child between 1857 and 1870 might go on to have a daughter in 1893, and name her Loeta. Loeta is the fairy queen, and she is a shining character. I don't know where Halse would have picked up the name, or if he would have made up something that sounded new and fanciful (a popular route to take when naming a fairy queen). I do know that his book is the first place I can find records of the name Loeta in print.

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This message was edited 6/19/2017, 6:18 PM

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Hi
My Mum was Loeta Davies nee Halse
She was the daughter or Roy Hewitt Halse who I believe is nephew of George
I have a copy of the book Queen Loeta and the Mistletoe
Happy if you contact me - meganinglisdavies@gmail.com
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My guess is that it's a variant of Leota. Leota seems to be a feminized version of Leo, analogous to Leona or Leola. The name Leota seems to be primarily American in usage.

This message was edited 5/27/2017, 8:24 AM

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We had a thread about that very name just about one month ago:https://www.behindthename.com/bb/fact/4807338--elbowin
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https://www.names.org/n/loeta/aboutMaybe?
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Information on this link is inaccurate. US census records show first 'Loeta' in 1809. I would not rely on this website for real info.

This message was edited 6/19/2017, 7:08 PM

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