Author Topic: Old fashioned way of saying child payments?  (Read 566 times)

Offline Mercia118

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Old fashioned way of saying child payments?
« on: Tuesday 18 February 20 12:11 GMT (UK) »
I've been idly browsing the northants archive catalogue (as you do ::) ) and I came across this:
Bonds against chargeability- James Dainty of Orton (Frances Page, infant lodged in Desborough) 25th March 1794

Is that an old fashioned way of saying our Jim got a bit frisky and now he's got to pay child support?

Offline stanmapstone

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Re: Old fashioned way of saying child payments?
« Reply #1 on: Tuesday 18 February 20 12:15 GMT (UK) »
Census Information is Crown Copyright, from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk

Offline stanmapstone

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Re: Old fashioned way of saying child payments?
« Reply #2 on: Tuesday 18 February 20 12:19 GMT (UK) »
If it was a case of illegitimacy then see
http://www.workhouses.org.uk/poorlaws/oldpoorlaw.shtml#Bastardy

Stan
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Offline andrewalston

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Re: Old fashioned way of saying child payments?
« Reply #3 on: Tuesday 18 February 20 14:28 GMT (UK) »
There was a lot of it about!

The depressing thing is that the courts had preprinted fill-in-the-blanks forms. There was a slightly different form for use where the putative father failed to show up in court, just to save writing a few words differently.
Looking at ALSTON in south Ribble area, ALSTEAD and DONBAVAND/DUNBABIN etc. everywhere, HOWCROFT and MARSH in Bolton and Westhoughton, PICKERING in the Whitehaven area.

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Offline jorose

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Re: Old fashioned way of saying child payments?
« Reply #4 on: Tuesday 18 February 20 16:29 GMT (UK) »
When a person became in need of poor relief they were "chargeable to the parish", so this is presumably another term for an indemnity or bastardy bond - required of James to prevent the parish having to pay for the support of the illegitimate child of Frances.

You can see some more info and an example here:
https://www.londonlives.org/static/WB.jsp
Census information is Crown Copyright, from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk