­
BDM announcements in The AnswerBank: Genealogy
Donate SIGN UP

BDM announcements

Avatar Image
mxyzptlk | 14:14 Tue 24th May 2011 | Genealogy
6 Answers
I assume the Times has carried a BDM section (mostly for the well to do) but when did it become more popular for the lower echelons to start announcing the BDM's in the local papers.
Gravatar
Rich Text Editor, the_answer

Answers

1 to 6 of 6rss feed

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by mxyzptlk. 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.
From the 1960s I think,
Question Author
Thanks Dotty, I was thinking along them lines too. So guess not much point in checking the local reg archives for missing relatives in the early part of the 20th century
Mxyxptlk - DO check! I've got a collection of newspaper reports and clippings starting about 1886 which deal with BMDs. Admittedly there are not many births but I've got loads of obits and a couple of marriages.
I know the local newspapers charged quite a sum for insertion of an announcement, which means the lower echelons of society certainly couldn't afford the luxury in the 19th century, but I suppose it is more about who you deemed to be lower echelons and whether you mean the column inches of reporting of a funeral or death or a wedding rather than the more simple 3 or 4 page announcement put in the BMD section of a local paper in alphabetical order. There are many many instances of obits in local papers, my Mum had one in the Ormskirk advertiser, it was almost half a page, we didn't pay for it, it was put in as a local interest item I suppose, We paid for the acknowledgement for the charity donations in the relevent column a few weeks late. My marriage was reported in the same paper with a full length picture, but I was well known in the town and it was news, but my parents paid for the engagement announcement in the right column, That is how neaspapers worked, I do think that the First World War was really the starting point for more people of less well off backgrounds to use the local announcment section, as there was a great effort by local papers to include a photo and write up of casualties amongst local lads who had been lost in the War. Prior to that there was a greater social element to the columns and it had an exclusivity.
*I meant 3 or 4 line announcement not page!
Question Author
Thanks for the info, I won't totally discount them when I plan my visit to the northern archives.

1 to 6 of 6rss feed

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.

Complete your gift to make an impact