Tuesday, 24 August 2021

What Was Your Ancestor's Job?

 

Work, Ford Madox Brown, Public Domain

A whole new route of ancestral exploration can be opened up if you know what your relative’s occupation was.  Many of mine were “ag labs” or crofters, and there is, as far as I know, no comprehensive list of everyone in those lines of work, but when they were nurses, weavers, clergymen, police officers, or miners, I might have better success.

Many libraries, archives, and historical societies maintain occupation-specific lists or indexes of local people, such as Renfrewshire Heritage Centre’s collection of Paisley weavers, hammermen and tailors’ records.  

Glasgow City Archives holds a computerised database of police officers' service records up to 1939.  The records themselves include information about the officers and their families.

Other sources are freely available online, and hopefully one or two of my suggestions here will give you some ideas to pursue.

 

Specific occupations

One resource that has been useful for my research on a couple of branches of the family is the Clergy of the Church of England Directory, 1540-1835.  This reference tool not only lists ordained clergy, but also shows the chronological order in which they served in each parish – in effect, providing a bit of history for the area, too.

Meanwhile, the Scottish Book Trade Index provided a ready-made career timeline for my 3rd great-grandfather, Thomas Paterson, a lithographic printer in Glasgow.  Anyone in the Scottish printing or publishing trades, including booksellers, stationers and papermakers, may be listed here.

If your relative operated their printing or publishing business in England or Wales, the British Book Trade Index, hosted by the Bodleian Library, covers similar occupations up until 1851. 

Working on the railways has always been a hazardous job, and the Railway Work, Life & Death website has for some years been compiling a database of those who met with accidents in the course of their railway occupations.  This covers Britain and Ireland from the late 1800s until the Second World War.

House historians as well as genealogists may find the Dictionary of Scottish Architects 1660-1980 valuable.  It gives biographical details plus a list of the known works of each architect in Scotland, and in turn a history of each of their buildings.  For instance, the entry for Glasgow School of Art has a chronology showing events in its history, from the 1896 competition held for its design until an award for its lighting in 1990.  A list of the unsuccessful competition entrants reads like a who's who of eminent Scottish architects of the day. 

 

Voluntary Work

People who did unpaid work may also be found in lists, such as the Red Cross Volunteers of WWI.  More than 90,000 individuals volunteered for the organisation, both at home and overseas, during the Great War.

A quick surname search finds a woman who sewed bandages for 2 hours every fortnight for 4 years, and was awarded the Red X Badge and Certificate in recognition of her work. 

Other entries include those for well-known figures such as Agatha Christie and E. M. Forster. 

 

E-books

It’s not only databases that can give you significant leads for your family tree.  E-books that might be obscure or difficult to source on paper can be found if you know where to look – in this case, the FamilySearch Catalogue, which when searched by ancestral surname, includes this handy volume in its results:

A Whispering in the Hearth – Lives of our Scottish Coalmining Ancestors   The author documents her mining ancestors, along with useful background information about the work of all those who laboured in the industry, what life was like for them, and the areas of Scotland that coalmining covered. You can read it online, or download individual pages or the whole book, in PDF format.

I've listed other e-book and digital sources, like trade directories, that could prove helpful in a previous blog post.


Directory of Directories

If you haven’t already heard of Cyndi’s List, it’s one of the longest-running genealogy websites around.  Divided into categories and sub-categories, it includes a directory of occupation-related resources that are relevant to family historians. Delve into the links and related subjects and get lost for a while!

    

 

Social Media

If you’re interested in learning about some of the more obscure occupations in your family tree, follow @ScientistSoph on Twitter where Sophie Kay regularly posts her #OccupationOfTheDay. 




3 comments:

  1. Kind of job related, I found my Great Grandfather in the Might's City Directory for Toronto on Archive.org. For some people it lists an occupation and/or employer. That information helped me track him in each annual directory during his time in Toronto.

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  2. I had quite a few ag labs, two metal workers, an ostler (later railway carriage cleaner), a builder, commercial traveller, and, one of the most interesting - an auctioneer and bailiff (this was my great-grandfather - he did both jobs).

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  3. Thanks for your post Alison. I spent a fabulous week in Glasgow's Scottish Women's Hospital collection and found so much about a relative who served as a nursing sister in WW1.

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