For what it's worth, a handful of people who have ordered Haskell merchandise from the CafePress store over the years have had "Haskell" as a surname. I assume they look at the designs before they buy, and I can't imagine what they think of some of them, but I guess the allure of having your (fairly obscure) name on a shirt can be irresistible.

Then again, I suppose they could be functional programmers who just happen to have Haskell as a surname.

  --  Fritz

PS: In other CafePress-Haskell Shop trivia, 277 items have been sold since the turn of the century, at a total price of just over one thousand dollars ... but, of course, no profit. (This last seems to be a slight problem with our business model.) The most curious order to date was a canceled one for 60 junior "baby doll" t-shirts: I like to imagine that some sort of big chorus number was planned for an ill-fated Broadway revue, but who can tell?

On Mon 11 Jun 07, at 7:35 am, Stephen Forrest wrote:

On 6/10/07, Brandon S. Allbery KF8NH <allbery@ece.cmu.edu> wrote:

You're pretty close, actually :)  Names derived from Hebrew were
fairly common in the Bible belt back when he was born.  ("Haskell"
from השקל, wisdom.  I half suspect "Curry" has a Biblical origin
as well, from קרי.)


Bible belt?  Curry was born in Millis, Massachusetts, and grew up in Boston.

The word "Haskell" seems to occur much more frequently as a surname, originating in the British Isles.  It seems more plausible that he got the name "Haskell" from some relative or family friend somewhere than ascribing a Hebrew origin for his name.

Steve
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