Difference between revisions of "General History"
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==Some Old Legal Terms == | ==Some Old Legal Terms == | ||
+ | |||
+ | Some of those funny words that we find on old wills etc. | ||
+ | |||
+ | MOIETY......... A half .....part..... portion or share of property etc. Note: Such is usually based on family or unilateral descent. | ||
+ | |||
+ | GAVELKIND...... Equal shares among qualifying heirs. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ECHEATS......... Reversion of land to the manor etc. under feudal tenure when lacking legal heirs. | ||
+ | |||
+ | MESSUAGE...... House or dwelling. | ||
+ | |||
+ | SIEZED............ To be in legal possession of, from the feudal concept of "seisin" | ||
+ | |||
+ | INTER ALIA..... Among other things | ||
+ | |||
+ | DEMESNE..........Land of a feudal lord retained for his own use i.e the grounds of a Mansion etc. | ||
+ | |||
+ | TERRIER........... A form of Register of Land belonging to an estate etc.. | ||
+ | |||
+ | FEALTY............The fidelity owed to a Feudal Lord | ||
+ | |||
+ | FRANKPLEDGE....Anglo Saxon system in which 10 households or tithings were grouped together and became responsible for each others behaviour or conduct. | ||
+ | |||
+ | CAPITE.............means the Tenant held the property in 'Capite' for the landlord to whom he paid rents | ||
+ | |||
+ | ATTAINDER........Common law - The state of an offender who had been sentenced for a capital offence. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ATTAINTED..... disgraced......... or to pass sentence of attainder against.... | ||
+ | |||
+ | ENFEOFFED.... to invest with a Feudal estate or fee. | ||
+ | |||
+ | DEVISED.......... Give land or property in a Will. Or to plan and contrive. | ||
+ | |||
+ | DEFEASANCE ...... Forfeiture or annulment of something or some legal right (usually because some original condition has not been complied with; e.g. not paying the mortgage) | ||
<br> | <br> | ||
+ | |||
==Workhouses == | ==Workhouses == | ||
Revision as of 21:00, 7 April 2007
Contents
- 1 Schools and Education
- 2 Museums and Galleries
- 3 Work and Trade Assosciations / Unions
- 4 Political Parties and Movements
- 5 Hospitals, Asylums and Sanitoriums
- 6 The Industrial Revolution
- 7 American History
- 8 Irish Political and Social History
- 9 Civilian Transport
- 10 Architecture and Old Buildings
- 11 The Law and Social Legislation
- 12 Crime and Punishment
- 13 The British Monarchy
- 14 Emigration and Immigration
- 15 Inns and Public Houses
- 16 Religion and the Clergy
- 17 Maps and Photography
- 18 The Landed Gentry
- 19 Bargemen/Boatmen/Watermen/Lightermen
- 20 Jewish history
- 21 Stonemasons
- 22 Emigration in the 1800's
- 23 Farming and Agriculture
- 24 Shipping and Passenger Lists
- 25 Some Old Legal Terms
- 26 Workhouses
- 27 OLD OCCUPATIONS (miscellaneous)
- 28 Pre-historic Ancesters
- 29 Ireland
- 30 Clothing and Fashion
- 31 Mining and Heavy Industry
- 32 The Celts
Schools and Education
- http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/legislation.htm Education acts – history & politicians
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Education_in_England History of State Education
Museums and Galleries
- http://www.thewardrobe.org.uk/main.php3 Museum of The Royal Gloucestershire, Berkshire and Wiltshire Regiment - Salisbury
- http://www.beamish.org.uk/ Open air museum,at Beamish, Couty Durham, reflecting Northern life in 1800’s and early 1900’s
- http://www.edencamp.co.uk/ Eden Camp, Malton, North Yorkshire - Theme museum, centred on the history of WW2
- http://www.bbc.co.uk/bradford/sense_of_place/saltaire.shtml Saltaire, Bradford – factory and village, built by millowner & philanthropist Sir Titus Salt.
