Interesting — in 18thC reenactment, I heard that you did not tie anything under your chin unless you had a chin to hide. I don't know if it came from an 18thC source, because various "folksy" things are shared in reenactment.

-Carol


On Nov 13, 2011, at 5:04 PM, Linda Walton wrote:

As the list is so quiet, I'll take this opportunity to raise a point that has always puzzled me, and hope that it will not be off topic.

My great-grandmother lived in the North of England, (north Lancashire), at the end of the Victorian era, and I know very little about her, except that she was considered a very proud woman because she wouldn't tie her bonnet strings.

It's bothered me all my life, and of course I should have asked my older relatives, but I've left it too late now, and they are all gone.

So:  can anyone explain what that was about?

Awaiting all suggestions with interest,
Linda Walton,
(in High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, U.K.).
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