Hello to all
I find understanding why our ancestors did things a certain way just as interesting as finding the ancestor.
When I first saw phrase 'my now wife' in a Pre-1858 will, I assumed that the testator was making provisions for his current wife, specifying the women he was married to at the time he wrote his will just in case she died before him and he remarried.
Now I'm not so sure what 'now wife' means.
I have a couple of early 1700's wills where it is obvious that the testator was dying. It just wasn't likely that there was time for him to remarry if his current wife died before him. But he still referred to his wife as his 'now wife'.
I also have seen this in a couple of wills were the testator was in his 80's. Well, if they were optimistic about finding love in old age, good on them.
I thought it was just a standard phrase used in estate planning, but its in just a many as it isn't.
Similarly, I have a will where the testator refers to his wife as the mother of his 2 children. He certainly did not have a second wife who he didn't have children with. Or a concubine.
So why all of the designations that seems unnecessary.
Could these be some sort of legal precautions for resolving legal issues or just what they called their wives?
Cheers Karen