• Re: Private baptisms

    From Geoff@21:1/5 to Graeme Wall on Sat Jan 6 17:32:00 2024
    Graeme Wall wrote:

    On 06/01/2024 17:17, Geoff wrote:
    Why would someone have a private baptism in 1714?
    I am researching the Hastings family in Horning in Norfolk and have
    not seen this in any other baptism records.

    Sick infant?

    He went on to have 7 children!

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  • From Graeme Wall@21:1/5 to Geoff on Sat Jan 6 17:24:47 2024
    On 06/01/2024 17:17, Geoff wrote:
    Why would someone have a private baptism in 1714?
    I am researching the Hastings family in Horning in Norfolk and have not
    seen this in any other baptism records.

    Sick infant?
    --
    Graeme Wall
    This account not read.

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  • From Geoff@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jan 6 17:17:56 2024
    Why would someone have a private baptism in 1714?
    I am researching the Hastings family in Horning in Norfolk and have not
    seen this in any other baptism records.

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  • From Graeme Wall@21:1/5 to Geoff on Sat Jan 6 17:49:52 2024
    On 06/01/2024 17:32, Geoff wrote:
    Graeme Wall wrote:

    On 06/01/2024 17:17, Geoff wrote:
    Why would someone have a private baptism in 1714?
    I am researching the Hastings family in Horning in Norfolk and have
    not seen this in any other baptism records.

    Sick infant?

    He went on to have 7 children!

    Obviously recovered.
    --
    Graeme Wall
    This account not read.

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  • From Colin Bignell@21:1/5 to Graeme Wall on Sat Jan 6 18:20:08 2024
    On 06/01/2024 17:24, Graeme Wall wrote:
    On 06/01/2024 17:17, Geoff wrote:
    Why would someone have a private baptism in 1714?
    I am researching the Hastings family in Horning in Norfolk and have not
    seen this in any other baptism records.

    Sick infant?

    That would appear to be what the Book of Common Prayer implies.

    'The Minister of every parish shall warn the people that without great
    cause and necessity they procure not their children to be baptized at
    home in their houses. But when need shall compel them so to do, then
    Baptism shall be administered on this fashion.'

    https://www.churchofengland.org/prayer-and-worship/worship-texts-and-resources/book-common-prayer/private-baptism-infants


    --
    Colin Bignell

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  • From Geoff@21:1/5 to Colin Bignell on Sun Jan 7 11:29:34 2024
    Colin Bignell wrote:

    On 06/01/2024 17:24, Graeme Wall wrote:
    On 06/01/2024 17:17, Geoff wrote:
    Why would someone have a private baptism in 1714?
    I am researching the Hastings family in Horning in Norfolk and
    have not seen this in any other baptism records.

    Sick infant?

    That would appear to be what the Book of Common Prayer implies.

    'The Minister of every parish shall warn the people that without
    great cause and necessity they procure not their children to be
    baptized at home in their houses. But when need shall compel them so
    to do, then Baptism shall be administered on this fashion.'


    https://www.churchofengland.org/prayer-and-worship/worship-texts-and-resources/book-common-prayer/private-baptism-infants

    Thanks for that. Hadn't seen it written before.

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  • From Steven Gibbs@21:1/5 to Geoff on Sun Jan 7 12:28:18 2024
    On 06/01/2024 17:17, Geoff wrote:
    Why would someone have a private baptism in 1714?
    I am researching the Hastings family in Horning in Norfolk and have not
    seen this in any other baptism records.

    In my experience of studyimg Bedfordshire registers, private baptisms
    are rarely noted as such before the late 18th century. Sometimes I find
    two baptisms quite close together for a child with the same name and
    parentage, with no intervening burial, but it is impossible to tell
    whether it is the same child (as so many child burials seem to go
    unrecorded).

    Steven

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  • From Ian Goddard@21:1/5 to Steven Gibbs on Sun Jan 7 15:13:26 2024
    Steven Gibbs wrote:
    On 06/01/2024 17:17, Geoff wrote:
    Why would someone have a private baptism in 1714?
    I am researching the Hastings family in Horning in Norfolk and have not
    seen this in any other baptism records.

    In my experience of studyimg Bedfordshire registers, private baptisms
    are rarely noted as such before the late 18th century. Sometimes I find
    two baptisms quite close together for a child with the same name and parentage, with no intervening burial, but it is impossible to tell
    whether it is the same child (as so many child burials seem to go unrecorded).

