Wedding Invitations & Paper

Junior, Senior and III question

So my grandpa was John M Doe and his son (my uncle) is John M Doe as well -- so he's technically junior but I never have really seen him go by that designation (probably because my grandpa went by Jack, not John).

So grandpa dies and my uncle names his kid John M Doe as well, so he's the third, technically.

So should the invitation read:

Mr. and Mrs. John M Doe, Junior
Kid #1, Kid #2, John M III

Or should I just leave the junior/III designation off entirely?
Lizzie

Re: Junior, Senior and III question

  • My grandpa, uncle, and cousin all have the same name. They've never used those titles, either, so we left them off the invites. 

    Can you ask them what they prefer?

    I'd lean towards leaving the titles off, but that's just from my experience. 

    For what it's worth, I'm almost positive that when you spell out "junior" you don't capitalize the J. You only capitalize if you're abbreviating the title, which is also correct etiquette wise. 
  • aragx6aragx6 member
    2500 Comments 5 Love Its Combo Breaker
    In Response to <a href="http://forums.theknot.com/Sites/theknot/Pages/Main.aspx/wedding-boards_invites-paper_junior-senior-and-iii-question?plckFindPostKey=Cat:Wedding BoardsForum:cd062f89-8272-496a-b0ab-225e1f87acecDiscussion:46d46467-ce8f-4500-b1ba-b655f4f85acbPost:c9bd04f2-c975-408d-a5bf-624ecedea593">Re: Junior, Senior and III question</a>:
    [QUOTE]My grandpa, uncle, and cousin all have the same name. They've never used those titles, either, so we left them off the invites.  Can you ask them what they prefer? I'd lean towards leaving the titles off, but that's just from my experience.  For what it's worth, I'm almost positive that when you spell out "junior" you don't capitalize the J. You only capitalize if you're abbreviating the title, which is also correct etiquette wise. 
    Posted by LeiselEB[/QUOTE]

    I honestly think that's what I'm going to do.

    And I actually thought the same thing about Jr./junior, but according to Crane's, the junior is capitalized -- I trusted them for everything else, so I figured to mainatain consistentcy I'd go with them for everything.

    <a href="http://blog.crane.com/wedding-etiquette-how-to-address-your-envelopes/#In-Which-the-Man-is-a-Junior" rel="nofollow">http://blog.crane.com/wedding-etiquette-how-to-address-your-envelopes/#In-Which-the-Man-is-a-Junior</a>
    Lizzie
  • Leisel B is correct about not capitalizing junior when it's written out and there's no comma before Roman numerals.

  • Lisa50Lisa50 member
    2500 Comments 5 Love Its Combo Breaker
    Even if your uncle is John M Doe, he may not be "Junior," technically.  My dad was James M Smith, my brother was James M Smith (no Junior or II).  Honestly,if your uncle doesn't use Junior at all, you should not put it on the envelope.
This discussion has been closed.
Choose Another Board
Search Boards