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The varying household arrangements of the elderly in three English villages: Nottinghamshire, 1851–1881

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 January 2009

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Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1988

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References

ENDNOTES

1 Laslett, Peter, The world we have lost (London, 1965)Google Scholar; Laslett, Peter and Wall, Richard, eds., Household and family in past time (Cambridge, 1972)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Achenbaum, W. A. and Stearns, Peter, ‘Old age and modernization’, Gerontologist 18 (1978), 307–12CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed; Dahlin, Michel, ‘Perspectives on the family life of the elderly in 1900’, Gerontologist 20 (1980) 99107CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed; Quadagno, Jill, Aging in early industrial society; work, family and social policy in nineteenth-century England (New York, 1982)Google Scholar; Quadagno, Jill, ‘Old age in industrializing England’, in Hess, B. and Markson, E. W., eds., Growing old in America, 3rd ed. (New Brunswick, N.J., 1985) 4555.Google Scholar For a critical examination of the ‘new family history’ as it applies to ageing, see: Smith, Daniel Scott, ‘Accounting for change in families of the elderly in the United States, 1900-present’, in Van Tassel, D. and Stearns, P., Old age in a bureaucratic society: the elderly, the experts, and the state in American history (New York, 1986) 87109.Google Scholar

2 Chudacoff, Howard and Hareven, Tamara, ‘From the empty nest to family dissolution: life course transitions into old age’, Journal of Family History 4 (1978) 6983CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Chudacoff, Howard and Hareven, Tamara, ‘Family transitions into old age’, in Hareven, T., ed., Transitions: the family and the life course in historical perspective. (New York, 1978) 219–44, esp. 230–36Google Scholar; Wall, Richard, ‘Woman alone in English society’, Annales de Demographic Historique (1981) 303–17CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Dahlin, Michel, ‘Perspectives on the family life’, 100101.Google Scholar

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7 Chudacoff, and Hareven, , ‘From the empty nest’, 72–2Google Scholar; Chudacoff, and Hareven, , ‘Family transitions’, 239.Google Scholar

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10 Lewis, J., Women in England (Indiana, 1984) 162–8Google Scholar; John, A. V., ‘Introduction’, in John, A. V., ed., Unequal opportunities: Women's employment in England 1800–1918, 3940Google Scholar; Rose, S. O., ‘Gender antagonism and class conflict: exclusionary strategies of male trade unionists in nineteenth-century Britain, Social History, in press.Google Scholar

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14 Michael Anderson suggests that most Boards of Guardians in the nineteenth century apparently regarded people of sixty and over as ‘aged and infirm’. In addition, he notes that in 1875 and 1887 Friendly Society Acts defined old age as over 50. See: Anderson, M., ‘The impact on the family relationships of the elderly since Victorian times in governmental income-maintenance provision’, in Shanas, E. and Sussman, M., Family, bureaucracy and the elderly (Durham, N.C., 1977) 40.Google Scholar

15 Parliamentary Papers (Hereafter P.P.), 1845, vol. xv, 117.Google Scholar

16 P.P. 1845, vol. xv, 677.Google Scholar

17 P.P. 1845, vol. xv, Q. 1830, 117.Google Scholar

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19 Household members who were classified as unemployed were listed as wife, mother, retired, indigent, imbecile, unemployed, pensioner, housework, scholar. Blanks in the enumerators' record were treated as missing data.

20 Nottinghamshire census enumerators books for Bulwell, 1851.

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27 The employment patterns of older men in the mines should be interpreted with caution. It is possible that their former occupations were recorded rather than their current occupational status. The extent of labour force participation by elderly men in Brinsley therefore, may be exaggerated. Continuation of work among framework knitters is less problematic. There is ample evidence that men continued as framework knitters until they died or were incapacitated. See, for example, P.P. 1984, vol. xv, Appendix to report of the commissioner appointed to inquire into the condition of the framework knitters 22–3Google Scholar. This appendix describes by name and age the extent and type of participation in framework knitting by members of eight families in Arnold. Of the eight, three households were headed by knitters who were over 60 years old, and one was headed by a knitter in his fifties. Because of the possibility that unemployment was underreported in Brinsley, these data probably underestimate the differences in the employment opportunities of older men in the three villages.

28 Rose, S. O., ‘Proto-industry’. in press.Google Scholar

29 The Nottinghamshire Guardian. 2 February 1851, 3Google Scholar; The Nottinghamshire Guardian. 9 January 1851, 3.Google Scholar

30 Mellors, T., Then and now (Nottingham, 1910) 208.Google Scholar

31 Table 2 shows that in 1851 only a small percentage of the widowed women in the three villages were lodgers, with little variation among the villages in the percentage of widowed women who were lodgers. Widowed men in Arnold were somewhat more likely than the widowed men in the other two villages to be lodgers. In 1881 there were more decided differences among the villages in the percentages of the elderly widowed who lodged. Widowed women in Arnold were more likely to be lodgers than their counterparts in the mining villages. Widowed men in Bulwell were more likely to be lodgers than the widowers in the other villages. None of the elderly widowed in Brinsley were lodgers.

