Film, Media & TV6 mins ago
Email For David Olusoga
19 Answers
How would I find an email address for the film-maker David Olusoga? I’ve stuck a note on his Facebook page, but don’t hold out much hope of a response.
In the first House Through Time programme he mentions a butler getting £250 a year in the 1850s, and I want to ask where he got the figure.
BB
In the first House Through Time programme he mentions a butler getting £250 a year in the 1850s, and I want to ask where he got the figure.
BB
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by bainbrig. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.alba. Agreed. Trouble with one outlandish statement is that you raise your eyebrows at the rest.
Have a look at this link about Victorian wages, which indictaes that butling paid between £25 and £50 a year!
http:// www.wir ksworth .org.uk /a04val ue.htm
Have a look at this link about Victorian wages, which indictaes that butling paid between £25 and £50 a year!
http://
Email his agent - [email protected] and see if he can help.
//In fact, James had been a butler, which would have given him skills in literacy and numeracy and a little social polish. By 1851 James gave his profession on the census as ‘master of newsroom’ – which meant he was a manager in a gentleman’s club, with a £250 annual salary. //
Source
http:// www.dai lymail. co.uk/f email/a rticle- 5218603 /BBC-se ries-tr aces-hi story-o ne-hous e-Liver pool.ht ml
I know that doesn't give you the source, but some context.
Source
http://
I know that doesn't give you the source, but some context.
James Orr ended up with a smart headstone it sounds like too, his wife lived to the ripe old age of 92.
http:// www.tox tethpar kcemete ryinscr iptions .co.uk/ archive s/page/ 129/
http://
well - -
when the doctors' insurance union ( MDU ) was set up as a PIU ( private indemnity union ) in 1884....
the MDU in the nineties commented they didnt have report 1 and 2 and a few others which I found in ... Manchester Uni Library ( where I used to lairk before the internet)
No 1 didnt exist and No2 was a special report because the secretary was paying himself ... £250 p.a. Lawson Tait and a few other worthies then sued him, got him fired and made him repay.... and the second one was paid more sensibly.
( so I wrote and told them and they replied - "Did we ? none of us can recollect a call for reports 1 and 2 ")
so yeah - it seemed a helluva lot
but I am sure in the prog - they go along to someone and ask - what did he actually do ?
when the doctors' insurance union ( MDU ) was set up as a PIU ( private indemnity union ) in 1884....
the MDU in the nineties commented they didnt have report 1 and 2 and a few others which I found in ... Manchester Uni Library ( where I used to lairk before the internet)
No 1 didnt exist and No2 was a special report because the secretary was paying himself ... £250 p.a. Lawson Tait and a few other worthies then sued him, got him fired and made him repay.... and the second one was paid more sensibly.
( so I wrote and told them and they replied - "Did we ? none of us can recollect a call for reports 1 and 2 ")
so yeah - it seemed a helluva lot
but I am sure in the prog - they go along to someone and ask - what did he actually do ?
// in a small lodging house with 23 other people. //
that would be five per room
one of the enquiries into slum landlords in the 1890s showed.... the average landlord was a single owner with dependents with around five properties trying to live off the low rents usually within the slum.
and not a fat capitalist
that would be five per room
one of the enquiries into slum landlords in the 1890s showed.... the average landlord was a single owner with dependents with around five properties trying to live off the low rents usually within the slum.
and not a fat capitalist
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.