Author Topic: Strange causes of death  (Read 7569 times)

Offline lyn22

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Re: Strange causes of death
« Reply #27 on: Thursday 19 September 13 09:21 BST (UK) »
I have a sad one my GGG Grandmother Mary died in 1856 when she was 36 years old. There was an inquest that was inconclusive it says she may have been raped. It says she died of the DTs I think she must have drank herself to death.
Peter Burke father Dominick Burke wife Bridget Bagley son James Burke wife Lucy Dyke County Mayo Coventry England Australia . Grant ,Snell,Diggins , Burton, James Frederick Elmore /Elmer , Alfred James Bailey , Julia Elmore , Pierson

Offline ThrelfallYorky

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Re: Strange causes of death
« Reply #28 on: Thursday 19 September 13 18:23 BST (UK) »
I recently felt really dim - in a parish register I thought I read someone had died"Of long tail" - I put a query on Rootschat after trying to find out what it might have been - and it turned out someone brighter read it to mean "Of long tail (a place nearby). Of course I felt very dim. But I did spend some time wondering in quite a creative way....
Threlfall (Southport), Isherwood (lancs & Canada), Newbould + Topliss(Derby), Keating & Cummins (Ireland + lancs), Fisher, Strong& Casson (all Cumberland) & Downie & Bowie, Linlithgow area Scotland . Also interested in Leigh& Burrows,(Lancashire) Griffiths (Shropshire & lancs), Leaver (Lancs/Yorks) & Anderson(Cumberland and very elusive)

Offline Graham47

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Re: Strange causes of death
« Reply #29 on: Thursday 19 September 13 18:24 BST (UK) »
The mind boggles!  ;D
Allanby's, Thompson's and Pannett's of Leeds and Tadcaster.
Streeter's and Kent's of Croydon.
Cavalli's and Cascarini's of Wales and Italy

Offline Meezer

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Re: Strange causes of death
« Reply #30 on: Saturday 21 September 13 20:36 BST (UK) »
Hubby has a relative who was a railway worker and who (illegally) hitched a ride back to the station holding onto a wagon but slipped and fell on jumping off and the wagon ran right over him. The inquest was reported in the paper and makes harrowing reading - typical graphic Victorian journalism in that he was basically sliced in half  :( All workers had to sign to say that they wouldn't do such things as hitching rides when they collected their weekly wages (could they all read?) so his wife received no pension for him  :(


Offline stanmapstone

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Re: Strange causes of death
« Reply #31 on: Saturday 21 September 13 22:12 BST (UK) »
(could they all read?)

You don't give a date but illiteracy was not as widespread as is commonly thought. Thanks to the growth in freelance schooling, all privately financed, literacy levels had risen to about 92 per cent by 1870 and Forster's Education Act. In any case I would think the railway company would expect their employees to be able to read and write before they employed them, working for the railway was a very secure job so they could take their pick.

Stan
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Offline iolaus

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Re: Strange causes of death
« Reply #32 on: Wednesday 20 November 13 15:30 GMT (UK) »
I have one with just 'old age' written on it as cause of death - thought that was probably quite a nice way to go (he was 99)