[I]t is teenage marriage today, not teenage pregnancy, that is the rarity. And, statistics show, teenage marriages tend not to endure. ... The median marrying age for women in the late 1950s was about 19, according to David Popenoe, co-director of the National Marriage Project at Rutgers University and an emeritus professor of sociology there. But a marriage between 19-year-olds or even 17- or 18-year-olds then would not have been described as a teenage marriage, he said. It was too routine to be given a special label. There is no way to know how many of those unions...
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