[LMB] Age at first marriage
otherlois
otherlois at verizon.net
Thu Apr 3 20:16:48 BST 2008
--- Jason Long <sturmvogel_66 at hotmail.com> wrote:
> I'm really not so sure that frontier women married
> as early as seems to be believed. I checked my
> genealogy database for my 1790s western Pennsylvania
> ancestors (as the closest match for the WGW) and
> found no marriage dates have survived unless I want
> to presume that they were married a year before
> their first child.
"Check your assumptions at the door." In at least some
cases those marriages might have been closer to six or
seven months before the birth of the child! I am
basing that on some more recent marriage/birth
pairings I know of in my own (1900s) Western
Pennsylvania family history. (I won't embarrass any of
my relatives who might stumble upon the list archives
by mentioning names, but some of them know some of
that history anyway.)
But in support of your idea that marriages were
generally not as early as sometimes believed, there's
also the theory -- I'm not sure there's enough data to
call it fact, but I've seen several reports to this
effect -- that menarche, the time in a young woman's
life when (ahem) her reproductive system becomes ready
to produce children, is earlier nowadays due to better
nutrition (and perhaps hormone-related chemicals in
said nutrition).
Lois Fundis "the other Lois" otherlois at yahoo.com or at verizon.net
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