My old insurance agent shared his office with a man named Dick Cox. I’m guessing it was good for business, having a memorable name.
No “Medium Dick” somewhere in there?
In the pre-penicillin days, the Dick Test, invented by Drs. George and Gladys Dick in the 1920s, was a common way to determine susceptibility to scarlet fever.
So, imagine your son having a negative Dick test…:o
I have a cousin who is 55 and he is the only Richard I know. He has always gone by his legal name, no Dick, Rich, Rick, or anything else.
There was a guy I was acquaintanced with whose name was Dick Whithers.
Dick Advocaat is quite famous in football I think, and he’s Dutch. Sounds like a revolting Christmas prank.
I suspect that Richards of my father’s generation (early Boomers) were the last to opt for “Dick” on a wide scale. I was named after my dad’s best friend in high school, and he went by Dick. I went to school with plenty of other Richards, and every one of us went by “Rich” or “Rick/Ric/Rik”, or stuck with “Richard”.
The slang connotations of “Dick” have only gotten stronger since I was in school, so I’d be really surprised to come across somebody younger than I am using “Dick” un-ironically.