Login or Sign Up
Logging in...
By logging into your account, you agree to our
Privacy Policy
, personal data processing and storage practices as described therein.
Remember me
Log in
Forgot password or user name?
or
Sign Up
Log in with
Search in titles only
Search in Family History Research only
Search
Advanced Search
Forums
Blogs
Wiki
Site Projects
Magazine
Today's Posts
Member List
Calendar
Forum
Research Advice
Family History Research
Unconfigured Ad Widget
Collapse
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Occupation help please
Collapse
X
Collapse
Posts
Latest Activity
Photos
Search
Page
of
1
Filter
Time
All Time
Today
Last Week
Last Month
Show
All
Discussions only
Photos only
Videos only
Links only
Polls only
Events only
Filtered by:
Clear All
new posts
Previous
template
Next
Guest
Send PM
Share
Tweet
#1
Occupation help please
24-03-10, 19:15
http://search.ancestry.co.uk/iexec/?htx=View&r=5538&dbid=1623&iid=31280_194686-00396&fn=George&ln=Stanton&st=r&ssrc=pt_t6737403_p395769335_g32768&pid=1947631
what occupation has George Black Father of the Bride thanks
looks like Stave Sawyer ?
fran
Member
Join Date:
Sep 2006
Posts:
594
Location:
Lancashire
Send PM
Share
Tweet
#2
24-03-10, 19:33
Stave sawyer?I agree
Fran
Comment
Post
Cancel
Guest
Send PM
Share
Tweet
#3
24-03-10, 19:39
what is that do you know thanks ?
Comment
Post
Cancel
Esta in Bristol
Member
Join Date:
Sep 2006
Posts:
54
Send PM
Share
Tweet
#4
24-03-10, 19:54
If the link works this is a rather long explanation but interesting lol
Victorian London - Publications - Social Investigation/Journalism - The Morning Chronicle : Labour and the Poor, 1849-50; Henry Mayhew - Letter LIX
http://www.victorianlondon.org/mayhew/mayhew59.htm
Esta
Comment
Post
Cancel
Guest
Send PM
Share
Tweet
#5
24-03-10, 20:17
thanks for that Esta have saved it, certainly looks interesting
Comment
Post
Cancel
Uncle John
Always remembered
Join Date:
Sep 2006
Posts:
7615
Send PM
Share
Tweet
#6
25-03-10, 14:38
Making the wooden parts for barrels was what sprang to my mind. One of the jobs that must have been mechanised fairly early on, because staves had to be mass-produced.
Uncle John - Passed away March 2020
Comment
Post
Cancel
Guest
Send PM
Share
Tweet
#7
25-03-10, 15:35
yes it seems it is Uncle John
Comment
Post
Cancel
Previous
template
Next
Working...
Yes
No
OK
OK
Cancel
X
Comment