#1
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An interesting find...
I am teaching my Year Five class about the Victorians and linking to maths.
We have to create a bar chart with the ages at death of a community from 1889 - 1899. I have just gone through and collected the data myself (they will collect it themselves though, based on the burial records I give them). Burials in Packington, Leicestershire 1889 - 1899 Under 5 years - 16 burials Aged 6 - 20 years - 6 burials Aged 21 - 40 years - 13 burials Aged 41 - 60 years - 20 burials Aged 60 - 80 years - 25 burials Aged 80+ years - 18 burials Total - 98 burials Obviously the fact that it was fairly remote and mostly a farming community has an impact on the results. Does anyone have the burial records for a city centre during this time period? |
#2
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Ooh, what fun!
The problem with an urban community is that the numbers will be so much bigger. What you could do is chose a name like Smith and do an Ancestry/Freebmd etc search in the death records for an urban RD. I recently did parish reconstruction work: where we had to count numbers in just the same way, but annual totals. It showed pretty starkly the epidemics and rises or falls in the success of communities.
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The chestnuts cast their flambeaux |
#3
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Will you be teaching them to add up etc in old money? That's very good for their times tables!!
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Merry "Something has been filled in that I didn't know was blank" Matthew Broderick WDYTYA? March 2010 |
#4
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Actually, I think our ancestors liked decimals too: think of all those 3s 4d or 6s 8d left in wills.
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The chestnuts cast their flambeaux |
#5
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We need to do a lot of work on times tables so think I shall leave the old money for the time being.
That's a good idea about the Smiths on ancestry Phoenix. I need them to understand that the data you get out is only as good as that which you put into it, as well as being able to draw and read the graph. Hmm, certainly some things to think about. |
#6
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If you succeed in teaching GIGO to year fives that will be a useful life skill for them to remember.
It will be interesting to see if there are differences shown between town and country. Logically, there are likely to be more deaths associated with crowded conditions, industrial conditions etc, but in a village you could have under-recording, town girls coming back to Mum for the first birth & all sorts of factors which might skew the results.
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The chestnuts cast their flambeaux |
#7
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I typed in WEST for deaths 1889-1899 in Hackney and got about 50 results.
When I changed it to WEST* for 1889 - 1899 in Hackney I got 98 results which matched the number from the other sample. These results - Under 5 years - 45 deaths Aged 6 - 20 years - 5 deaths Aged 21 - 40 years - 8 deaths Aged 41 - 60 years - 19 deaths Aged 60 - 80 years - 14 deaths Aged 80+ years - 7 deaths Total - 98 deaths It's great as it shows the clear difference between rural and urban communities. Much higher infant and young child mortality rate and fewer people living to 80+ Going to have to change my Monday lesson plan now. Before I just had them drawing a graph but now I think we will collect all the data on Monday morning and draw the graphs in the afternoon. Total - 98 burials |
#8
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That's really intersting. A great-great grandfather died in a Glasgow fever hospital and I'm fascinated by mortality statistics.
Here are some bits and pieces to add to the mix. In 1871, 24% of deaths in Glasgow went unregistered. The figure had fallen to about 4% by 1893, but in Inverness, 42% of deaths still went unregistered. One study I read considered the death rate from 1835-1845 in 331 rural Scottish parishes - a population of 751,061 - and compared the rate with a similar size population in 14 principle urban areas. The rate was 20 per 1,000 in rural areas and 27 per 1,000 in urban areas. Another study showed that in Edinburgh the highest death rates were in the most densely populated areas, while the lowest rates were in less crowded neighourhoods. The area of Tron had the highest rate and a population density of 353 people per acre. Whereas Morningside with a density of 8 per acre had the lowest rate in Edinburgh. Last edited by Shona; 13-10-12 at 19:41. |
#9
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I'm just wondering whether it is valid to compare burial data with death data at that date - would everyone from Packington who died in that decade have been buried in Packington? Was there a workhouse in Packington, and if not, were many people from Packington sent to a workhouse elsewhere? And if they died in that workhouse, were they sent back to Packington for burial? I'm just wondering whether there could be a correlation between social class / income and burial place which would skew the results.
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#10
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Lies, damn lies and statistics
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Merry "Something has been filled in that I didn't know was blank" Matthew Broderick WDYTYA? March 2010 |
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