anybody read this pleaseocc.JPG
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I think that was quite a common "died of" at one time ....... I usually associate it visions with angry old men waving their stick at someone (family or not), and then keeling over!
i might have read too many melodramatic stories in my youth :D
I think it might be what we now call a stroke.Last edited by Sylvia C; 16-06-18, 22:46.My grandmother, on the beach, South Bay, Scarborough, undated photo (poss. 1929 or 1930)
Researching Cadd, Schofield, Cottrell in Lancashire, Buckinghamshire; Taylor, Park in Westmorland; Hayhurst in Yorkshire, Westmorland, Lancashire; Hughes, Roberts in Wales.
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Agree with Jill - apoplexy. Here is a slightly fuller historical description from Wikipedia.
From the late 14th to the late 19th century,[3] apoplexy referred to any sudden death that began with a sudden loss of consciousness, especially one in which the victim died within a matter of seconds after losing consciousness. The word apoplexy was sometimes used to refer to the symptom of sudden loss of consciousness immediately preceding death.[citation needed] Ruptured aortic aneurysms, and even heart attacks and strokes were referred to as apoplexy in the past, because before the advent of medical science, there was limited ability to differentiate abnormal conditions and diseased states.Last edited by GallowayLass; 17-06-18, 09:53.
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Probably not if died at home and of a good age. How old was the deceased?
Have you checked to see there is not a second death certificate for him? Reason I mention it is that my 4xGGF Harrison died 1869 as a result of injuries received a few weeks before when a pit roof collapsed on him. A neighbour dutifully went off and registered the death that day. Three weeks later, there was a post mortem and the Registrar registered his death after receiving the coroner’s report. Both certificates still exist in the GRO index and I have copies. I went “local” and phoned the Registrar there wondering if they could oblige me by letting me know which one of the two Daniel Harrisons close in number in the GRO index was my relation.
Strictly, she ought not to have done what she did but went off to get the volumes and discovered that although the injuries which led to his death were described differently, they were one and the same person. How she got round it, was letting me make a telephone order for one of the certificates and “bringing my attention” to the existence of another certificate that I might like to add to my order.
Check your quarter and the one after it just in case
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