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  1. Alamy. The researchers found the 'good family' narrative was a key factor in women changing their names. “I wanted to do it to have a better connection with my kid, not just in a loving ...

  2. When a person (traditionally the wife in many cultures) assumes the family name of their spouse, in some countries that name replaces the person's previous surname, which in the case of the wife is called the maiden name (" birth name " is also used as a gender-neutral or masculine substitute for maiden name), whereas a married name is a family ...

  3. Back in 1855, Lucy Stone bore the appellation “Miss,” which was otherwise reserved for unmarried women. For many decades, most women who retained their maiden name also retained the title “Miss.”. The appellation “Ms.” solved the obvious social problem of what to call a married woman who retained her surname.

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  4. Mar 7, 2019 · Today, Lucy Stoners remain in the minority. About 20% of women who got married in recent years reported keeping their maiden name in a Google Consumer Survey conducted by the New York Times in ...

  5. Jul 19, 2022 · Contemporarily, “at least in the US, about 20% to 30% of women retain their name, meaning the vast majority take their spouse’s name when they marry,” Carr said. That includes artist ...

  6. Jul 28, 2013 · Studies from the 1990s indicate that between 3 percent and 25 percent of married women were using their maiden names as middle names. About 18 percent of women at the marital name change website ...

  7. Aug 16, 2016 · Articles from the early 1900s sometimes note the growing frequency of hyphenated names, or a woman keeping her maiden name as a middle name. By the mid-1930s H.L. Mencken writes that it was ...