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?
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.
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!
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?
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.'
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.
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).
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).
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 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!
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.
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.
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.
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