- http://www.saltsmill.org.uk/ Village includes Salts Mill – houses the David Hockney exhibition
Work and Trade Assosciations / Unions
- http://www.historyshelf.org/shelf/friend/06.php Friendly Societies - a brief overview, with links to some specifiic societies
- http://www.unionancestors.co.uk/index.htm Trade Union Ancestors
Political Parties and Movements
The Suffragettes
Hospitals, Asylums and Sanitoriums
- http://users.ox.ac.uk/~peter/workhouse/MAB/MAB.shtml Establishment of hospitals, asylums, hospital ships, smallpox & TB
- http://www.institutions.org.uk/asylums/england/english_asylums.htm Asylum information
- http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/hospitalrecords/search.asp TNA's Hospital Database search facility
- http://www.coram.org.uk/heritage.htm CORAM Foundling Hospital Association
The Industrial Revolution
- http://www.leeds.gov.uk/armleymills/ Leeds industrial museum, which includes a history of industrialisation
- http://www.spinningtheweb.org.uk/ A useful site for the cotton spinning and weaving industry
- http://www.revolutionaryplayers.org.uk/home.stm Industrial History
American History
- http://userpages.aug.com/captbarb/femvets2.html Women in the American civil war, with links to other related sites
- http://www.teacheroz.com/wwi.htm America in World War One
Irish Political and Social History
This section has been moved to its own page due to its size. Click here to view it.
Civilian Transport
- http://www.georgianindex.net/horse_and_carriage/carriage_door.html Carriages and Coaching
- http://www.lvta.co.uk/history.htm Horse cabs and Hackney carriages
- http://www.ba-gb.com/index.php?ps=8 Bicycles
Architecture and Old Buildings
- http://www.letchworthgardencity.net/heritage/index-3.htm Letchworth, the first Garden City
- http://www.cadbury.co.uk/EN/CTB2003/about_chocolate/history_cadbury/social_pioneers/bournville_village.htm Bourneville village (founded by the Cadburys)
- http://www.portsunlightvillage.com/page.asp?pageid=history Port Sunlight (founded by William Lever)
- http://www.jrf.org.uk/housingandcare/newearswick/ New Earswick (built by Joseph Rowntree)
- http://koti.welho.com/rhurmal1/linnat2004/castles.html#A British Castles, Stately Homes and Houses
- http://www.victorianstation.com/architecturemenu.htm Victorian Architecture, mostly American
- http://www.building-history.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/ Researching historic buildings in the British Isles
The Law and Social Legislation
- http://www.oldbaileyonline.org This has the transcripts of Old Bailey trials from 1674-1834. You can search by name or place, (the name search includes defendants, witnesses and jurors). Also has old maps and other info about London history.
- http://www.devonfhs.org.uk/forewords/A138.pdf although written as an introduction to the Apprenticeship Register for Dawlish, Devon, this provides a good description of the Parish Apprenticeship system in England in the late 18th and early 19th centuries.
- http://www.schools.bedfordshire.gov.uk/gaol/ccourts.htm A brief description of the 19th Century Criminal Justice System
- http://www.met.police.uk/history/index.htm History of the Metropolitan Police
Crime and Punishment
Crime and Punishment has been moved to its own page due to size considerations
The British Monarchy
- http://www3.dcs.hull.ac.uk/genealogy/GEDCOM.html Royal and Noble Genealogical Data on the Web
- http://tribalpages.com/familytree.html Tribal pages uses the British royal family for its family tree tutorial. If you think you have royal connections it might be worth browsing.
Emigration and Immigration
Highland Clearances
For those interested in the Highland Clearances there is loads of info here - I only looked at 6 of them and have already found a missing person.
If you google "Metagama" you will get some ship passenger lists from 1920's. This is a small example - 404 names on this list mostly from Scotland. Departed Glasgow, Scotland on Friday, June 22, 1923 Departed Belfast, Ireland on Saturday, June 23, 1923
Trans-Atlantic Sailing to Quebec and Montreal, Canada, July 5, 1923 THIS was a C.P.R. liner, come to Lewis to take on those whom Manny Shinwell later described in Parliament as "the best of Scottish manhood". The Metagama sailed on Saturday the 21st of April, 1923. From all over Lewis, they crowded into Stornoway on the Friday. Cromwell Street echoed with the banter and excited anticipation of those about to leave, mingling with the sadness of those who had come to say goodbye. (This is From West Side historical Society on Google - out of the 300 who sailed that day only 20 were NOT young men, the average age was 22.) It decimated the Island Communities and to this day they have not recovered.