    One thing I've seen a few times is that the child is baptised at home
    and then subsequently "introduced to the congregation" or similar words
    but that would only be a matter of weeks.

    I've also seen churching of women recorded in the same register as
    baptisms which has confused (admittedly a low bar) some IGI
    transcribers. This was the case with one of my 3xggmothers: "Christiana
    wife of John Goddard". The actual entry was "Wife of John Goddard
    Ch"[urched], her name was Mary.

    It only seemed to be carried out, or at least noted, after a miscarriage
    as not only does there seem to be no baptism of a corresponding infant
    but one woman was churched at intervals of several months but far too
    short for a pregnancy to full term. Mary G's churching happened in the
    longish interval between marriage and baptism of their first child.

    Ian

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  • From Colin Bignell@21:1/5 to Steven Gibbs on Sun Jan 7 16:00:13 2024
    On 07/01/2024 12:28, Steven Gibbs wrote:
    On 06/01/2024 17:17, Geoff wrote:
    Why would someone have a private baptism in 1714?
    I am researching the Hastings family in Horning in Norfolk and have not
    seen this in any other baptism records.

    In my experience of studyimg Bedfordshire registers, private baptisms
    are rarely noted as such before the late 18th century. Sometimes I find
    two baptisms quite close together for a child with the same name and parentage, with no intervening burial, but it is impossible to tell
    whether it is the same child (as so many child burials seem to go unrecorded).

    From The Book of Common Prayer on private baptisms:

    'And let them not doubt, but that the Child so baptized is lawfully and sufficiently baptized, and ought not to be baptized again.'

    Of course, if the baptisms are too close for a second child to have been
    born to the same parents, the second 'baptism' is probably the public declaration in church that the child was baptised privately.

    --
    Colin Bignell

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  • From J. P. Gilliver@21:1/5 to Graeme Wall on Mon Jan 8 01:33:55 2024
    In message <unc2cv$mfgi$1@dont-email.me> at Sat, 6 Jan 2024 17:24:47,
    Graeme Wall <rail@greywall.demon.co.uk> writes
    On 06/01/2024 17:17, Geoff wrote:
    Why would someone have a private baptism in 1714?
    I am researching the Hastings family in Horning in Norfolk and have not
    seen this in any other baptism records.

    Sick infant?

    I'm looking at a fairly closely-written double page (1765-1766 for
    Reedham (also in Norfolk), and only three of the entries are "was Pub.
    Bapt.d"; the rest - the vast majority - are "was priv: Nom:". So either
    there was some epidemic in Reedham over those two years, or private was
    the norm. Or, "priv: Nom:" (the capitalisation and punctuation is
    consistent for both formats) doesn't mean what it appears to mean.

    (Why "Nom:" - presumably meaning "named" - for the "Priv:" ones, and
    "Bapt.d" for the "Pub." ones, I don't know.)

    Interestingly and unusually, this particular scribe seems to have
    recorded the day of the week - for example, the one I'm interested in:

    97 Abraham Son of Abraham Turrell & Mary his
    wife was priv. Nom.Monday Decem.br 16.1765

    (at least I think he's the one I'm interested in; I have him married
    1788-7-13 in Wymondham, which is over 23 miles away and the other side
    of Norwich, so Reedham seems very unlikely to be where he was born, but
    I can't find any other Abr* T*r*l* in anything like the right date in
    Norfolk. If anyone can, please say!)
    --
    J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/<1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf

    Of course, this show - like every other cop show on earth - massively overstates the prevalence of violent crime: last year, in the whole of the UK, police fired their weapons just three times. And there were precisely zero fatalities. - Vincent Graff in RT, 2014/11/8-14

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  • From Athel Cornish-Bowden@21:1/5 to Geoff on Wed Jan 10 09:56:41 2024
    On 2024-01-06 17:32:00 +0000, Geoff said:

    Graeme Wall wrote:

    On 06/01/2024 17:17, Geoff wrote:
    Why would someone have a private baptism in 1714?
    I am researching the Hastings family in Horning in Norfolk and have
    not seen this in any other baptism records.

    Sick infant?

    He went on to have 7 children!

    My grandmother was baptised in 1875 by a nurse in a maternity hospital
    because she wasn't expected to live. She was later baptised again in
    church. She died in 1965 at the age of 89, with three surviving
    children (a fourth lost in a submarine during the War) and eight
    grandchildren. You don't need to be a priest to carry out a baptism,
    and I think baptism by nurses in hospital was quite common.

