Name Help: Should they name her Peggy?Name Help is a series at Appellation Mountain. Every week, one reader’s name questions will be discussed.

We’re relying on thoughtful comments from the community to help expectant parents narrow down their name decisions. Thank you in advance for sharing your insight!

Jessica writes:

My partner and I are expecting a daughter before the end of the year. Most likely this will be our only child.

We keep coming back to one name: Peggy.

It doesn’t have any meeting or significance, though my partner does have a great-grandmother named Margaret. That’s not why we like it, though. The name just makes us both smile.

Several people close to us have suggested naming our daughter Margaret and calling her Peggy, but we’re not interested in that. First of all, neither of us really knew Peggy was a nickname for Margaret until the name came up, so I feel like we’d be in for years of explaining that we call her Peggy, not Maggie or Meg. Second, we don’t really like the sound of Margaret.

We’re mostly wondering if Peggy is too old-lady of a name, but I guess we’re also wondering if Peggy is too cute to be a full name? (Can both things be true? They sound like opposites.)

Our daughter’s middle name will be my last name, which is like Matthew-with-an-S, and her last name will sound like Albert-with-an-H.

Please read on for my response and leave your thoughtful suggestions in the comments.

Abby replies:

Congratulations on your new daughter!

I’m laughing a little at the whole “why not name her Margaret” comment, because it sounds like the kind of well-meaning thing I might say.

While naming your daughter Margaret might give you options, it also potentially causes a hassle.

Because yes, Peggy isn’t intuitively derived from Margaret.

It goes a little like this: Margaret shortened to Meg, which became Peg, and then Peggy, courtesy of the same rhyming magic that transformed Robert to Bob and William to Bill.

People know … but you’re right. At the same time, they don’t know that Peggy comes from Margaret, and I agree – you’d probably find yourself explaining that she’s Peggy, not Maggie.

So we agree, you’re going to skip the formal name.

Now let’s talk about the whole too-cute old-lady name dilemma.

Because you’re right … it can’t be both. But somehow it is.

That’s because we use terms like “too cute” and “old lady” as pejoratives. They’re shorthand for “you shouldn’t use that name because it’s not a good name because I say so.”

If someone said that about Sadie or Hazel, you’d shrug and say, “But Sadie/Hazel ranks in the current US Top 100, so you’re wrong. It’s a completely reasonable name for a girl born now, and the numbers prove it.”

The trick is that Peggy is stuck in style limbo.

It ranked in the US Top 100 from 1927 through 1962 as an independent name. Layer in popularity of Margaret in same era, plus a healthy number of girls named Mary Margaret, and Peggy? There were plenty of Peggys in the US in the middle of the twentieth century.

The name’s image seems to be shifting. During the late 1980s and 90s, Married With Children’s Peg Bundy wasn’t much of a namesake, but three decades later, Mad Men’s fabulous Peggy Olson made many of us reconsider the name. (Though, yes, the latter is a Margaret.)

PEGGY: BY the NUMBERS

It’s impossible to know how many Margarets answer to Peggy.

But we do know that just 18 girls were named Peggy in 2021.

That’s a huge decrease from peak Peggy, circa 1958, when over 10,000 girls received the name.

And yet, Peggy has lots of advantages.

PEGGY’S PLUSES

  • Everyone knows how to spell and pronounce Peggy. Is there a Peggie, Peggye, or Peggi out there who disagrees? Possibly. But this is one of those names with a strong, uncontested default spelling, and that’s an advantage.
  • It fits with Penelope and Piper. We love the pop of so many P names for our daughters. Paisley. Parker. Persephone. Poppy. Peggy fits right in. You just thought of it first.
  • We know it will age well, just like the other nickname names in this generation. The whole argument about Peggy being too cute? Sure, it’s a sweet name for a child, just like Millie and Birdie and Winnie. And just like those names, it will age – gracefully – across the years until it’s an old lady name once again. After all, it’s happened before.

Naming your daughter Peggy today seems just daring enough – a name that’s slightly ahead of the curve.

