Researching Your Ancestor's Childhood - EBOOK
Unlock the Past
- SKU:
- UTPE0325
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Media: EBOOK - download
File Format: PDF, 11MB (56 pages)
Author: N. Kyle
Year: 2016
ISBN: 9781925323313
Other: b&w & colour photos, further reading, index
Publisher: Unlock the Past
This book draws on a range of research on the history of childhood and the family, histories of and sources for institutionalised care, educational records, toys and games, childhood museums, oral traditions, photographs, law and work for children, health and children's hospitals, the history of women's ancestry, and much more from Noeline Kyle's research into the history of childhood, to map out useful strategies for researching the history of your ancestor's childhood.
There is no doubt that all records, including birth, death and marriage certificates, cemetery records, illegitimacy, divorce, probate, immigration and missing persons, and much else, should be consulted to further your research on your ancestor's childhood. At the same time this book offers a further and more specific window into the many records and strategies for research that will help you find and record the stories of children and childhood.
Noeline also provides insights into the clues to be gleaned by looking at place, gender, class, race, cultural norms, and landscape to more fully write about childhood. This is a practical book outlining the records and strategies for researching, finding and writing the stories of children and your ancestor's childhood.
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Contents:
Abbreviations
Introduction
The indigenous child
- Books and websites
The convict child
- Children of the First Fleet
- Transported children
- Children accompanying convict parents
- Children left behind in the United Kingdom
- Books and websites
The immigrant child
- Colonial immigrant child 1788-1900
- Twentieth century immigrant child
- Orphan girls sent from the United Kingdom to Australia
- Chinese immigrants
- New Zealand
- Books and websites
The institutionalised child
- Orphan children
- Adoption records, Forgotten Australians
- The disabled
- Voluntary organisations
- New Zealand
- Books and websites
Children's books, toys, games, school texts and play
- Books and websites
Photographs
- Books and websites
Children and the law
- Age at marriage, age of consent
- Age of criminal culpability
- Juvenile prisons, reformatories and industrial schools
- Books and websites
Children and work
- The laws of child labour
- Apprenticeships
- Books and websites
Education records
- Government schools
- Early private venture schools and other private schools
- Technical/business colleges
- Church schools
- Books and websites
Museums of childhood and school museums
- Books and websites
Children's hospitals, hospital schools
- Hospital schools
- Children's hospitals
- Books and websites
Basic principals for researching your ancestor's childhood
- The child in history is vulnerable and at the mercy of adults
- Mothers were both the bearers and the carers of children
- Age/place in family
- Gender/class
- Research parents, extended family and community members close to your child
- Landscape and thinking creatively
- Schooling is not for every child
- The life of the child was viewed as economically and politically important
- The child has no power to effect change
Additional books and websites
Index
ALSO AVAILABLE
- Researching Your Ancestor's Childhood - printed guide
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