English name from the plant or Old English place name meaning cottage settlement.
Cotton began as an English occupational or topographic surname, likely referring to a settlement near a cottage or copse, derived from Old English cot (shelter, cottage) with a locative suffix. As a given name, its most famous bearer is Cotton Mather (1663–1728), the formidable Puritan minister and prolific author who stands as one of colonial New England's most complex figures — a man of genuine intellectual ambition who nonetheless advocated during the Salem witch trials. His name itself was a tribute to his maternal grandfather, the minister John Cotton, establishing a Puritan tradition of honoring theological lineage through naming.
The association with the textile fiber — that soft, white crop whose cultivation defined and devastated the American South — gives the name a richly layered resonance in the American context. Cotton as a crop was the engine of the antebellum plantation economy and therefore deeply entangled with the history of slavery. This historical weight means the name carries different frequencies for different listeners: agricultural heritage, colonial intellectual history, or the brutal economics of the old South.
In contemporary use Cotton is rare and decidedly unconventional, which gives it a kind of bold, frontier-flavored appeal for parents seeking something genuinely unusual. It has appeared in modern fiction and on television — most notably Cotton Hill, the gruff patriarch of the animated series King of the Hill — cementing a certain rugged, Southern masculine image. Yet the name's softness as a material, and the gentle sound of the word itself, allows Cotton to carry an unexpected tenderness alongside its toughness.