« Reply #164 on: Sunday 01 August 10 10:11 BST (UK) »
I think Grothenwell might be implying that "dressmaker" could be a euphemism for "lady of the night".

Lizzie
true, but without evidence it is a slur on the character of the individual concerned and also a poor basis for any investigation.
I wasn't implying that she was a lady of the night, so there was no slur. But if she was I wouldn't say it was a slur, our ancestors did lots of things in order to survive hard times, and I for one would never criticise or slur an individual for what they did in those times.
However as I have discovered on this fine site, "dressmaking" was, as Lizzie says, a euphemism for a trade, one of the oldest in history I am informed, even before the need for dresses.

My question was not directly about Georgina but a general one, are there any studies that tell the ratio and or likelihood? Was it the areas that the "dressmakers" stayed that guided the implication that they told this fib to the census taker? How was it discovered that Dressmaker was the term used and not say Stocking maker?
Aberdeenshire; Brechin, Robb, Clark, Hardie, Johnston, Watt, Elmslie, Milne, Harper, Adam, Edmond, Laing, Gibson, Aedie, Jameson, Argo & Doverty.
Booth, Watson, Grothenwell, Ewen, Mackie, Simpson, Piper, Taylor, Davidson, Willox, Chalmers & Gordon
Still, Fraser, Robertson, Burnet & Lumsden
Banffshire; Cruickshank, Bennet, Broug, Allen, West & Lyal
Caithness; Sutherland
Herefordshire, Worcester, Monmouthshire, Gloucestershire; Wagstaff, Jones, Turner, Wiggett, Hannes