Links
- http://www.ulsterancestry.com/ Ulster ancestry has a lot of information on its free pages, both passenger lists and some lists of emigrants...
- http://www.abdn.ac.uk/emigration/ A Scottish emigration database
Inns and Public Houses
- http://www.norfolkpubs.co.uk/ Norfolk Public Houses
- http://homepage.ntlworld.com/hitch/gendocs/pubs.html Pubs in Victorian London
- http://www.1881pubs.com/ Pubs in 1881
- http://www.pubsgalore.co.uk/towns/worcester/worcestershire/ Worcester pubs
- http://www.bristolslostpubs.com Pubs lost in Bristol
- http://londonpublichouse.com/ London & Essex Pubs History & Trade Directory
- http://www.hillfields.org.uk/History/Pubs/Index.htm Pubs in Hillfields, Coventry
- http://www.midlandspubs.co.uk Midlands pubs
- http://www.hunimex.com/warwick/pubs/index.html Warwickshire pubs
- http://www.sfowler.force9.co.uk/page_27.htm Tracing ancestors who worked in pubs
- http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/STS/Dir/StaffsPubs1818.html Staffordshire pubs
- http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~dutillieul/ZOtherPapers/Index/PubsInnsBeer.html Index to Pubs Inns and Beer Houses
- http://www.edinburgh247.com/edinburgh-pub-guide.asp A modern guide but handy list of Edinburgh pubs
- http://www.ensignewart.demon.co.uk/ensign/html/history_of_the_pub.html The story of the Ensign Ewart pub
- http://www.pubhistory.freeserve.co.uk/ The Pub History Society
- http://www.easywell.co.uk/pubs/ Gloucestershire Pubs and Breweries
Religion and the Clergy
- http://theclergydatabase.org.uk/ The Clergy of the Church of England Database
- http://www.catholic-history.org.uk/cfhs/index.htm Catholic family history
- http://rylibweb.man.ac.uk/data1/dg/methodist/methguid.html Methodists Archive and Research Centre
- http://www.methodist.org.uk/static/factsheets/fs_primitiveandwesleyan.htm The Methodist Church – factsheets (Wesleyans and primitive Methodists)
- http://www.answers.com/topic/primitive-methodism Primitive Methodism
- http://www.crockford.org.uk/ Crockford’s Clerical Directory: a directory of the clergy of the Church of England, the Church in Wales, the Scottish Episcopal Church,
- http://www.kinderlibrary.ac.nz John Kinder Theological Library
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_Society_of_Friends Religious Society of Friends - Wikipedia
- http://members.lycos.co.uk/JennySteel/quakers.html Famous Quakers
- http://www.rootsweb.com/~engqfhs/ Quaker Family History Society
- http://www.hull.ac.uk/oldlib/archives/quaker/bihrlink.htm Yorkshire Quaker Heritage Project
- http://www.leeds.ac.uk/library/spcoll/quaker/quakint1.htm Quaker Archives Database, West & North Yorkshire
- http://www.special-coll.bham.ac.uk/ The archives for the Church Missionary Society are kept at Birmingham University Library in their Special Collections. The catalogue can be searched online here
- http://www.jgsgb.org.uk The Jewish Genealogical Society of Great Britain
- http://eagle.cch.kcl.ac.uk:8080/cce/index.html Another database of Clergy of the Church of England
- http://www.cofe.anglican.org/about/librariesandarchives/familyhistory/index.html Anglican Sources for Tracing your Family History
Maps and Photography
- http://www.motco.com/MAP/ -Historic maps of London – most have indexes of place names
- http://www.motco.com/print/ Historic prints of London and other parts of Britain
- http://www.motco.com/panoramas/ Panoramic views of London and the Thames
- http://www.lancashire.gov.uk/environment/oldmap/index.asp Lancashire County Council - Environment Directorate: Old Maps
- http://www.old-maps.co.uk/ Historical map archive searchable by place name, address or coordinate (OS Grid Reference)
- http://www.nls.uk/maps/early/index.html Maps of Scotland 1560-1928
- http://www.nls.uk/pont/index.html Ponts Maps of Scotland
- http://www.nls.uk/maps/military/index.html Military Maps of Scotland (18th century)
- http://www.nls.uk/maps/townplans/index.html Ordnance Survey town plans 1847-1895
- http://www.countyviews.com/beds/church.htm Bedfordshire Church Photographs