    --
    Athel cb

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  • From Graeme Wall@21:1/5 to Athel Cornish-Bowden on Wed Jan 10 11:25:04 2024
    On 10/01/2024 08:56, Athel Cornish-Bowden wrote:
    On 2024-01-06 17:32:00 +0000, Geoff said:

    Graeme Wall wrote:

    On 06/01/2024 17:17, Geoff wrote:
    Why would someone have a private baptism in 1714?
    I am researching the Hastings family in Horning in Norfolk and have
    not seen this in any other baptism records.

    Sick infant?

    He went on to have 7 children!

    My grandmother was baptised in 1875 by a nurse in a maternity hospital because she wasn't expected to live. She was later baptised again in
    church. She died in 1965 at the age of 89, with three surviving children
    (a fourth lost in a submarine during the War) and eight grandchildren.
    You don't need to be a priest to carry out a baptism, and I think
    baptism by nurses in hospital was quite common.


    I had the misfortune to spend part of my secondary schooling at a
    Catholic school, run by Irish priests. At about the age of 15 we were
    taught the correct form of words for a baptism in case we came across an emergency situation. I hasten to add, I've never actually performed one.

    --
    Graeme Wall
    This account not read.

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  • From Athel Cornish-Bowden@21:1/5 to Graeme Wall on Thu Jan 11 10:29:21 2024
    On 2024-01-10 11:25:04 +0000, Graeme Wall said:

    On 10/01/2024 08:56, Athel Cornish-Bowden wrote:
    On 2024-01-06 17:32:00 +0000, Geoff said:

    Graeme Wall wrote:

    On 06/01/2024 17:17, Geoff wrote:
    Why would someone have a private baptism in 1714?
    I am researching the Hastings family in Horning in Norfolk and have
    not seen this in any other baptism records.

    Sick infant?

    He went on to have 7 children!

    My grandmother was baptised in 1875 by a nurse in a maternity hospital
    because she wasn't expected to live. She was later baptised again in
    church. She died in 1965 at the age of 89, with three surviving
    children (a fourth lost in a submarine during the War) and eight
    grandchildren. You don't need to be a priest to carry out a baptism,
    and I think baptism by nurses in hospital was quite common.


    I had the misfortune to spend part of my secondary schooling at a
    Catholic school, run by Irish priests. At about the age of 15 we were
    taught the correct form of words for a baptism in case we came across
    an emergency situation. I hasten to add, I've never actually performed
    one.

    Thinking of the 89 years that my grandmother lived after being thought
    unlikely to survive, I looked up her father, who was an equally
    impressive case of longevity. He served in the Indian Army, and fought
    in the Indian Mutiny, eventually becoming its last known survivor. He
    left the Army at the age of 29 on account of ill health, but he lived
    another 69 years after that, dying at the age of 98. His unmarried
    daughter, my great-aunt, was the last person to receive a pension from
    the East India Company -- until she died in 1962, 87 years after the
    company was dissolved. General Frank Kitson, who died a few days ago at
    the age of 97, was his grandson. I was always told that longevity was characteristic of that family, and it's apparently true.


    --
    Athel -- French and British, living in Marseilles for 36 years; mainly
    in England until 1987.

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  • From Colin Bignell@21:1/5 to Athel Cornish-Bowden on Thu Jan 11 17:28:19 2024
    On 10/01/2024 08:56, Athel Cornish-Bowden wrote:
    On 2024-01-06 17:32:00 +0000, Geoff said:

    Graeme Wall wrote:

    On 06/01/2024 17:17, Geoff wrote:
    Why would someone have a private baptism in 1714?
    I am researching the Hastings family in Horning in Norfolk and have
    not seen this in any other baptism records.

    Sick infant?

    He went on to have 7 children!

    My grandmother was baptised in 1875 by a nurse in a maternity hospital because she wasn't expected to live. She was later baptised again in
    church. She died in 1965 at the age of 89, with three surviving children
    (a fourth lost in a submarine during the War) and eight grandchildren.
    You don't need to be a priest to carry out a baptism, and I think
    baptism by nurses in hospital was quite common.


    The situation in the case of a child not expected to survive varies
    slightly by religion. The Anglican Church and Methodists allow anybody
    who is themselves baptised to baptise a child. The Roman Catholic Church
    allows even somebody who is not baptised to baptise a child, provided
    they use water and the approved form of words.

    --
    Colin Bignell

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