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Gwyn in Kent
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10 Aug 2010 14:31 |
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Norma As I understand it you are hoping for information from the actual stillbirth register, is that right?
Does your council have a bereavement office where group records / registers for the various cemeteries may be kept?
I have been able to obtain burial information this way for a particular surname and included in the list are several still births with my surname of interest. Their address and date of burial is given, so if you could obtain something similar it would be possible to match with information that you already hold.
The records I have include stillbirths from 1879 to 1960s. Grave numbers and cemetery names are all shown.
Gwyn
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holamiga
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10 Aug 2010 14:10 |
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Hi At last...today I was able to speak to our towns archivist to find out if the first register of still births from 1929 was lodged in the archives. He did a quick check and said no. He did promise to check further but I'm not holding my breath. How the council lost this historic document I have no idea. Maybe I will have to be content to have David's Still birth certificate and assume he was buried 'somewhere' in the cemetery. Norma
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holamiga
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2 Aug 2010 17:27 |
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Hi PigletsPal
I don't know how far back legislation goes regarding burial of the dead. But I suspect that hygiene matters figured large as well as religious traditions as our society developed. From what I have read and been told all burials had to be recorded locally. Though no doubt there were those who felt they had some right to pick and choose. My local authority is missing what must have been the 1st. volume from 1929 which would have covered the period of David's death. I am on to the local archive officer tommorow. I believe traditions and customs reflect the morality of any society and doesn't follow some natural linear flow to become more civil compassionate. There are primitive societies who had more respect for the dead and say the elderly and infirm. I cannot concieve of myself feeling indifferent to bereaved families just because others were. I believe in accountability particularly for those with power and not necessarily power with a big P. Don't you think the pain should be felt ,this makes us more alert to things that need to change? Right off my soap box now. Norma
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Mauatthecoast
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2 Aug 2010 16:41 |
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Sorry Norma, However you did say you carried dead infants and I still think you were brave
You should write down your experiences on the wards,sounds like you enjoyed the Christmas times with the children Mau xx
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holamiga
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2 Aug 2010 16:05 |
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Hi Mau
I wasn't talking about stilborn babies, I was working on a children's ward in a general hospital. My babies usually under 9 months I had nursed in incubators for varying lengths of time with time enough to get attached. I was always transfered to childrens ward at Christmas time ( a dangerous time for infants) to decorate the ward to whatever theme the children wanted. I remember scrubbing old X-rays to make space helmets for various animals shooting up and down the wards walls-such happy times. Norma
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Mauatthecoast
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2 Aug 2010 14:12 |
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Hello Norma Have just read your thread for the first time , I'm so glad you have now finally received the certificate for your brother David. You sound a lovely caring person,and to have carried still born babies when you were a student nurse took imo great courage!too sentimental or not.
I remember when I was on a maternity ward in the early 1960s another young woman (who had been in the bed next to me) had a stillborn child,and I often thought afterwards why they had kept her still on the ward surrounded by happy mothers? but as Piglets Pal has said that was then and i'm pleased things are 'done' differently now.
Mau xx
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holamiga
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2 Aug 2010 10:55 |
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Good morning to everyone on this thread. Today my brother's Still Birth Certificate arrived born the 8th May 1931. It feels so surreal, he is no longer just a memory of others. David's death was only registered a month later and I can't imagine the grief of my parents. Now I maybe able to find where he lies. Thank you all for your support and encouragement.
Norma'
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holamiga
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26 Jul 2010 14:11 |
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Hi Dutch Thankyou for your good wishes. It''s good to hear your story, it must mean so much to you and your family that you all know where your little grandaughter rests. My brother was also full term and perfectly formed. Without an emergency caesarian section,( he was twelve and a half pounds) he just couldn't make his exit safely. So much for eating for two, the advice in those days. Hope I will be back with good news soon Norma
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dutch
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24 Jul 2010 17:17 |
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First all i hope you ladys who are looking for your babies that you might find them,my daughter gave birth to full term little girl but she was born died,i buried her with my mum and dad so i no shes safe with family
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holamiga
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24 Jul 2010 16:59 |
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Of course. It's a matter of waiting to find out what the GRO come up with and if I had enough information for them Norma
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Beejay
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22 Jul 2010 07:34 |
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Good morning Norma, you will let us know how you get on won't you
Bee
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holamiga
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21 Jul 2010 17:09 |
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Thanks for the last two comments. Many must have felt as I did. Luckily my father brought me up to stand up for what I believed in and not to live with a challenged conscience. Which has brought me in dispute with authority figures throughout my life, I just got more effective. Jt filling or trying to fill in the application form for a Still Birth Certificate and realised that I never KNEW when my brother was born or even where... just made certain assumptions i.e sometime between my parents marriage and my birth. I rang & they said to write possibilty where there was doubt. Hope I can I c
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Beejay
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21 Jul 2010 07:11 |
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Norma, what a lovely lady you are.
The very best of luck to you in your search
Beejay xx
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Purple **^*Sparkly*^** Diamond
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21 Jul 2010 05:25 |
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Norma, how lovely to think you gave those little babies some dignity at the end, I hope someone treated my baby daughter with the same loving care.
Thanks for being sentimental and caring.
Lizxx
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holamiga
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20 Jul 2010 14:55 |
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Hi everone on this thread.. Your stories are absolutely heartbreaking. At a time when a mother & father too is most vulnerable these major decisions were made often under the influence of people who they feel they should trust.
