Recent statistics show single motherhood on the rise, at 12 million, up from 3.4 million in 1970.
• In 1998, 26 percent of all families with children were headed by single parents. Press Release cb98-228.html, U.S. Census Bureau,
www.census.gov, April 29, 1999.
• “Most single-parent children live in metropolitan areas (14.5 million), and six in 10 of them (9.2 million) are in cities with populations of 1 million or more.� “Children of single parents – how they fare,� Census Brief CENBR/97-1, September 1997.
• In 1998, an estimated 42 percent of all custodial parents had never married, 38 percent had divorced, only 5 percent were widowed, and about 15 percent were separated.
“Census Bureau Facts for Features,� U.S. Census Bureau,
www.census.gov, April 29, 1999.
• In 1995, nearly six of 10 children living with mothers only were near the poverty line. About 45 percent of children raised by divorced mothers and 69 percent by never-married mothers lived in or near poverty, which was $13,003 for a family of three in 1998. Census Brief CENBR/97-1, Bureau of the Census,
www.census.gov, September 1997.
• In 1999, 41 percent of all first births were born to premarital parents. Of females ages 15 to 29, 53 percent of first children were conceived out of wedlock. Press-Release (CB99-213), U.S. Census Bureau’s Public Information Office, December 20, 1999.
• Of never married women in their 30s, 40 percent have had a child. “Single Mothers, Many Faces,� by Sara Eckel, American Demographics, May 1999.
• One in five never-married women ages 15 to 44 are mothers. Press Release cb97-192.html, U.S. Census Bureau,
www.census.gov, April 29, 1999.
• Two-thirds of infants born to teen mothers were fathered by adult men over age 20. “A Few Facts About Illegitimacy,� Family Research Council,
www.frc.org, January 1997.
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Fifty-three percent of high school girls say it is worthwhile to have a child out of wedlock. “Snapshot of America,� Rutgers University study, The Barna Report, July-Sept. 1999.
• An estimated 25 million (40 percent) children are growing up without fathers in the home. “American Agenda,� World News Tonight with Peter Jennings, December 13, 1994.
• About 13 million (50 percent) children without fathers in the home have never even been in their fathers’ homes.
“American Agenda,� World News Tonight with Peter Jennings, December 13, 1994.
• Boys living in a fatherless home are two to three times more likely to be involved in crime, drop out of school, and get divorced. Girls living in a fatherless home are two to three times more likely to become pregnant teenagers and have their marriages end in divorce. “Heading Toward a Fatherless Society,� by Barry Kliff, MSNBC News,
www.msnbc.com, March 31, 1999.
• Children of divorce do worse academically, are more prone to delinquency, are more vulnerable to the appeal of substance abuse, are more likely to bear a child out of wedlock, and are less equipped to enter marriage themselves. “Real Women Stay Married,� by Susan Orr, Washington Watch, June 2000.
• Almost 70 percent of young men in prison grew up without fathers in the home. “American Agenda,� World News Tonight with Peter Jennings, January 12, 1995.