The one challenge, of course, is that she won’t really have a fallback name, since her middle is a surname. That’s completely fine. But if you’re hesitant, it’s always possible to add one more name. Peggy Charlotte LastName LastName. Peggy Genevieve LastName LastName. Peggy Rose LastName LastName. The options are many.

But that’s only if you are so inclined.

Because I think Peggy is a great name for your daughter.

Readers, over to you – what have I missed? Would you name a daughter Peggy?

About Abby Sandel

Whether you're naming a baby, or just all about names, you've come to the right place! Appellation Mountain is a haven for lovers of obscure gems and enduring classics alike.

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What do you think?

22 Comments

  1. I love playing with longer forms for nicknames … my daughter calls these nicholas names!

    And I agree Peggy has lots of potential here. Kind of love the suggestion of Peggy “Pearl” or Pearl “Peggy” depending on your preference.

    Though it sounds to me that you and your husband have found a name you both love. That’s huge and good enough reason to just go for it. While it would be nice for everyone else, especially your nearest and dearest, to love it too, I’m sure they’ll still love your daughter and hopefully get used to her name … maybe even love it one day, too.

  2. Peggy seems to be a controversial choice. You either love it or hate it. It’s cute but also kind of silly. Personally I’m not a big fan of nickname names on the official birth certificate so I would advise you to choose a traditional name and just call her Peggy. But like you I’m not sold on the name Margaret. Variants of Margaret I like would be greta, Margot, marguerite.
    How about Penny? It sounds so similar and to my ears it’s sweeter and has less teasing potential. (Penny could be short for Penelope e.g)
    Also how about Polly ? With Pauline / Paula as a full name.
    Good luck and congrats !

  3. I’m totally biased because my youngest has a nickname name, but I LOVE Peggy so much and I think it’s totally ahead of the curve. I would 200% rather meet a young Peggy than another Peg is a sweet nickname.

    My two cents is I completely had middle name regret when my babe was four months old. Her middle names were more masculine leaning surnames and there was no fallback for her. So we changed her middles before she was one. She now has a name we just love that is more feminine leaning though also has a masculine version, and a name from my maternal side that is meaningful and beautiful. (That was just a bonus once we started rethinking the first middle the second middle for my first child is my surname, so I just continued it for my second child but realized that obliterated my maternal side.) So I agree with Abby that you might consider sticking a ‘fallback’ name in the middle too.

    The other thing we did was reach out to friends who either go by their middle name primarily, or who have a nickname name on paper (one old colleague of my husband shares our daughter’s exact name.) We got reassurance from this anecdotal research that 1) naming what you’ll call them is infinitely easier for a person in the long term, though not insurmountable if there’s a good reason to use the middle primarily layer on. 2) a ‘nickname’ never felt like it held the person back and they never wished for a longer form to fall back on. Yes I’m sure a person could keep looking and find evidence to the contrary on both accounts, but this gave us the extra faith in our decision process.

    When she was a baby I was determined to start a trend of using long forms for a ‘nickname’ when it suited, because why shouldn’t it go both ways? Why shouldn’t Peggy have Margaret in her arsenal if needed at some point, when Margarets can reinvent themselves as Pearl, Maisie, Marg, anytime they want?! (Spoiler – she’s almost 7 now and I have never felt the need for the longer form and only ONCE has someone asked what her name is short for.)

    Long story short… use it use it! Peggy is amazing.

  4. It makes sense that the name it’s both cute and old lady. It makes me think of an adorable old lady, kind of like Miss Marble.
    If you don’t like Margaret, maybe you’ll like other names that could shorten to Peggy?
    Peregrine
    Paige
    Pelagia
    Penelope
    Agape
    Pegasus
    Pearl – Margaret means pearl, so this one makes even more sense

  5. I like Peggy for a little girl born in 2022 and actually think it’s kind of refreshing.

  6. My mother named me megan after her two best friends Margaret (one went by Margie, the other Peggy). For me, it’s just too close to Piggy. But if you love it, go for it

  7. If you keep coming back to it and it makes you smile, it seems pretty obvious that’s her name. For what it’s worth, it makes me smile too.