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Change of surname by 'deed poll'
Profile | Posted by | Options | Post Date |
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Susan10146857 | Report | 20 Jul 2011 01:21 |
Try entering the name in the London Gazette....online....Google it.....I came across many changes of name whilst researching.....The gazette was one of those papers that name changes were reported in...You never know :-) |
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mgnv | Report | 20 Jul 2011 00:32 |
Suzanne - yeah, that's what they say they need, but I doubt it's truly the case - there's just too many people with no passport and driver's licence for that to be the case. |
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Suzanne | Report | 19 Jul 2011 23:20 |
my son has just had his sons name changed(with his ex girlfriends permission)his son was born after they broke up and his ex didnt know if the child was his or the new boyfriends,the baby was reg in the mothers name until D.N.A was done...as soon as my son knew that the baby was his they wanted to change the name on the cert,my son needed his birth cert,his passport, and his driving licence,before any formal changing of his sons name could be done(and of course he had to be there in person)so its not only marriages tha you have to proof your identity.x :-) |
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InspectorGreenPen | Report | 19 Jul 2011 18:26 |
As has been said on may times before, the information recorded on any certificate is only as good as that provided at the time. |
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Suzanne | Report | 18 Jul 2011 23:07 |
hi. |
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Andysmum | Report | 18 Jul 2011 15:52 |
When I went to the Pensions Office in 1981 to cancel my mother's pension, the clerk behind the counter was tactfully telling the young man in front of me that his mother wasn't entitled to a widow's pension as she and his father had never been been legally married. It was obvious that he hadn't been aware of this, because he kept saying that his mother was Mrs XX and his father was Mr XX. I felt very sorry for him. |
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KathleenBell | Report | 18 Jul 2011 00:08 |
My mother-in-law had a pension book in her "married" name and her death recorded in her "married" name (hubby and I registered her death). At the time we didn't know that they were not married. We knew hubby's father had been married before but assumed that he had divorced. It was only afterwards that an elderly relative told us that they had never married - which is why I had spent about 5 years looking for a marriage that could not be found!! (we had never seen a wedding photo either). |
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Kucinta | Report | 18 Jul 2011 00:03 |
I changed my surname by statutary declaration before a commissoner for oaths so that I would have a 'document' for changing my details on bank accounts, PAYE, passport etc. |
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mgnv | Report | 17 Jul 2011 23:44 |
I would guess abt a third of people claiming pensions have legally changed their names under common law by just adopting their new name and abandoning their old name without resorting to deed polls. The vast majority of these are women who married. Their is nothing in a marriage ceremony abt changing names. |
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Susan | Report | 17 Jul 2011 22:00 |
Surely when a pension book was issued it would have been in the legal 'given' name and not in the 'adopted' name.. If death was registered in 'adopted' name there would be no recorded documentation to reconcile maiden name birth and death. |
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KathleenBell | Report | 16 Oct 2008 23:01 |
My in-laws were in the same position. My father-in-law was married in the 1920's and the marriage broke up but divorce was too expensive and difficult to get. He just lived with my mother-in-law as man and wife and she used his name and registered children's births as if they were married. |
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Heather | Report | 16 Oct 2008 22:49 |
I think they are likely to have just adopted the name. |
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Susan | Report | 16 Oct 2008 22:37 |
Hi - thanks for replying - my query 'goes back' to the 1950/60s - the couple couldn't marry due to a earlier wartime marriage overseas. The pair lived as 'normal married couple' - just wondered whether any legal documents were needed - death of 'Mrs' was registered in her 'married name' as it was not discovered until later that she was not 'legally' married ........... |
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fudge1 | Report | 16 Oct 2008 22:29 |
Kaths right as long as your not obtaining money by doing so. gill |
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fudge1 | Report | 16 Oct 2008 22:28 |
Hi Susan,we changed our name,you have to do it through a solicitor, not too expensive,for a while everything you do afterwards you have to keep producing the deed,bank details etc,but it gets better and in the end you tend to forget your old name,! you just reminded me! gill |
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KathleenBell | Report | 16 Oct 2008 22:27 |
You can call yourself anything you like as long as it is not for fraudulent reasons. I don't think it has to be done legally. |
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Susan | Report | 16 Oct 2008 22:16 |
Hi - has anyone any idea how I can find information concerning change of surname (by deed poll or just 'being called by a different surname'). |