ArticleWDYTYA? IS BACK!
WE REVEAL THE NEW CELEBRITIES
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WE REVEAL THE NEW CELEBRITIES
Reading Judith’s article about apprenticeship records on page 30 has reminded me of my joy in finding someone who was lost in the census. He became a bootmaker but, at 17, I couldn’t find him in the census. Realising that he was probably an...
Judy is a professor of economic history at UCL known for her work on English wages and labour markets. On page 19 she shares tips on how to interpret our ancestors’ wages.
Judith, AKA ‘Genealogy Jude’ (genealogyjude. com), is a genealogist and writer who loves to add context to family history. She dives into apprenticeship records on page 30.
Jad is a historian and author who specialises in radical history. One hundred years on, he explores the Great Strike and the impact that it had on British society (page 56).
Genealogist Nicola Morris and Zoë Reid of the National Archives of Ireland present our guide to making the most of the newly released 1926 census of Ireland On the night of 18 April 1926, the Irish Free State counted itself for the first...