- http://www.countyviews.com/beds/index.htm Bedfordshire Town and Village Photographs
- http://www.countyviews.com/bucks/church.htm Buckinghamshire Church Photographs
- http://www.countyviews.com/bucks/index.htm Buckinghamshire Town and Village Photographs
- http://www.countyviews.com/oxford/index.htm Oxfordshire Photos (very few at the moment)
The Landed Gentry
- http://www.sledmerehouse.com/intro.html Sledmere House and Gardens website
- http://www.archiveshub.ac.uk/news/0601sykes.html Biographies of family members; papers of Sykes family held at Brynmor-Jones library, University of Hull
- http://www.yorkshire-racing.co.uk/sledmere.htm The Sledmere stud
- http://www.eastriding.gov.uk/leisure/tourism/pdf/leaflets/sykes_trail.pdf Churches restored by Sir Tatton Sykes
- http://www.yorkshirehistory.com/wagon/index1.htm Sir Mark Sykes & the Wagoners Reserve (with link to attestation details of individual men)
- http://www.r-alston.co.uk/country_house_database.htm A database of country houses in England, Wales, Scotland, Ireland and some of the surrounding islands, with brief histories.
Bargemen/Boatmen/Watermen/Lightermen
- http://www.hnboc.org.uk/ Narrowboat
- http://www.bargeman.co.uk/ Bargemen
- http://www.silsden.net/useful/Leeds_andLiverpool_canal_timeline.htm Leeds and Liverpool Canal
- http://www.canaljunction.com/craft/index.htm Boats and Barges
- http://www.canaljunction.com/canal/boat_people.htm Canal People
- http://www.geocities.com/thameswatermen/index.htm The Thames Watermen - 1555 to 1700
- http://www.portcities.org.uk/london/server/show/ConNarrative.142/chapterId/2955/Thames-Watermen.html History of London Watermen
Jewish history
- http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/UK/londweb.htm Jewish history in London
Stonemasons
The January 2007 issue of Your Family Tree has an article about stonemasons.
Covers many different aspects including some historical background.
The earlier you go back, the more likely your stonemason would have been a very skilled craftsman, with an apprenticeship of 15 years to learn all the different aspects of construction. However, in later times (17-1800s onwards), this term covered all sorts of trades other than the skilled carving we think of today... such as quarrying, fashioning door lintels, paving stones and all sorts of other things related to building & construction (think farm buildings & houses as well as bridges & viaducts etc). These folk probably start off as builders labourers, and most of the people who change their occupation between censuses probably fall into this category.
The article does not give any sources for apprenticeship records; where they still exist these would presumably be included in the records offices.
Master masons did have their own "marks". Earlier ones are often symbols, later ones can be initials. You can sometimes see these on gravestones (low down and possibly buried by now).
I am told there is no centralised record of these.
Master masons may have belonged to a Guild, and here the Worshipful Company of Masons may be able to help, but you have to access the records in person. (Southgate, London N14) www.masonslivery.co.uk
It is also suggested you may find relevant records in old Trade Associations (which are now our modern trade unions of course) and sources for these include the Working Class Movement Library in Salford, and the Modern Records Centre at Warwick University.
Salford (holds 1865-1918 yearly audits of members etc.) http://www.wcml.org.uk/holdings/operative_stonemasons_annual_audit_contents.htm
Warwick has an extensive collection of Trade Union records http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/services/library/mrc/ the relevant unions: Friendly Society of Operative Sonemasons of England, Ireland & Wales (1833-1919)
Operative Society of Masons, Quarrymen and Allied Trades of England and Wales (1919-1921)
this became the Amalgamated Union of Building Workers in 1921 & further evolved into the Union of Construction, Allied Trades and Technicians in 1971.
You will have to visit in person to look at any relevant records.
