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Midwifery in the 1900s

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thickoeric | 16:55 Sun 01st Jul 2012 | Genealogy
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My great-grandmother appears in the 1901 census as being in someone else's house and described as "Midwife" and indeed the other people in that house are a couple and "son, aged 1/2 hr. old". Is there any way I can find out if she was a qualified midwife or whether she just used to nip round and help out the neighbours?
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You might be interested in this:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monthly_nurse

which suggests there were no real qualifications at the time
do you have any other primary source that might give further clues? later/earlier returns? marriage certificate? My great grandfather's half sister was a career nurse with a london teaching hospital and travelled all over the world in her job from the 1890s up to 1912 when she married an officer in the army she had been nursing.
One of my great grannies was both the midwife and the person who laid out corpses- hatching and dispatching so to speak:-)
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Many thanks for your replies.

All the earlier censuses just show her as "wife" so I suspect she wasn't exactly a trained midwife at all!

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