L&T Archive 1998-2003

'A good woman at Deane'..?
In Response To: Weaning ()

] ] Was Mrs Austen doing anything unusual in sending all her babies away to be reared by a local nurse? It seems that she kept them for the first three months while breast-feeding,

] Three months seems rather early for weaning. I wonder if a wet-nurse was also involved. Babies weaned very early at that time would surely not have thrived easily.

I have the same question as Linden, about why the Austen babies were sent to live with a village woman, apparently after weaning.

It was a practice until well into the early 20th century for wealthy families to employ a 'wet nurse' to breast-feed a baby in place of the mother.

However, it seems that the Austens sent their babies to a village woman after weaning. Mrs. Austen wrote to her sister-in-law Mrs. Walter about her experiences with JA's older sister Cassandra : 'I suckled my little girl thro' the first quarter.... [Cassy] has been weaned and settled at a good woman's at Deane just eight weeks; she is very healthy and lively, and puts on her short petticoats today.'

Does anyone know what was happening here, and does the Austens’ experience reflect the standard practice of the times?

Messages In This Thread

MT. Farming out babies
Weaning
Farming out babies
Claire Tomalin says:
Addendum.....
I think you're right
Very helpful and interesting, thanks for the explanation! - NFM
Maybe Tomalin...
farming out avoids infections
Are you new to Pemberley?
'A good woman at Deane'..?
Breast-feeding
LOL!
A possible answer