The following websites mentioned in the article may also be of interest
- http://www.finestoneminiatures.com/dictionary.htm A Stonemasons Dictionary
- http://www.scan.org.uk/researchrtools/james_smith_diary.htm Diary of a stonemason
Emigration in the 1800's
- http://www.british-genealogy.com/resources/county/ntt/emigration/southafrica-1820/nttsa.htm Nottinghamshire Colonists to South Africa 1820
Farming and Agriculture
Counting sheep - East Yorks
Maternal grandfather and his father were shepherds. Grandad passed this on to Mum and she to me. There are many deviations on the count to 20, and each area of Yorkshire has it's own version, especially each of the Yorkshire dales. The land there is often hilly and impossible to cultivate, so sheepfarming is one way of utilising the land. The word pattern is usually based on groupings of five, to correspond with the digits on one hand.
yar tar tethera methera pip
teeza leeza catra nova dick
yardick tardick tetheradick metheradick bumper
yardibumper tardibumper tetherabumper metherabumper jigger
Working the land, in the East Riding
During the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, those working on the land could be categorised as:
- farmers and their male relatives working on the land
- owner occupiers
- tenant farmers
- farm servants
- agricultural labourers
- casual workers
Agricultural labourers were, generally, those who were married or had dependants. They were paid daily or on a weekly basis, or at busy times (such as harvest) by piece work rates. They lived in their own homes and made up 43% of the farming workforce.
Casual workers, (including women and children) were hired as additional, supplementary help at busy times in the farming calendar, such as shearing, haymaking and the corn and potato harvest. In the East Riding, lots of the casual labour force were itinerants from the Dales or Ireland.
Farm servants were unmarried, or occasionally widowers with no dependant family members, who were hired and paid on an annual basis and who received their board and lodging as a part of their annual wage. In the 1850’s, this group provided 33% of the East Riding farming population.
They were subject to legally enforceable contracts of employment, and in East Yorkshire, these contracts ran from Martinmas (23rd November) to Martinmas.
Annual statute Hirings were held at Beverley, Bridlington, Driffield, Hedon, Hornsea, Howden, Hull, Hunmanby, Malton, Market Weighton, Patrington, Pocklington, Scarborough, Selby and York.
Farm servants - The Hirings
Male and female servants would gather at the hiring venue to bargain with prospective employers and so secure a position for the coming year.
“Driffield Times” 15th November 1873
“Early in the morning, the great stream of humanity rolled into the town, conveyed thither in every conceivable appliance that could be obtained for the occasion; but conspicuous amongst the rest were the heavy waggons with their living freight, which were deposited amid the greetings of those who had chanced to outstrip them in the drive to town. Other vehicles, from heavy waggons to the humble donkey and cart were to be seen threading their way through the streets, to their several destinations. The Railway Company, too, brought hundreds into the town by special and regular trains, which were literally packed. At about nine o’clock, the bustle was commenced in earnest, for by that time most of the servants had congregated”
If a bargain was struck, the farmer gave the Lad a “fest”, or fastening money – a small sum in recognition of the hiring. The amount of the fest varied; usually 5s for a waggoner and 2/6d for other workers.
The whole range of working conditions was subject to an implicit informal agreement, which both the farmer and the worker assumed to automatically be part of the agreement – hours of work, holidays, sick pay.
Once the fest money had changed hands, a legally binding agreement had been entered into. If either party withdrew before the year was up, magistrates and judges had special powers to enforce the contract.
Contracts were usually oral. What few written contracts there were rarely specified more than the agreed wage and the termination date, e.g
“I Samuel Ellwood engage to Mr Francis Johnson as waggoner from Martinmas 1897 to Martinmas 1898 for £19 – nineteen pounds. Signed ……”
Farm Servants - Wages
"Malton Messenger" 1874
- Girls 12 – 18 yrs £6 - £8
- Upper servants & housekeepers £13 - £15
- Boys 13 –15 yrs £10 - £12
- Boys 16 – 18 yrs £18 - £20
- Good shepherds, experienced foremen £20 - £30 (Some asked for and were engaged for more)
"Driffield Times" 14 Nov 1874
- Young foreman £25
- Experienced foreman £30
- Young waggoner £18
- Experienced waggoner £20
- Strong ploughboy £13 - £15
- Young maid-of-all-work £9 - £12
- Housemaid £12 - £14
- Experienced cook £20
Farm servants were paid annually, on the completion of their year, minus any subsidies they had been given.
