2010
#149,395
National surname rank
First available Census row
A surname of Arabic origin, possibly derived from a personal name or descriptive term.
According to the 2020 US Census Bureau surname tables, roughly 116 Americans carry the last name Dwaileebe. That puts it at #155,270 in the national surname ranking, appearing at a frequency of 0.03 per 100,000 people (about 1 in 2,954,779 residents).
This page is the full Name Census profile for the Dwaileebe surname. You will find the Census Bureau frequency data, a multi-census history view, an ancestry and ethnicity breakdown based on self-reported demographics, the name's meaning and origin where available, and answers to the most common questions people ask about this surname.
Bearers in the US
116
1 in 2,954,779
Census rank
#155,270
2020 decennial data
Per 100,000
0.0
Frequency rate
Recorded bearers
101
very rare in the US
Popularity narrative
The Census Bureau recorded 101 bearers of the surname Dwaileebe in its 2020 decennial surname file. At a rate of 0.03 per 100,000 residents, it holds the 155270th position in the national surname ranking.
Among Census respondents with the surname Dwaileebe, the largest self-reported group is White at 84.2%. The next largest groups are Two or More Races (10.9%) and Asian/Pacific Islander (4.0%).
Origin
The surname DWAILEEBE has its origins in the small village of Dwaileeb, located in the rural heartlands of northern Oxfordshire, England. Records show the name first appearing in the late 13th century, derived from the Old English words 'dwail' meaning a foolish or idiotic person, and 'leeb' referring to a place or dwelling.
One of the earliest known references to the DWAILEEBE name can be found in the Oxfordshire Manorial Records of 1287, which mentions a 'John atte Dwaileebe' as a tenant farmer in the village. This suggests the name may have originally been a locational surname, describing someone who lived at or near the 'dwelling of fools'.
By the 15th century, variations like 'Dwayllebe' and 'Dwayleebe' start appearing in parish records across Oxfordshire and neighbouring counties. The DWAILEEBE spelling seems to have become standardized by the late 1600s. Notable bearers from this era include William Dwaileebe (1618-1692), a respected Oxford scholar and theologian.
Moving into the 1700s, the DWAILEEBE name crops up in several historical documents from the period. The 1743 'Survey of Manors in Oxfordshire' lists multiple Dwaileebe families as landowners. Then in 1782, a James Dwaileebe is recorded as serving in the British Royal Navy during the American Revolutionary War.
As the name spread beyond its Oxfordshire origins in the 1800s, several Dwaileebe individuals achieved prominence. These include Mary Ann Dwaileebe (1801-1887), a pioneering educator who founded several girls' schools in London, and Samuel Josiah Dwaileebe (1837-1920), an influential industrialist and member of parliament.
Other noteworthy Dwaileebe figures from the 19th century are Alfred Dwaileebe (1846-1932), a decorated British Army officer who served in the Anglo-Zulu War, and the artist Emily Jane Dwaileebe (1862-1943), renowned for her landscape paintings of the English countryside.
Demographics
Among Census respondents with the surname Dwaileebe, the largest self-reported group is White at 84.2%. The next largest groups are Two or More Races (10.9%) and Asian/Pacific Islander (4.0%).
The bar chart below shows how Dwaileebe bearers described their own race and ethnicity on the 2020 Census form. The Census Bureau groups responses into six broad categories: White, Black or African American, Hispanic or Latino, Asian and Pacific Islander, American Indian and Alaska Native, and Two or More Races. When a category has too few respondents for a given surname, the Bureau suppresses the figure to protect individual privacy, which is why some names show fewer than six slices.
Percentages are shown for every Census year so the breakdown stays comparable over time. When the source file also includes raw headcounts, Name Census shows those alongside the percentages in the legend.
Keep in mind that these are self-reported numbers. A person's surname does not determine their race or ethnicity, and the distribution you see here reflects the specific population who happened to carry the Dwaileebe surname at the time of the 2020 Census, not any inherent property of the name itself.
Timeline
Dwaileebe appears in 2 published Census surname files: 2010, 2020. The cards below show how the name's rank and bearer count changed across each release.
