Hello all,
I've recently received the death certificate of a Cornelius Brian, coal whipper/porter/heaver. (My as yet unconfirmed ggg-grandfather). His wife was in and out of workhouses and eventually died in the St George in the East Infirmary in 1907, and their son's family were very poor and frequented workhouses and their daughter lived in one of the 'filthy, vile' black coloured streets according to Charles Booth's survey. I need some help understanding this sequence of events.
I have his death certificate from 1881, he died on 17th March, aged 38. Tonight I found a probate record for him, (death dates match exactly), although I hadn't really been looking for one because I assumed they were too poor. But it seems he left a lot of money to his wife Ellen... 400 pounds. Wasn't 400 pounds a lot of money back then? And if so then why was his son living in poverty? Where does a coal whipper get that kind of money?
Thanks for reading, I hope some of you can shed some light on this situation for me.
Amy.