32 Laslett, P., ‘Mean household size in England, since the sixteenth century’, in Laslett, P. and Wall, R. eds., Household and family in past time (Cambridge, 1972)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Wall, R., ‘The household, demographic and economic change in England, 1650–1970’, in Wall, R., Robin, J. and Laslett, P. eds., Family forms in historic Europe (Cambridge, 1983)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Wall, R., ‘Work, welfare and the family: an illustration of the adaptive family economy’, in Bonfield, L., Smith, R. M. and Wrightson, K. eds., The world we have gained (Oxford, 1986).Google Scholar See also R. M. Smith who argues that English household formation was a culturally distinctive pattern involving economic (and residential) independence for the newly married. Smith, R. M., ‘Fertility, economy, and household formation in England over three centuries’, Population and Development Review 1 (1981) 615.Google Scholar

33 Anderson, , 139–44.Google Scholar Also, it should be pointed out that research on the elderly in America has pointed to the importance of household extension as a way of caring for the elderly, especially elderly widows. See Smith, D. S., ‘Life course, norms, and the family system of older Americans in 1900’, Journal of Family History 5 (1979) 285–98.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

34 Levine, D., Family formation in an age of nascent capitalism (London, 1977) 52.Google Scholar

35 Levine, , Family formation, 57.Google Scholar

36 Thomson, D., ‘Welfare and the historians’, in Bonfield, L., Smith, R. M. and Wrightson, K. eds., The world we have gained: histories of population and social structure (Oxford, 1986) 368–72.Google Scholar See also, Smith, R. M., ‘Fertility, economy and household formation’, 610.Google Scholar However, Michael Anderson has argued that attitudes embodied in the Poor Law generally proclaimed the duty of relatives to care for the destitute elderly and young. He suggests that there were wide variations in the support given within a Poor-Law Union and between unions, but poor relief was generally inadequate for independent subsistence. Anderson, M., ‘The impact on the family relationships of the elderly’, 3659, esp. 37–8.Google Scholar

37 Wall, R., ‘Work, welfare and the family’, 261–94.Google Scholar

38 David Thomson has argued, in direct opposition to the argument being made here, that the percentages of the elderly living with a child were not above 40 per cent. See Thomson, , ‘Welfare and the historians’, 364.Google Scholar

39 Wright, C. N., Directory of Nottingham (Nottingham, 1881) 347.Google Scholar

40 David Thomson suggests that from the 1830s to the 1870s, elderly dependants received financial support from their communities which were equivalent to two-thirds or more of the incomes of younger working-class adults. See Thomson, D., ‘The decline of social welfare: falling state support from the elderly since early Victorian times, Aging and Society 4 (1984) 453.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

41 D. S. Smith found that marital status, followed by employment status and then age predicted whether an older man was head of his household. Smith, , ‘Life course, norms, and the family system’, 289.Google Scholar As with the American census, there is no clear interpretation of what being head of household meant. However, as Smith argues for the American case, headship in Britain appears to have correlates (with age, sex, marital status, and employment status, for example), suggesting that being head of household had a cultural meaning during the nineteenth century.

42 See Riley, M. W., ‘On the significance of age in sociology’, American Sociological Review 52 (1987), 114CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Riley, M. W. and Riley, J. W. Jr, ‘Longevity and social structure: the potential of added years’, in Pifer, A. and Bronte, L., eds., Our aging society (New York and London 1986), 5378.Google Scholar

43 Riley, M. W., ‘On the significance of age’, 6.Google Scholar

44 See Chudacoff, and Hareven, , ‘From the empty nest’Google Scholar; Hareven, Chudacoffand, ‘Family transitions’.Google Scholar See also, Smith, D. S., ‘Life course, norms and the family system’.Google Scholar

45 Brenner, Johanna and Laslett, Barbara, in Himmilstrand, Ulf, ed., Sociology, from crisis to science? 2 The social reproduction of organization and culture, (London, 1986) 116–31.Google Scholar

46 Brenner, and Laslett, , Sociology from crisis to science? 117.Google Scholar They stress that there is no necessary relationship between the family and social reproduction. Non-familial resources may be totally or partially responsible for social reproduction. The community or the state, for example, may provide some or all of the services for children or the infirm. How the responsibilities for social reproduction are allocated in different cultural and historical contexts becomes the focus of analysis.

47 Brenner, and Laslett, , Sociology from crisis to science? 57.Google Scholar

48 See also, Tilly, L. and Scott, J., Women, work, and the family (New York, 1979)Google Scholar; and Wall, , ‘Work, welfare and the family.’Google Scholar

49 Thomson, , ‘Welfare and the historian’, 359.Google Scholar

50 It is possible, for example, that in different societies and in different historical periods definitions of dependency may vary. In societies such as England where the creation of independent households at marriage seems to have been a long-standing cultural rule, conditions under which the aged are perceived to be dependent or when they, themselves, recognize that they must relinquish their independence, might be different from a society in which patrilocal postmarital residence is the norm. See for example Kertzer, D. I., Family life in central Italy, 1889–1910: sharecropping, wage labor and coresidence (New Jersey, 1984) 96.Google Scholar Kertzer found the large majority of the widowed elderly (between 74 per cent and 96 per cent of those age 65 and older) living in extended and multiple family households.

51 See Thomson, , ‘Welfare and the historians’Google Scholar; Thomson, , ‘The decline of social welfare’Google Scholar; and Thomson, , ‘I am not my father's keeper; families and the elderly in 19th century England’, Law and History Review 2 (1984), 265–86.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

52 See Thomson, , ‘Welfare and the historians’Google Scholar; and Thomson, , ‘The decline of social welfare’.Google Scholar