Garrison means fortified place or son of Gerard — from the Old French/Germanic. William Lloyd Garrison IS the most important abolitionist — The Liberator. A garrison IS a military fort — the most protected place. Three syllables of the most important abolitionist, The Liberator, and the most protected military place.
Three syllables with a strong, English sound: GAIR-ih-son.
Garrison IS protection AND liberation simultaneously.
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The vibe of Garrison
fortified placeson of GerardOld FrenchGermanicGarrisonabolitionistLiberatormilitary fort
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Origin & history of Garrison
Old French/Germanic garrison (fortified)→Garrison
1
Modern American roots
Garrison means fortified. William Lloyd IS the most important abolitionist — The Liberator.
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First recorded
Earliest known use: Old French; William Lloyd Garrison (1805–1879).
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Today
Garrison remains a beloved choice, ranking #1306 in the US. 8,420 babies have been named Garrison since 1912.
◈ Sources: Behind the Name, SSA data
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How popular is Garrison?
1999peak year
Garrison reached its widest reach during the 1990s. In 1999, 353 babies received the name (ranked #566). In the present decade it sits well outside the top 1,000 (around #1306), with about 147 babies given the name annually. Garrison has been declining in recent years. The all-time total comes to roughly 8,420 registrations.
Year-by-year registrations1880–2024 · U.S. Social Security data
Garrison's Life Path 1 is the leader's number — liberator leadership. People named Garrison tend to be strong, protective, and gifted at being the most important abolitionist AND the most fortified.
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