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How can ages differ so much
Profile | Posted by | Options | Post Date |
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InspectorGreenPen | Report | 7 Jul 2010 05:33 |
Has been corrected - 1846 not 1946.....! lol |
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Peterkinz | Report | 7 Jul 2010 04:29 |
Don't forget there was plenty of time for a death and remarriage between census. Therefore Ann in 1881 is not necessarily the same Ann in 1891 |
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SylviaInCanada | Report | 7 Jul 2010 04:08 |
regarding birth place |
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Madmeg | Report | 6 Jul 2010 23:04 |
When I first started tracing my family history, I lost count of the number of times I gave my own year of birth on documents as 1852 - and I'm still here to tell the tale! |
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brummiejan | Report | 6 Jul 2010 20:07 |
Now that's what I call an impressive age difference! |
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Joy | Report | 6 Jul 2010 18:39 |
"My wife's great grandad was - allegedly - born in 1847, or there about. His wife, we are fairly certain, was born in 1946." |
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InspectorGreenPen | Report | 6 Jul 2010 17:54 |
As stated earlier, look at the earliest census you can - this is likely to be the most accurate. |
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Jill 2011 (aka Warrior Princess of Cilla!) | Report | 6 Jul 2010 17:40 |
Also on the 1841 I have come across the odd one or two where the children's ages have been rounded down too - unless there were lots of twins and triplets living in the same road ... |
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Chris in Sussex | Report | 6 Jul 2010 16:20 |
In the 1841 census the enumerators were told to round down ages for those older than 15 to the nearest 5 years(to 15, 20, 25 ect). |
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Elizabeth2469049 | Report | 6 Jul 2010 15:35 |
I understand that in the 1841 census (the first national one) there were guide lines to round ages up or down, can't remember exactly. It would have been so much easier if in all the censuses they had been asked to give "year of birth" instead of "age"! probably too late to arrange for next year's! |
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Jilliflower | Report | 6 Jul 2010 15:30 |
Even as 'recently' as the 40's it was quite common for someone to give a local address so that the banns could be read and marriage take place in that parish - even thought they didn't live there. |
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Christine | Report | 6 Jul 2010 15:23 |
Sexist possibly, but so true! |
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Jonesey | Report | 6 Jul 2010 15:03 |
Objection!! - Sexist (lol) |
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Thelma | Report | 6 Jul 2010 14:46 |
I think it also depends on who filled out the form. |
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Jonesey | Report | 6 Jul 2010 14:17 |
In the case of adults many either did not know their true age or even where exactly they were born. In other cases some "adjusted" their age so that males looked older than their wives or visa versa. Birthplaces were also sometimes "changed" so that the parish where they were currently living would not try to remove them should they fall on hard times. |
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brummiejan | Report | 6 Jul 2010 14:12 |
That's true - further to what Joy has said, baptisms could take place several years after birth. |
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Joy | Report | 6 Jul 2010 14:05 |
With birth registration not being compulsory until the 1870s, many people's birth would not have been registered, so many would not have known when they were born though some would have known their baptismal details. |
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brummiejan | Report | 6 Jul 2010 14:03 |
Well, it was a different world really - not as obsessive with exact records as we are now. My husband has a family of 10 children in his ancestry whose father was a railway worker so they were born all over the place. These birthplaces got moved around on various censuses! |
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Angela | Report | 6 Jul 2010 12:47 |
How can some family members over the census years be consistant each time to what year they were born, age and where they were born and others haven't got a clue, even without education at some point they must have known what year it was or even realised it was their birthday or was it a case of too many children and you were lucky to be alive or your parents died and someone else brought you up. |