Thursday, 23 April 2020

A to Z Challenge 2020 - T




The Blogging from A to Z Challenge is to post everyday (except Sunday) in the month of April 2020 starting with the letter A and going all the way to Z. My theme is...
Ancestor Occupations 





TAILOR


I have written some about my 2x great grandfather Andrew Smith Tait, who was a tailor in Bath, Somerset. In 1878 while still in Liverpool Andrew took out a patent (Patent No 1168) for his secret pocket in pants and a better fit.  The family moved to Bath about 1887. Andrew had his shop on Broad Street. His children all learned the tailoring business and some worked with him part time to help out. Here are some stories of his children.


In 1891 Andrew set up Tait Bros, a tailoring shop on Green Street, for two of his sons, William and Andrew Eli. 


FMP - This ad was in most papers around Bath



William is in court in 1897, as the plaintiff asking for payment.



William Tait, tailor of Green Street, sought to recover £1 10s for the making of a jacket, bodice, and skirt for the wife of the defendant, Charles Rich, 34 Belvedere, Bath, sanitary engineer. There was a counter-claim to the amount of £1 5s for the material of which the coat and skirt was made, which it was alleged had been damaged through plaintiff's unskilfulness. His Honour found for the plaintiff on the claim and dismissed the counter-claim with costs. 


In 1899 William got in trouble for "allowing" two of his seamstresses to work overtime.



"William Tait, of 4 Belvedere, was summoned for allowing two of his employees, Nellie Rice and Lily Jones, to work after four o'clock in the afternoon on Saturday, the 13th of may. Mr J S Maitland, Inspector of Factories and Workshops, prosecuted. Harold Shorland, Inspector's assistant, said he visited Mr Tait's tailoring workshop at about 4:55 pm on the 13th of May and found two girls working there. He said he had warned Mr Tait some months ago. The defendant pleaded guilty and he was fined £1 or 14 day's in each case."

(Update: The Factory Act permitted women and children to work only these hours: 
Week days 6 am to 6 pm and Saturdays 6 am to 2 pm. From what I can tell with a bit of research these two were young girls)


William died in October 1900.

In 1901 there was a terrible boating accident in which Andrew Eli lost his fiancé and he almost drowned. A few days later their father died suddenly. 


Andrew Eli kept the shop on Green Street for a few years, then in the 1920s it was run by his daughter, Dora Constance Tait. She kept the old W. Tait sign. 





Andrew Eli opened Tait & Son, Ladies' & Gentlemen's Tailors, with his son Bernard Tait, at No.1 Northumberland Buildings on Wood Street. 




According to the 1925 Bath Directory their sister Elizabeth Reid Tait was a tailoress with Reid & Collins, costumiers at No.5 Wood Street, Queen Square, across the street from the Northumberland Bldgs. 


Google street view, reimagined




In September of 1935 two strangers to the city of Bath were seen stealing a car by Andrew Eli Tait, who was looking out his shop window. 



FMP - Bath Chronicle 7 Sept 1935


After a bit of a search the men were found and taken to the police station where they were put in an identification parade, and identified by Mr Tait and a witness to the chase.
The prisoners were charged with taking from Queen Street, Bath, a Standard Twelve motor car, value £235, without the consent of the owner or other lawful authority. 
Both pleaded guilty and were sent to prison, one for three months and the other for one month. 

My father visited his great uncle Andrew Eli Tait when he was in England in 1943 





Elizabeth Reid Tait died unmarried September 1945 and left a small sum of money to her brother Andrew Eli. 

Andrew Eli Tait died January 1951 at the age of 72. 


These Tait's had an ancestor William Tait (son of my 5x great grandfather George Tait) that was a tailor in 1798 in Edinburgh. 





8 comments:

  1. Secret pocket! I wish my pants had secret pockets. Or any pockets...

    The Multicolored Diary

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    Replies
    1. Right! And when you advertise it, it’s not so secret haha.

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  2. I love Bath. SO sorry we won't be taking our trip to England this year.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. There are a few places I’d like to visit in England... if only I traveled well 😏

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  3. I've never been to Bath but it's on my list for someday! As for that secret pocket - I love it! I'm always happy when any item of mine has pockets. It's a main selling point for me, especially with dresses.

    Sad stuff about those poor little girls working "overtime." Wow... One reason I love history is that it reminds me of how good I've got it!

    ~Tui Snider, @TuiSnider TuiSnider.com - Historic Cemeteries & Symbolism from A to Z

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    Replies
    1. When I was still in high school, one summer I worked in a factory that made the little plastic trays you get cookies or chocolates in. I worked from 7am to 5 pm, with two 15 minute breaks and a half hour lunch all unpaid! I got $1/ hr, 9 hours a day so $45/ week. It was quite the experience! Thank goodness a new mall opened the next summer and I got a job in a department store selling nylons and gloves. We got better pay plus 10% off all our purchases in the store.

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  4. That’s a long tradition of tailoring. Those working hours were pretty fierce. I wonder how my grandmother and her sisters managed when young women working as dressmakers in Glasgow.

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    Replies
    1. I had an ancestor aunt who was a dressmaker. She lived in a clients house all the winter and made clothes for the whole family. She also made new linens, sheets etc as required. It was a not bad job for a spinster.

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