What are the most common names of parishes in the Anglican Church in North America?
The Background
I go to a church called All Saints Anglican Church. I have long suspected that "All Saints" is the most common name of ACNA churches. Read on to see if my suspicion was correct.
I got the data (which was just names) from here: acna.org. There were 983 entities on that list, almost all of which are churches. I did not carefully check if all were churches, but I did remove two that were clearly not churches. Thus, I considered 981 entities.
The Data

Figure 1. I coded each church with a key word or phrase. This pie chart breaks all the churches up into categories by key word. This is not meant to be comprehensive: "Other" includes all key words with fewer than 25 instances. Main takeaways: almost one-third of churches are named after a saint (or sometimes two, like St. Peter and St. Paul). Almost one-quarter named their church "Christ" in one of many forms (e.g. Christ the King or Christ Our Redeemer).
The single most common name is "Christ Church" (n=40) and the second most common is "All Saints" (n=37).

Figure 2. ACNA churches have named themselves after a lot of different saints, but the distribution is by no means even. A .txt file listing all instances including saints with only one church named after them is available here. I was extremely suprised to see so few churches named after the Virgin Mary (n=8, even including "Our Lady of X"-type names). Maybe it sounds too Catholic for North American Protestants? Also, the Feast of Saint Joseph (of Nazareth) is the only Red-Letter Day commemorating a saint who no ACNA parish has as its patron saint.
*David here is not King David but St. David of Wales.

Figure 3. John was the disciple Jesus loved, but he is apparantly also the Evangelist Anglicans love.
*To be fair, this category includes churches named after both John the Apostle and John the Baptist but this data set has no way of seperating them.

Figure 4. Poor Judas (not Iscariot) never gets churches named after him because his mom and dad gave him the fourth most common name of his time. Unless of course all those St. Jude's are named after the disciple, or even if the 2+ men named Ἰουδας are the same person...
*note that there are multiple people named James in the NT, but churches do not identify who they are named for. (Same with John).

Figure 5. One group of Spanish-speakers prefers "Gran Pastor" and another prefers "Buen Pastor". By the way, for this analyis Spanish names were usually translated into English for categorization. E.g. “Iglesia Piedra Angular” → "Cornerstone Church" and “Iglesia Santa Cruz” → "Holy Cross Church".

Figure 6. Are the 30 ACNA churches that didn't choose "Blessed Trinity" OR "Holy Trinity" real Christians?

Figure 7. I bet King's Cross gets a lot of Harry Potter fans.