#1
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Widow
On a Facebook group to which I belong, we are discussing this:
"A Dictionary of Old Trades, Titles and Occupations" : Widow: In the 1700s (widow) was used to indicate a woman living alone on private means. At that time it did not always indicate that the woman had been previously married . Old records such as Widow Jane Smith, Spinster can be confusing" Family historians, beware of assuming that widows were previously married. In a similar vein, the first time I came across "Mrs" as a courtesy title was for the marriage of my ancestors Mrs Sarah Williams and Mr James Barker in 1690. Sarah was a minor and her father was the Rev. John Williams, personal chaplain to King William and Queen Mary and later Bishop of Chichester. |
#2
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Are they using that quotation as an indication of marital state?
Spinster could equally mean someone earning a living from spinning. Certainly Mistress is status, rather than marital state.
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The chestnuts cast their flambeaux |
#3
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Thanks for this. I had not heard of widow being used as anything other than a woman whose husband had died. I have had the Mrs thing confuse me in the past but someone on here kindly set me straight.
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Toni |
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