Got general Family History research questions - this is the place
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rodit
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by rodit » 28 Apr 2008 05:47
Can anybody help me in decyphring these occupations from the 1901 census (taken in London)
Regards
Rodit
ID:2872
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RalfofAmber
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by RalfofAmber » 28 Apr 2008 07:39
Not easy - are there other entries on the page that are more obvious that help you figure out the handwriting?
All I get is Tramway on the first and the odd 'Bottle Labourer' on the third!
have you the sheet reference to allow us to look up the whole page?
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ADC65
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by ADC65 » 28 Apr 2008 08:38
I can see 'Lime Works' as the first words on the second line, and 'General' as the first word on the fourth line.
The 1st, 3rd and 4th lines all seem to have the same last word starting with 'Ca' but nothing comes to mind at the moment.
Adrian Cook
Researching Cook, Summers, Phipps and Bradford, mainly in Wales and the South West of England
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rbryce
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by rbryce » 28 Apr 2008 10:14
Might the Ca word be 'carman'?
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briardsnz
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by briardsnz » 28 Apr 2008 10:55
I looked long and hard and was also sort of on the 'car.....something' line - first line looks like Tramway Co. and whatever the other bit is, it presumably has to be also applicable to a Lime Works and to a General tag? Is the feint long sloping slash relevant to the actual lettering - it seems to be in approx same place and similar shape in all three cases? The possible 'm' in carman looks equally abyssmal in Lime so it could well be. Is carman a term of the time for driver? The third example looks possible for 'man' though previous two looks like more than that?
Sorry - nothing else springs to mind for now.
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rbryce
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by rbryce » 28 Apr 2008 13:28
Yes, I understand a carman was a driver, originally at least of horse drawn vehicles. That fits well with 'tramway' and OK with 'general' Not so sure about 'lime works' but there was likely to have been a need to transport things.
Robert
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ADC65
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by ADC65 » 28 Apr 2008 13:57
Just to muddy the waters, if you look how he finishes the 'er' in 'worker' on line 4, it is almost exactly the same as the end of the 'Ca' word to the left of it ... so the word could end in 'er'.
Adrian Cook
Researching Cook, Summers, Phipps and Bradford, mainly in Wales and the South West of England
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SunnyLady
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by SunnyLady » 28 Apr 2008 19:14
I think its carman.....
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ChrisBowyer
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by ChrisBowyer » 29 Apr 2008 02:29
I agree. Carman is a common term for a goods driver at the time.
Tramway Co. Carman
Lime Works Carman
Bottle Labourer
...
General Carman
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rodit
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by rodit » 05 May 2008 03:35
Thanks to all for the comments. I will go with 'carman' which had never come to mind.
regards
rodit