Monday, March 28, 2011

Extraordinary 19th Century British and Irish Images Now Available on The Origins Network

Extraordinary 19th Century British and Irish Images Now Available on The Origins Network

A unique publication on life in 19th Century Britain and Ireland has been made available to subscribers of The Origins Network. The ChildrenÂ’s Employment Commission Part II of 1842, reproduced as a facsimile copy on CD, is a government publication containing evidence on the employment of children in this era.

(PRWEB) June 30, 2005

The Commission investigated childrenÂ’s employment in dozens of trades and manufactures throughout Great Britain. Sub-Commissioners reported from all over England, from North Wales, from the East and West of Scotland, and from the North and South of Ireland. They undertook the interviews and related investigations personally, and their reports are often very detailed. Most reports cover the following topics: nature of employment, state of the place or work, hours of work, meals, accidents, holidays, wages, health, moral and intellectual condition. Other topics include the employeesÂ’ housing and leisure.

This extraordinary source can be used in many ways. You can find out about working conditions in factories in the first half of the 19th century, all over the British Isles. You can find out how your forebears lived, the kind of housing they stayed in, what they ate, what they did in their leisure time, how much money they earned. You can learn about their education, both temporal and spiritual – there is considerable coverage of the children’s moral welfare.

There is often detailed information about occupations, the nature of the business, what the various activities were, the different types of job, and the types of machinery used (including illustrations in some cases). So if you are seeking information about the occupation of some 19th century ancestor, these reports are an excellent resource.

Evidence is stated by means of interviews with the employers, adult workers and children, relating to the work and life style conditions of the children.

An amazing and fascinating insight into conditions of work and peoples' lifestyle in 1842, in their own words.

About The Origins Network (www. originsnetwork. com)

The Origins Network (formerly Origins. net), specialists in British and Irish genealogy, was founded in 1997 and offers online access to some of the richest ancestral information available for genealogy research at http://www. originsnetwork. com (http://www. originsnetwork. com)

Origins Network services include subscription access to exclusive English genealogy related collections on British Origins (http://www. britishorigins. com (http://www. britishorigins. com)) and to Irish genealogy related collections on Irish Origins (http://www. irishorigins. com (http://www. irishorigins. com)), expert Scottish Old Parish records research on Scots Origins (http://www. scotsorigins. com (http://www. scotsorigins. com)

Genealogical data unique to The Origins Network includes Irish and English census records (including exclusive access to the 1841 English census – England’s first), marriage registers, wills, valuation records, emigration passenger lists, court and apprentice records, as well as images such as original survey maps and vintage photographs. Most of this information is not available anywhere else on the internet.

Partnerships with leading archives and genealogical societies in the UK and Ireland, including the Society of Genealogists, Eneclann Ltd, The National Library of Ireland, and the Borthwick Institute for Archives, allow The Origins Network to provide exclusive online access to key sources, with an increasing emphasis on access to primary records, and to material which puts the “flesh on your ancestors bones”

For all enquiries, please contact:

Jane Hewitt, Origins Network, 12 Greenhill Rents, London, UK EC1M 6BN

Jane@origins. net - phone: +44 (0)207 2516117

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