Siblings and Singleness: Exploring Family Life Across England and Across Social Classes, 1750-1850
Join us on the 24th of September (18.00-19.00 BST) for the seventh Strathclyde Institute for Genealogical Studies’ online Spotlight Talk featuring Dr Amy Harris, Family History Bachelor’s Program coordinator at Brigham Young University. (A recording of the talk will be available for 2 weeks after the event).
Siblings were essential to family life and household economy in the 18th and 19th centuries. This presentation explores how siblings, particularly those who married late or never married navigated family and property relationships. The experience of the wealthy Sharp family, based in London, Northamptonshire, Durham, and Northumberland juxtaposes with the experience of the Pratt family of southern Sussex to demonstrate how families from different social groups managed households, provided for children, and prepared for later generations. The impact of sibling and property relations on marital choices is also discussed. The case studies are supplemented with findings from a statistical analysis of 9200 co-resident sibling households across England.
Amy Harris is the current Family History Bachelor’s Program coordinator at Brigham Young University. She has published in the National Genealogical Society Quarterly, in the Genealogists’ Magazine, and on the history of genealogical practices. Her historical research focuses on families, women, and gender in eighteenth-century Britain. Her works include Siblinghood and Social Relations in Georgian England (Manchester, 2012); A Single View: Family Life and the Unmarried in Georgian England (Oxford, 2023); and Redeeming the Dead (Maxwell Institute & Deseret Book, 2024). She competed a family history BA degree at BYU before earning an MA in European history at American University and a PhD in British history from UC Berkeley. She is an accredited genealogist in English research and Fellow of the Royal Historical Society. Amy, a native of Ogden, Utah is a professor in the BYU Department of History where she teaches history and family history/genealogy courses.
How to book
Register your place via our booking site, MyCLL.
Please note that there will be a nominal booking fee of £5.00 which will apply to all attendees.
New to our online booking system 'MyCLL'?
As a first-time user, you will be asked to set up an account with username and password, and provide brief details to create a personal profile. Thereafter you will be able to add the SIGS Spotlight Talk to your basket and pay to confirm your enrolment.
How to join an online Spotlight Talk
Registered participants will receive an email with the Zoom webinar link by 12.00 GMT on the day of the talk.
Participants can also access the Zoom webinar link on MyCLL. Please read the MyCLL Student Guide for step-by-step instructions.
We hope you can join us!
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