Zij is getrouwd met Isaac ABRAHAMS.
his father is Moshe and hers Joseph but it is one of the records withoutan address..
Zij zijn getrouwd op 2 januari 1822 te Great Synagogue, Dukes Place, London, Middlesex, England, zij was toen 17 jaar oud.Bron 1
Kind(eren):
occupation milliner:
Millinery and dressmaking constituted the higher end of female employment with the needle; they were "respectable" occupations for young women from middle-class or lower middle-class families. The number of women involved in dressmaking alone in the early 1840s was estimated to be 15,000 (House of Commons, Reports from Commissioners: Children's Employment, Trade and Manufactures, Sessional Papers XIV (1843) 555). Milliners and dressmakers came from families who had enough money to pay for them to be apprenticed to learn the trade. This type of employment was part of an old, established apprenticeship system (like tailoring among men), and it was one of only a few occupations open to women which offered a skill and a sense of belonging to a trade, and which promised, at least after the apprenticeship period was served, a decent and respectable living. http://www.victorianweb.org;gender;ugoretz1.html "Slaves of the Needle:" The Seamstress in the 1840s. Beth Harris, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, Fashion Institute of Technology, State University of New York, USA
Hebrew name = Hendel(a) bat Yosef; Daughter of Yosef which indicates Hannahs fathers Hebrew name was Yosef (which would often Anglicise to Joseph). from Great Synagogue, Dukes Place, London, Middlesex, England Marriage info.
The jewishgen database of Jewish Traders and Businesses in London 1769-1839 includes six entries for a Joseph Phillips, who could be the father of Hannah Phillips.
Handel Hannah Phillips | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1822 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Isaac ABRAHAMS |