Those parents didn't suffer in vain totally. Because of their stories, pressure was put on relevant authorities and midwives to LISTEN and change things.
As a student nurse on night duty ( 50's) I couldn't let the porters place a dead infant on a trolley and I carried them to to the mortuary as a substitute mother and hated leaving them.Night Sister used to scold me but gav e up eventually. I was regarded as too sentimental which was not handicap for me.. I thought everyone would feel the same.
Burial services couldn't find evidence of my brother's burial. I tried the town where my parents were married but no luck. Have ordered a form from GROto order a certificate Maybe then I will know more.
Norma
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Shirley~I,m getting the hang of it
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19 Jul 2010 18:27 |
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MY elder sister had a miscarriage at 5 months in hospital 1956. they were devastated at the time and were told dont worry we will deal with it ,she was told it was a boy. Some years later she worried what what had happened to her son and contacted the hospital . she was told that most probably he was in the coffin of an adult that was being collected by a funeral director at the time but no records were ever found , she was assured that the baby wouldn't have been incinerated by the hospital BUT always regretted knowing not what happened to their son
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Janice
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19 Jul 2010 18:06 |
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I gave birth to twins in 1982. One daughter is alive and kicking but my other precious child was born dead.
We decided to allow the hospital to deal with the funeral as she was not breathing when she was born.
Thirteen years later I needed to find my child.
I visited the cemetery and found her. I knew roughly when she was buried and the cemetery allowed me to browse the burial records for that period in time. She was registered as 'daughter of......myself'. They directed me to her communal grave...a paupers grave. She is buried with 6 other people. Today, several years later she would have been interred in a children's plot in a separate part of the large municipal cemetery. Hope this is of some help.
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Purple **^*Sparkly*^** Diamond
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19 Jul 2010 02:17 |
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I have written about this before so apologies for repeating myself.
My mother told me I had an older brother who was stillborn, in a small village just outside Buckingham, he was premature too I think, but my Mum told me the midwife told my Dad to bury the body in the garden. I don't remember what she said happened after that - I assume Dad did just that, and both parents are dead now so I have no one to ask and Mum didn't tell me any dates altho I can narrow it down a bit as they met in Oct 1945, married Dec 28th 1945 (Dad was on demob in Norfolk and had to move back to his home village) and I was conceived in late October 1946 if I was full term as born July 1947, so my brother would have been born in 1946 . It would be awful if the baby's bones were dug up if people living in the cottage now did a lot of work in the garden.
When my daughter was born prematurely in 1974 and died after three days, I was in shock and went along with the funeral director who arranged things, he said parents didn't often go to 'these things' so I didn't go to her funeral, well burial, it probably wasn't a proper funeral. Afterwards when I wanted to know where she was buried (don't recall talking about cremation) I found she was buried in a common grave, one that had been used before, but worst of all, the plot could be used again for another baby and I couldn't put a marker on. It was an awful shock and I was lucky to find out so soon afterwards so was able to buy the burial rights for 75 years, and put a small headstone on there. There was at least a record of where she had been buried tho so that was a blessing, how awful if it hadn't been noted and she had been buried just any where with nothing noted.
I hope you can find out what you want to know Norma, and anyone seeking information on a baby's burial. Near my daughter's grave there are many similar ones, mostly unmarked, and sometimes I go there and see another one suddenly tidied after years of neglect. The most heartbreaking little message was on one, some years ago, it said 'Now we have found you we can name you' I came away in tears, not just for my Zoe but for that little one as well.
Lizx
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holamiga
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18 Jul 2010 23:49 |
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Lead Lettering Index
The lead lettering index (LLI) has been used by a number of workers to measure the amount of material removed usually from marble gravestones [1-4]. The index is assumes that the lead lettering often found inserted into gravestones was originally polished flush to the surface. Over time the marble has been eroded and left the lead lettering proud of the surface. It is assumed that the lead lettering has not been eroded to any significant degree over the exposure of the gravestone. Similar protrusion of lead can be found on building (Images 1-4) and have been used at St Paul's Cathedral, London to quantify weathering loss over a 250 year period [5]. The marble is assumed to have eroded at a relatively uniform rate across the whole gravestone. Measuring the height difference between the lead lettering and the marble surface indicates how much material has been removed since the gravestone was exposed. Repeated measurements across the gravestone (between 10 and 25) is assumed to provide a representative sample of height change. If the same letters are selected, for example the '1' in the date or the 'I' in died, then comparisons are possible between gravestones keeping the letter location approximately constant. As the marble erodes, however, the lettering itself can become loose and begin to peel off. Often the lettering is attached to the gravestone by small lead pegs and these become loose. The lead lettering begins to curl away from the surface and eventually drops out. The impression of the lettering, complete with peg holes, is often visible in old gravestones. This means that there is a limit to the age of gravestones that can be measured using this method. Once peeling of lettering begins the method becomes difficult to apply with any consistency. No mention of cost included. Will take my camera next time and photograph the stone for posterity.
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holamiga
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18 Jul 2010 23:36 |
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Thanks Joan
Re the lead lettering... I just musn't visit enough cemeteries. I also wonder why would lead be used? perhaps it was less expensive. I'm ready for bed but... i can feel a Google cccoming on. Regards Norma
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