« Reply #5 on: Tuesday 23 December 25 00:12 GMT (UK) »
As he was described as a "husbandman" I doubt he would have travelled far from his family home which was probably a smallholding/farm either as an owner or as a tenant.
When he left school my late OH went to live and work on a farm that raised livestock and his title was "husbandman".
I found this online:-
A husbandman was a farmer or a cultivator of the soil. In medieval and early modern England, it denoted a specific social status: a small landowner or free tenant farmer who ranked below a yeoman but above a serf.
The word's root is not related to the modern sense of "married man," but rather to managing a household and its resources:
Old Norse: hūsbōndi, literally "house-dweller" or "master of the house" (from hūs "house" + bōndi "dweller" or "freeholder").
Middle English: huseband.
Modern English: The term "husbandman" was eventually replaced by "farmer" in common usage during the 18th and 19th centuries. The modern word "husband" (married man) evolved separately from the same hūsbōndi root, as male heads of households were typically married.
In the Bible, "husbandman" is often used metaphorically for a vinedresser or vineyard keeper, with God being described as the ultimate husbandman (e.g., in John 15:1 in older translations).
Husbandman
Wikipedia
Husbandman - Oxford Reference
Quick Reference. The old word for a farmer below the rank of yeoman. A husbandman usually held his land by copyhold or leasehold...
The word "husband" originates from the Old Norse word hūsbōndi, which literally meant "master of a house" or "householder".
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