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Burials For The Poor
Profile | Posted by | Options | Post Date |
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Carole | Report | 18 Nov 2009 18:18 |
Can anyone tell me what happened to babies when they died if the family was too poor to pay for a burial? |
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Jacqueline | Report | 18 Nov 2009 19:15 |
I remember my mother-in-law telling me that as a child she use to take flowers to the cemetry where there was a large grave covered with a big tin sheet which was for the babies in the parish who had passed and whose parents could not afford to bury them when full the grave was full it wasfilled in and another one started. |
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Wildgoose | Report | 18 Nov 2009 20:56 |
Jonesey - I think that is what happened to the infant who died after 2 hours who was my gran's sister. There is no record of her in the burial register but I do have the birth certificate for this baby. The mother died a week later so they couldn't have buried her baby with her. |
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Jilliflower | Report | 18 Nov 2009 21:15 |
Carole, I think the "popped in someone else's grave" rings true to me as my grandparent's last daughter was born with water on the brain and the midwife told my gran to put the baby in a cupboard and let her die. Naturally my gran fed and cared for the baby for a week until she died and then my grandad got a Persil box and carried the baby to the cemetary on the tram thinking that everyone knew what he was carrying. Gladys Joan was buried in a communal grave. |
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Madmeg | Report | 18 Nov 2009 21:40 |
A couple of years ago, as a result of my research, we made contact with the oldest living cousin of my husband, now 89. We visited him, and he recalled his parents dealing with two dead babies. Dad put them in cardboard boxes and carried them to the "board" grave at the cemetery. So called either because it was a grave designated by the Burial Board for the burial of people with no money for a grave of their own, or perhaps because it was covered with wooden boards. His dad deposited the babies, and came home in tears. |
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Wildgoose | Report | 18 Nov 2009 21:45 |
Oh, Jill - how could a mother put her baby in a cupboard until she died? How could the family function knowing the little one was in there unfed and uncared for? It doesn't bear thinking about, does it? |
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Carole | Report | 18 Nov 2009 21:58 |
Thanks for the replies everyone. Yes it's very sad. I think of the poor mother losing so many babies even though they were giving birth almost every year as in my relations case, I bet she never forgot any of them. |
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Ray | Report | 18 Nov 2009 22:04 |
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Jilliflower | Report | 18 Nov 2009 22:06 |
NO,no, the midwife told gran to put the baby in a cupboard - gran kept little Gladys out and tended and cared for her until she died naturally in her arms a week later! |
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Carole | Report | 18 Nov 2009 22:13 |
Ray |
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Wildgoose | Report | 18 Nov 2009 22:21 |
Jill - I did read that your grandmother cared for the baby - I was saying 'how could they?' in the context that 'how could the midwife expect a mother to do such a thing'. |
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Jilliflower | Report | 18 Nov 2009 22:34 |
Oh, right, sorry, Birdsinanest, I see what you mean. Interestingly little Gladys Joan was named after gran's sister who emigrated to Canada - as was my mother and aunt - both named after sisters who emigrated just before the World war l. I was quite moved when I found Gladys's registration. |
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Annina | Report | 18 Nov 2009 23:37 |
When my daughter Rebecca died aged 3 weeks in 1969, I asked the undertaker if there was a plot just for children in the local cemetary,as was where I came from. |
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Madmeg | Report | 18 Nov 2009 23:51 |
It's a very emotional topic isn't it? The idea of shutting your baby in a cupboard until it died, propping up dead babies in an undertaker's window as a show, fathers trekking to the cemetery with a baby in a Kellogs box. |