Sorry, this is a bit of a general question:
Was it common practice in the 1850s to give a child their mother's maiden name as a middle name? I have 3 instances in my family - John Dean Cartwright and Sampson Cartwright Worsey in 1853, and William Jervis Cartwright in 1857.
Does anybody else have anything like that? Was it fashionable, or in some way, perhaps, a response to the cholera epidemic in Nantwich in the late 1840s?
It definitely seems to be a middle name and not a 'double-barrelling'.
Any ideas?
Thanks
Neil