Author Topic: Miscarriages and Stillborn at the turn of the century  (Read 2172 times)

Offline Siouxsie

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Miscarriages and Stillborn at the turn of the century
« on: Wednesday 11 January 23 03:29 GMT (UK) »
I am asking the hive mind as I haven't been able to turn up a birth/death certificate for the child that was born/miscarried and died, and then subsequently my great grandmother died. And this was 1908 in Broken Hill, NSW.

I am wondering at what stage in the pregnancy would a death not be recorded? Would there have been a cut off period......say 6 months?

Many thanks in advance.
Census information is Crown Copyright from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk
Hutton : Edinburgh, Scotland
Downey : England
Ingram: St George East, Middlesex and New Zealand
Roberts : Grafton, NSW
Blackadder : Grafton, NSW
Gillett : Grafton, NSW
Brocklebank :Carkettle, Lancashire
Bowes : Ulverston, Lancashire
Rose : Bo'ness, Linlithgowshire, Scotland
Kelleher:County Cork, Ireland
Shepherd : Helpringham, Lincolnshire

Offline franh1946

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Re: Miscarriages and Stillborn at the turn of the century
« Reply #1 on: Wednesday 11 January 23 06:21 GMT (UK) »
Hello Siouxsie. Still births were not registered (as a birth) in Australia until 1986,as far as I know. The death was not required to be registered.  Fran
Leadbetter North Meols
Tyrrell  and Shettle Hampshire
Cope Wolstanton
Rice New York and Sydney
Pidgeon County Wexford
Smail and Cochran Berwickshire
Worling and Harrop Cambridgeshire
Happ Eltville
Harrop and Shettle Suffolk

Offline Siouxsie

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Re: Miscarriages and Stillborn at the turn of the century
« Reply #2 on: Wednesday 11 January 23 10:33 GMT (UK) »
Many thanks Fran.

I should have been more expansive........I know that she birthed a child, but I am not sure how far along she was.

Was there a cut off period where they were not registered, but considered miscarriages?
Census information is Crown Copyright from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk
Hutton : Edinburgh, Scotland
Downey : England
Ingram: St George East, Middlesex and New Zealand
Roberts : Grafton, NSW
Blackadder : Grafton, NSW
Gillett : Grafton, NSW
Brocklebank :Carkettle, Lancashire
Bowes : Ulverston, Lancashire
Rose : Bo'ness, Linlithgowshire, Scotland
Kelleher:County Cork, Ireland
Shepherd : Helpringham, Lincolnshire

Offline franh1946

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Re: Miscarriages and Stillborn at the turn of the century
« Reply #3 on: Wednesday 11 January 23 20:39 GMT (UK) »
After 20 weeks gestation or over 400 grammes are the current criteria; I'm afraid I know no more than that, I know that some stillbirths were buried in unmarked graves in Sydney, for example, until quite recently. Heartbreaking for the family. I can't imagine that guidelines would be kinder in the 19th/early 20th centuries. Fran
Leadbetter North Meols
Tyrrell  and Shettle Hampshire
Cope Wolstanton
Rice New York and Sydney
Pidgeon County Wexford
Smail and Cochran Berwickshire
Worling and Harrop Cambridgeshire
Happ Eltville
Harrop and Shettle Suffolk