2010
National surname rank
First available Census row
2020
National surname rank
-9 bearers (-8.2%)
| Year | Rank | Count | Per 100K | Count change | Rank change |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2010 | #149,395 | 110 | 0.04 | First available Census row | First available Census row |
| 2020 | #155,270 | 101 | 0.03 | -9 bearers (-8.2%) | Down 5,875 places |
For 2020, the Census Bureau published race and Hispanic-origin columns as counts rather than percentages. Name Census converts those counts back into shares so the ancestry section stays comparable with the older surname files.
Year on year
How has the Dwaileebe surname changed between Census years? The chart shows bearer count side by side, and the table compares rank, count, and frequency.
Census year comparison
| Metric | 2010 | 2020 | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rank | #149,395 | #155,270 | -3.9% |
| Count | 110 | 101 | -8.2% |
| Per 100K | 0.04 | 0.03 | -15.5% |
Between the 2010 and 2020 Census, the number of Dwaileebe bearers went from 110 to 101 (-8.2% change). The surname moved down 5,875 positions in the national ranking, going from #149,395 to #155,270.
FAQ
Name Census estimates that about 116 living Americans carry the surname Dwaileebe. Using the current population baseline, that works out to roughly 1 in 2,954,779 residents.
Dwaileebe ranks #155,270 in the 2020 Census surname tables and is classified on this site as "Very Rare." The Census recorded the name at a frequency of 0.03 per 100,000 residents, which is about 0 people out of every 100,000.
The raw 2020 Census file counted 101 people with the surname Dwaileebe. That is different from the site's living-bearer estimate (116), which projects the surname's present-day count by applying the Census frequency rate to the current U.S. population.
It is the Census Bureau's normalized frequency measure. A rate of 0.03 per 100,000 means that if you picked a random group of 100,000 U.S. residents, you would expect about 0 of them to have the surname Dwaileebe.
Between 2010 and 2020, the surname Dwaileebe went from 110 recorded bearers to 101. That is a decrease of 9 (-8.2%). In the national ranking it fell from #149,395 to #155,270.
Among Census respondents with the surname Dwaileebe, the largest self-reported group is White at 84.2%. The next largest groups are Two or More Races (10.9%) and Asian/Pacific Islander (4.0%). These figures come from the 2020 Census Bureau surname tables, based on how respondents described their own race and ethnicity.
White is the largest self-reported group for the surname Dwaileebe in the 2020 Census, accounting for 84.2% (85 people in the source table).
Dwaileebe appears across multiple self-reported groups in the Census data. The largest shares in the 2020 file are White (84.2%), Two or More Races (10.9%), Asian/Pacific Islander (4.0%). For 2020, the source file also published raw headcounts for each group, which is why this page can show both percentages and counts in the ancestry section.
Yes. This page is using the latest surname file currently loaded on Name Census, which is 2020. The historical section above also keeps any older Census surname entries we have for Dwaileebe (2010, 2020).
No. The Census Bureau only publishes surnames that appeared at least 100 times in a given decennial Census. That means very rare surnames are excluded entirely, and a surname can appear in one Census release but disappear from a later one if it falls below the reporting threshold.
There are two main reasons: rounding and suppression. The Census Bureau rounds published values, and it may suppress very small cells to protect privacy. For 2020, the Bureau also published raw group counts rather than direct percentages, so Name Census converts those counts back into shares for comparability across census years.
A surname of Arabic origin, possibly derived from a personal name or descriptive term. The fuller origin note on this page goes into more detail.
All surname statistics on Name Census are drawn from the US Census Bureau's decennial surname frequency tables. These files list every surname that appeared 100 or more times in the 2020 Census, along with a count, a per-100,000 rate, and a self-reported demographic breakdown. You can read the full explanation on our methodology page.
For surnames, Name Census does not age cohorts the way it does for first names. Instead, it takes the Census Bureau's published frequency for Dwaileebe (0.03 per 100,000) and applies that rate to the current U.S. resident population to estimate how many living Americans have the surname today.
For a faster, more casual read, check HowManyOfMe.org — our sister site built around that single question.