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Deceipher please

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  • Deceipher please

    I think this is one of my missing pieces.
    Under mmn what does it say and what would it mean
    Brian
    Attached Files
    avatar is my paternal grandmother Hazel May Sheridan (Coles /// Callaghan)
    researching Coles/Sheridan from Broken Hill Callaghan from Sydney P.J O'Flynn M.J Campbell from County Clare plus others as they pop up

  • #2
    looks like piler in a forge? googled - seems to be a process of piling but that seems like heavy work?

    Not too sure about it being and F in forge
    Carolyn
    Family Tree site

    Researching: Luggs, Freeman - Cornwall; Dayman, Hobbs, Heard - Devon; Wilson, Miles - Northants; Brett, Everett, Clark, Allum - Herts/Essex
    Also interested in Proctor, Woodruff

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    • #3
      I agree with Carolyn, piler in forge.

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      • #4
        I would agree piler in a forge, and I wasn't surprised when I went back to check, and it was Wales.

        My GG Grandfather's sister was a labourer in the iron works in the 1861 census in Glamorgan, so it was something I'd already looked into.

        In 'Labour and the Poor in England and Wales, 1849-1851, Volume 3' it was estimated that around 2,320 females were employed in the South Wales iron industry, in jobs that were broadly loading, unloading, weighing, carrying and stacking coal, cinders or iron. Additionally, some worked as ‘Limestone girls’ breaking limestone with picks etc., for use in the furnaces. In each case they worked outdoors, year-round, for 11 hours a day; earning between 3s 9d and 7s per week. It was also observed that “Great numbers find an early grave. Exposed to sudden vicissitudes of heat and cold, of wind and rain, on the bleak mountain-side, or in the fiery atmosphere of the forges, what wonder that consumption should thin their numbers?"

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        • #5
          Thanks for quick replies.
          teasie I have copied your description into my tree as it makes a lot of sense
          What did a piler do. ?? stack stuff on top of other stuff ??
          Brian
          avatar is my paternal grandmother Hazel May Sheridan (Coles /// Callaghan)
          researching Coles/Sheridan from Broken Hill Callaghan from Sydney P.J O'Flynn M.J Campbell from County Clare plus others as they pop up

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by 2weis View Post
            What did a piler do. ?? stack stuff on top of other stuff ??
            I believe so. Another description mentions women working twelve hours of heavy labour, lifting and piling iron, loading and unloading trams, stacking coal at the coking pits (etc)

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