Recent Matching
WhitePages members

More WhitePages members

Add your member listing

Benjamin in the US

  1. #165 Craig
  2. #166 Harold
  3. #167 Henry
  4. #168 Jeff
  5. #169 Benjamin
  6. #170 Lee
  7. #171 Samuel
  8. #172 Alice
  9. #173 Cindy

Smith in the US

  1. #1 Smith
  2. #2 Johnson
  3. #3 Williams
  4. #4 Brown
  5. #5 Jones

Benjamin Smith in the US

  1. #1,737 Jeffrey Wilson
  2. #1,738 Thomas Young
  3. #1,739 Jerry Miller
  4. #1,740 Jose Soto
  5. #1,741 Benjamin Smith
  6. #1,742 Guadalupe Martinez
  7. #1,743 John Hayes
  8. #1,744 Miguel Perez
  9. #1,745 Travis Smith
HOME DISCOVER ABOUT
3,182
people in the U.S. have this name Get contact details for people named Benjamin Smith

Meaning & Origins

Biblical name, borne by the youngest of the twelve sons of Jacob. His mother Rachel died in giving birth to him, and in her last moments she named him Benoni, meaning ‘son of my sorrow’. His father, however, did not wish him to bear such an ill-omened name, and renamed him Benyamin (Genesis 35:16–18; 42:4). This means either ‘son of the right hand’ or more likely ‘son of the south’ (Hebrew yamin can also mean ‘south’), since Benjamin was the only child of Jacob born in Canaan and not in Mesopotamia to the north. Another tradition is that the second element of the name is a variant of the Hebrew plural noun yamim, which means ‘days’ but is used idiomatically to mean ‘year’ or ‘years’. The name would then mean ‘son of (my) old age’ and refer to the fact that Benjamin was Jacob's youngest child. In the Middle Ages the name was often given to sons whose mothers had died in childbirth. Today it has no such unfortunate associations and it grew enormously in popularity following the release of the film The Graduate (1967), in which Dustin Hoffman played the role of Benjamin Braddock. It is used in Scotland as an Anglicized form of Gaelic Beathan.
169th in the U.S. for 2011
English: occupational name for a worker in metal, from Middle English smith (Old English smið, probably a derivative of smītan ‘to strike, hammer’). Metalworking was one of the earliest occupations for which specialist skills were required, and its importance ensured that this term and its equivalents were perhaps the most widespread of all occupational surnames in Europe. Medieval smiths were important not only in making horseshoes, plowshares, and other domestic articles, but above all for their skill in forging swords, other weapons, and armor. This is the most frequent of all American surnames; it has also absorbed, by assimilation and translation, cognates and equivalents from many other languages (for forms, see Hanks and Hodges 1988).
1st in the U.S. for 2011

Nicknames & variations

Top state populations

U.S. Distribution Map

Benjamin Smith is most likely to live in Georgia, Texas, California, North Carolina, and Florida

Comments