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Scottish Dressmaker/seamstress rumours help??
Profile | Posted by | Options | Post Date |
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Alison | Report | 12 Dec 2010 18:51 |
In 19th C Scotland it would have been unthinkable not to have a child baptised, even if illegitimate, and baptisms were normally carried out at home before witnesses who were often relatives. |
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FamilyFogey | Report | 12 Dec 2010 18:10 |
There was usually a fee to baptise children, in one parish I have heard of them having a kind of special offer for either free or cheaper baptisms and poorer families making the most of it and baptising several children in one go where they probably wouldn't have normally done so. |
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+++DetEcTive+++ | Report | 12 Dec 2010 17:37 |
Could it be that there was a fee to baptise a child? On some of the PR originals, the occupation for the father is given as *pauper* and a summary page of events officiated at, and income. Pauper then suggesting that no child would be turned away, but there would be the expectation of payment if the parents could afford it. |
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Researching: |
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Helen | Report | 12 Dec 2010 14:16 |
Official birth registration came into practice in Scotland in 1855. |
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Potty | Report | 12 Dec 2010 11:27 |
I don't think any charge is made for registering a birth - it is the certificate that is paid for. I would think that a lot of poor families would just register the birth and not bother to get the cert. |
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InspectorGreenPen | Report | 12 Dec 2010 10:52 |
Prostitutes regularly gave their occupation as Dressmaker, throughout the 1800's, and not just in Scotland. However, it didn't automatically follow that all Dressmakers were prostitutes.....! |
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~~~Secret Red ^^ Squirrel~~~ **007 1/2** | Report | 12 Dec 2010 10:33 |
Hello Contrary Mary :) |
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Contrary Mary | Report | 11 Dec 2010 21:59 |
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Dawn | Report | 11 Dec 2010 21:47 |
I have checked the Parish records but cant find any of them which leads me to believe that because they were illigitimate they werent registered. It was just a thought that she could of been as she would of fitted the title, i think so anyway. Thankyou for replying.xx |
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Ozibird | Report | 11 Dec 2010 21:03 |
If she had 4 children with the same man, I'd find it hard to believe she was a prostitute. |
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Dawn | Report | 11 Dec 2010 20:42 |
I heard a while back that in the 1841 Scottish census particulaly, if your relative was down on the census as a dressmaker/seamstress then she could be covering up for being a 'woman of ill repute', or prostitute. My 5x great grandmother was down as a seamstress in 1841 and she had 4 illigitimate children with the same man but they never married each other, he married a different woman in 1860. I cannot find a birth record for the 4 illigitimate children (one being my 4x grandfather) but the fathers name is down on their death certificates. Also if this is true would it of been common not to register the 4 illigitimate childrens births? |