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Any ideas on this occupation?
Profile | Posted by | Options | Post Date |
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Potty | Report | 9 Jul 2012 14:35 |
I know what a costermonger is and I know what a fishmonger is but does anybody know what Volmonger is? |
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brummiejan | Report | 9 Jul 2012 14:42 |
Could it be a toolmonger? |
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brummiejan | Report | 9 Jul 2012 14:43 |
Other remote suggestion: |
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Potty | Report | 9 Jul 2012 14:46 |
Thanks, jan, I had seen Fellmonger. I suppose fellmonger it is possible, I wonder if Vol is a Dorset dialect word? |
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brummiejan | Report | 9 Jul 2012 14:49 |
I don't know! But there is a piece on Wiki re. Dorset dialect, in which it says: |
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Porkie_Pie | Report | 9 Jul 2012 14:55 |
Costermonger / Coster Wife 1) Peddler of fruits and vegetables 2) Ditto, female |
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AnninGlos | Report | 9 Jul 2012 15:03 |
Monger is given as seller of anything. |
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AnninGlos | Report | 9 Jul 2012 15:15 |
Despite the trade from the sea, it was rope making that had become the primary industry in the town. In 1211 King John, planning the war with France demanded large supplies of hempen thread for ships ropes and cables. In 1213 he further ordered that there be ‘made at Bridport by night and day, as many ropes for ships both large and small as they could'. |
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AnninGlos | Report | 9 Jul 2012 15:26 |
Fell mongers were around in bridport. |
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Andysmum | Report | 9 Jul 2012 22:47 |
According to my dictionary, a fellmonger was a dealer in hides, particularly sheepskin. Also "fell" is an old word for what we would now call a "fleece". Were wigs made of wool?? |
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Albert | Report | 10 Jul 2012 11:35 |
Voll small piece of mowable land next to a cottage could volmonger be a gardner? |
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John | Report | 10 Jul 2012 11:55 |
A costermonger originally sold costards, a type of apple. |
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Potty | Report | 10 Jul 2012 13:46 |
Thanks everyone for the suggestions, etc. I think I will try to trace that family forward (not direct ancestors) and see what occupations his descendants had. |
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Bernadette | Report | 10 Jul 2012 17:12 |
How about Fowlmonger (dealer in fowls)? There is a Fowl-monger street in Madras, India, and a couple of fowl mongers in the 1911 UK Census |
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Colin | Report | 10 Jul 2012 21:04 |
This may sound daft but could it be volemonger a seller of watervole which I have never heard of but going back through the centuries people used to catch and sell a veriety of things.The trade may have died out in the early 1800's. |
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Komby | Report | 10 Jul 2012 21:33 |
This is a longshot... is it possible that you saw a transcription of the original - perhaps typed? If so... is it possible that someone put a "V" instead of a "C" |
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John | Report | 11 Jul 2012 10:03 |
If the will is hand-written, perhaps it's the penmanship - and it could well be "Felmonger". The "F" with a single stroke formed like a "V" and a "e" looped like an "o", an "L", then "monger". |
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Potty | Report | 11 Jul 2012 14:14 |
Thanks again, everyone. Some interesting ideas. |
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MargaretM | Report | 11 Jul 2012 14:38 |
Had a look at the will and I would say it definitely says Volmonger. |
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Potty | Report | 11 Jul 2012 15:00 |
Have just found out that a currier also worked with skins and the volmonger had a brother-in-law who was a currier, so I think I will go for Fellmonger! |