The wage of an agricultural servant was divided equally between a cash payment and his keep e.g. 1900, an average waggoner’s wage was £25 cash & 5s fest £25 board and lodging Total – £50-5s
Links
- http://www.ruralhistory.org/nof/victorianfarming/index.php History of British agriculture 1700-1914
- http://www.soilandhealth.org/01aglibrary/010136ernle/010136ch10.htm Large Farms and Capitalist Farmers 1780-1813
- http://www.answers.com/topic/british-agricultural-revolution British Agricultural Revolution
- http://homepage.ntlworld.com/booty.weather/climate/wxevents.htm Historical Weather Events
- http://www.foxearth.org.uk/oxen.html Use of oxen for working the land and transportation
Shipping and Passenger Lists
- http://home.att.net/~wee-monster/onlinelists.html Sources for transcribed passenger records and indexes
- http://www.theshipslist.com/ The Ships List
- http://proarchives.imagineering.com.au/index_search.asp?searchid=23 Unassisted Immigration to Victoria
- http://proarchives.imagineering.com.au/index_search.asp?searchid=24 Assisted British Immigration
- http://proarchives.imagineering.com.au/index_search.asp?searchid=42 Outward Passengers to Interstate, UK, NZ and Foreign Ports 1852-1876
- http://mariners.records.nsw.gov.au/ Mariners and Ships in Australian Waters
- http://www.blaxland.com/ozships/plist.htm Convictions Australian Shipping
- http://www.list.jaunay.com/ausnzpassengers/ Gateway page to Online AUSNZ Passenger Lists
- http://www.records.nsw.gov.au/archives/assisted_immigrants_1839-96_366.asp NSW Assisted Immigrants 1839-96
- http://members.aol.com/rprost/passenger.html Passenger lists on the internet
- http://www.archives.qld.gov.au/research/index/immigration.asp#immigrationindexes Queensland Indexes - Immigration 1848-1884
- http://www.collectionscanada.ca/02/020110_e.html Child emigration from Great Britain to Canada between 1869 and the early 1930s
- http://www.scan.org.uk/researchrtools/emigration.htm Highlands and Islands to Australia
- http://www.nationaalarchief.nl/emigranten/en/ Searchable database of Emigrants from the Netherlands to Australia between 1946 and 1991
- http://www.geneaknowhow.net/digi/pass1.html Dutch passenger lists pre-1736
- http://www.geneaknowhow.net/digi/pass2.html Dutch passenger lists after 1736
Some Old Legal Terms
Some of those funny words that we find on old wills etc.
MOIETY......... A half .....part..... portion or share of property etc. Note: Such is usually based on family or unilateral descent.
GAVELKIND...... Equal shares among qualifying heirs.
ECHEATS......... Reversion of land to the manor etc. under feudal tenure when lacking legal heirs.
MESSUAGE...... House or dwelling.
SIEZED............ To be in legal possession of, from the feudal concept of "seisin"
INTER ALIA..... Among other things
DEMESNE..........Land of a feudal lord retained for his own use i.e the grounds of a Mansion etc.
TERRIER........... A form of Register of Land belonging to an estate etc..
FEALTY............The fidelity owed to a Feudal Lord
FRANKPLEDGE....Anglo Saxon system in which 10 households or tithings were grouped together and became responsible for each others behaviour or conduct.
CAPITE.............means the Tenant held the property in 'Capite' for the landlord to whom he paid rents
ATTAINDER........Common law - The state of an offender who had been sentenced for a capital offence.
ATTAINTED..... disgraced......... or to pass sentence of attainder against....
ENFEOFFED.... to invest with a Feudal estate or fee.
DEVISED.......... Give land or property in a Will. Or to plan and contrive.
DEFEASANCE ...... Forfeiture or annulment of something or some legal right (usually because some original condition has not been complied with; e.g. not paying the mortgage)
Workhouses
OLD OCCUPATIONS (miscellaneous)
Pre-historic Ancesters
Ireland
Clothing and Fashion
Mining and Heavy Industry
The Celts