skip to primary navigation skip to content
 

 

Emma Diduch « Top of the Campops: 60 things you didn't know about family, marriage, work, and death since the middle ages

Skip to blog menu ▼

Emma Diduch

Who are these people? Reconstructing life courses using record linking.

Thursday, December 19th, 2024

Emma Diduch

In the autumn of 1896, the employees of the Strutt cotton spinning mills in Belper lined up wearing their Sunday best for a series of photographs marking the firm’s upcoming merger into the English Sewing Cotton Company. The images which survive in the Derbyshire Record Office offer a fascinating glimpse into the lives of ordinary working people – there are friends holding hands, children scowling into the camera, a row of three sisters in matching dresses – and they also spark questions about work in the Strutt Mills and the community surrounding the factory. Did these workers make good wages and have long careers in the mill? Were these children sent to work at a young age to help support their families? Would these young women soon leave the factory to get married? 

(more…)

« Home
  • Recent posts

  • Pages

  • Archive

  • Tags

  • age at marriage agricultural revolution census Chinese history coal death demographic transition demography disease economic history English peasants extended family family history family size family tree famine fertility fossil fuels genealogies households industrial revolution marriage medieval medieval history middle ages migration mortality naming practices occupational structure occupations old age old people parish registers plague poor laws population size service social history surnames urbanisation wages women's employment women's history women's work work