February 27
National Susan Day
A name-day observance on February 27 honoring individuals named Susan and celebrating the name's Hebrew roots and cultural legacy.
Unknown
Community Origin
No documented founder or formal establishment record has been identified. The observance appears to have emerged informally online alongside similar name-day holidays in the early 2000s.
Introduction
An estimated 1.5 million Americans share the name Susan, making it one of the most common given names in the country's history. National Susan Day honors a name that crossed from ancient Hebrew scripture into mid-century American living rooms, where it dominated birth certificates for more than two decades.
The name's most famous bearer, Susan B. Anthony, became so synonymous with women's suffrage that the constitutional amendment bears her name. From Susan Sontag reshaping cultural criticism to Susan Boyle's audition becoming one of the most-watched videos in internet history, the name marks two centuries of outsized influence.
National Susan Day History
The name Susan started as a flower. In ancient Hebrew, Shoshana meant "lily," a word some linguists trace further back to the Egyptian "ssn," their term for the lotus. The name traveled from temple gardens into Greek as Sousanna, then into Latin as Susanna, and finally into English as Susan.
Its earliest boost in the Christian world came from the story of Susanna and the Elders, a narrative included in some biblical traditions as part of the Book of Daniel. In the tale, a virtuous woman named Susanna is falsely accused of adultery and saved by the prophet Daniel's cross-examination of her accusers. The story made the name a symbol of faith and resilience across medieval Europe.
A Midcentury Phenomenon
By the 1940s, Susan had begun climbing American baby-name charts. It entered the SSA top 10 in 1945 and never left for a generation.
The streak lasted 24 consecutive years. At its peak in 1959 and 1960, it ranked second in the entire country, trailing only Mary.
The sheer volume was staggering. In a single year during the late 1950s, more than 45,000 newborn girls received the name. The result is a generation where knowing multiple Susans in the same classroom, office, or family was routine.
A Name That Shaped History
Long before the midcentury boom, Susan B. Anthony had already made the name synonymous with civic courage. Born in 1820, Anthony spent decades campaigning for women's suffrage alongside Elizabeth Cady Stanton. She died in 1906, fourteen years before the amendment she had championed was ratified.
From Baby Name to Holiday
No documented founder or formal establishment record has been identified for National Susan Day. The observance emerged online in the early 2000s alongside dozens of similar name-day holidays, part of a broader internet-era tradition of dedicating calendar dates to common first names.
National Susan Day Timeline
Susan enters English usage
Anthony arrested for voting
Susan peaks at number two
Sarandon wins Academy Award
Boyle audition goes viral
How to Celebrate National Susan Day
- 1
Look up your name's SSA history
The Social Security Administration's baby name tool lets you search any name's popularity by year and state. Type in Susan, or your own name, to see exactly when it peaked and how many people share it.
- 2
Visit the Susan B. Anthony Museum
The National Susan B. Anthony Museum and House in Rochester, New York, preserves the home where Anthony was arrested for voting in 1872. Virtual tours are available for those who cannot visit in person.
- 3
Watch a film starring a famous Susan
Stream Dead Man Walking, the 1995 film that earned Susan Sarandon her Academy Award, or revisit Thelma and Louise for another iconic Sarandon role.
- 4
Read a Susan Sontag essay
Pick up On Photography or Illness as Metaphor, two collections that reshaped American cultural criticism. Both are widely available at public libraries and remain essential reading for anyone interested in how images and language shape perception.
- 5
Share the Susans in your life
Use the day to send a note to a Susan you know, whether a grandmother, colleague, or old friend. A short message acknowledging someone by name carries more weight than a generic holiday greeting.
Why We Love National Susan Day
- A
It carries a suffrage legacy
The 19th Amendment granting women the right to vote is colloquially known as the Susan B. Anthony Amendment. Anthony's name became so closely linked to the cause that the U.S. Mint placed her portrait on the dollar coin in 1979, the first woman to appear on circulating American currency.
- B
It reveals how names create generational identity
Because Susan dominated birth certificates during the postwar baby boom, the name now functions as a generational marker in the same way Jennifer does for the 1970s or Jessica for the 1980s. Researchers in onomastics use these concentration patterns to study how media, migration, and cultural shifts drive naming trends across decades.
- C
It connects ancient symbolism to modern identity
The name's journey from the Hebrew Shoshana to the English Susan spans over two millennia and at least five languages. That linguistic trail documents how names carry religious meaning, literary association, and cultural identity across civilizations.
Holiday Dates
| Year | Date | Day |
|---|---|---|
| 2023 | Monday | |
| 2024 | Tuesday | |
| 2025 | Thursday | |
| 2026 | Friday | |
| 2027 | Saturday |



