From the French city Mâcon; used as a place-based given name in the American South.
Macon is a place-name pressed into service as a given name — a practice with deep roots in the American South, where geography and family honor have long intertwined in naming traditions. The name has a dual heritage: it echoes the French city of Mâcon in Burgundy, a Roman settlement known as *Matisco* and later a medieval wine capital, whose name may derive from a pre-Roman tribal root. But in American usage, Macon is overwhelmingly associated with Macon, Georgia, the city founded in 1823 and named for Nathaniel Macon, a North Carolina statesman and Speaker of the House of Representatives.
As a given name, Macon appears throughout Southern genealogical records as a tribute to the Georgia city or to Nathaniel Macon himself — the kind of patriotic, place-honoring name that American families bestowed when they wanted to express regional pride without resorting to an overtly political title. The name carries the cadences of the antebellum South: two syllables, deliberate and unhurried, with a hard consonant landing that gives it more presence than its brevity suggests. Anne Tyler gave the name significant literary exposure in her 1985 novel *The Accidental Tourist*, where Macon Leary is the quietly unraveling protagonist — a choice that gave the name a distinct literary melancholy alongside its regional character.
Macon today sits in the category of Southern-inflected surname-names that have crossed over into broader American use: Sutton, Cade, Beau, and their kin. It reads as masculine without being aggressive, regional without being parochial, and old without being antique. For parents who want a name that sounds like a county seat and a character in a novel simultaneously, Macon is an unusually precise fit.