Via Norm, an article on books read and unread. It wasn’t the article itself but the author that caught my eye: G. Tracy Mehan III (or, as they write it, G. Tracy Mehan, III. I didn’t know a comma was required). And I thought, that’s funny: you don’t see that so much any more.

It’s always struck us British as slightly risible, this “the second” or “the third” business. A joke American name is always something like Elmer Hucklebuck III. (It used to be Homer before the Simpsons. Or Hiram maybe.) It’s like they’re trying to establish some kind of dynasty, along the lines of the 4th Earl of Sandwich, or King Henry the Eighth. Either that or they haven’t the wit to come up with new Christian names for their offspring. It never seems to go beyond the fourth though (with George Hamilton IV the only example I can think of), as though the whole thing collapses under the weight of its absurdity after a while. Or maybe it’s more a function of time: if the custom started about a hundred years ago, they simply haven’t got to the stage of Dwight Noodleberry VIIs yet – and by now it may be too late, as, judging by the decreasing frequency of such monikers, the tide of history seems to be turning against the whole practice.

Except for G. Tracy Mehan, III.

And I was thinking, how droll that this male practice should now be taken up by women. There had to be some kind of symbolic point to be drawn here: the unfortunate tendency of certain feminists to appropriate the most pompous, unappetising aspects of maleness. But then I googled the name, and came across an earlier article by the very same G. Tracy Mehan, III, bemoaning the presence of a salacious Victoria’s Secret window display in a local Virginia shopping mall, and I read this:

As a father, I spend a fair amount of time intercepting commercials, mailings, and unsolicited shower gifts generated by and purchased from this purveyor of provocative undergarments.

and had to reshuffle my thoughts. G. Tracy Mehan, III is a man!

Which raises the question: if he’d rather be called Tracy than whatever it is the G stands for, then, well, what on earth does the G stand for?

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10 responses to “G. Mehan”

  1. P. Froward Avatar
    P. Froward

    I won’t defend this ordinal foolishness, and I sure as hell won’t defend G. Tracy, but I’ll offer a theory about the comma: Lots of people use a comma before Jr or Sr, like L. Butch Shankweiler, Jr or whatever. So maybe they’re thinking in those terms.
    Still, I’d lay off on Dwight Noodleberry XXIV and his ancient dynasty, if I came from the kind of glass house where people call themselves “ffitch” with a straight face.

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  2. DAW Avatar
    DAW

    Tracy is not an uncommon name for boys in America. This took me surprise about 25 years ago; all the Tracys I had met growing up were girls. Now I view “Tracy” the way I view Pat or Sam or Terry — make no assumptions until the truth is known.

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  3. dearieme Avatar
    dearieme

    Beware: the chumps use “Sandy” for girls.

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  4. Alan Avatar
    Alan

    There is one famous American who certainly went above IV. Before Muhammad Ali became Muhammad Ali, he was Cassius Marcellus Clay VII.

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  5. DaninVan Avatar
    DaninVan

    dearieme; “Sandy” ? That’s the diminutive for Sandra (Sandie or Sandi)…but then you knew that. Sandy, for a male, is rather outdated; an Aussie name is it not?
    On the ordinal business, it’s likely a result of the practice of ‘honouring’ the Grandparent (or father) by naming a son after him (Junior) but also takes into account the likelihood and confusion of there being three generations with the same name…four generations not so much.

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  6. dearieme Avatar
    dearieme

    “Sandy” is Alexander. Scottish.
    Cassius Clay’s counting – did that go back to slave times?

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  7. Dr. Weevil Avatar

    Juniors are generally NOT named after their grandfathers, only their fathers. If Aloysius Q. Farnsworth is named after his grandfather (or uncle), but his father has a different name, he will be Aloysius Q. Farnsworth II.
    I have met a V, in College, he would be 55 or so now. He was rather proud of being a ‘Fifth’ and drank a lot of hard liquor to live up to his number. This was back when American liquor still came in non-metric bottles.
    Finally, I wouldn’t snicker (or snigger) too much at a man named Tracy. There are several names that are almost invariably feminine in the U.S. that seem to be worn by men in the U.K.: male Evelyns and Leslies would be snickered at here except that most Americans don’t feel comfortable making fun of other people’s names — that probably comes from being a nation of outlandish-named immigrants.

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  8. dearieme Avatar
    dearieme

    Or from being armed to the teeth?

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  9. matthew Avatar
    matthew

    G might not stand for anything. Harry S Truman’s S was just an S.
    I Claudius was different.

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  10. dearieme Avatar
    dearieme

    The “I” stood for Eye-tie I assume?

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