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Home » Working Lives » Domestic servants/estate workers » Wages (servants)

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Household accounts of the steward of Lady Myddleton, Chirk Castle, 1729 [image 1 of 4]
  • There is very little information available about the dress of women from the lower levels of society during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. This manuscript sheds some light on the subject.

The manuscript is a list of payments by Ieuan ap Rees ap David of Wigfair, Denbighshire, to his maid 'Elin vawr'. Many of the payments were made not in cash but in goods such as clothing or material for making clothes. The prices paid by Ieuan for the clothing and materials are noted on the list. The most comprehensive list is in Welsh, but some of the items on this list are also on a shorter list in English.

According to a note at the beginning of the list it is a copy of the original list that was made because of a court case where Ieuan ap Rees ap David was the defendant and Elin and George Gruff[ydd] ap D[avid] ap M[ered]edd were the plaintiffs. It appears, therefore, that the lists were copied after Elin had departed from her position and married.

Ieuan ap Rees ap David was a member of the Lloyd family of gentry and his son, John Lloyd, was the recorder of Denbigh. Ieuan died sometime between 1600-1610.

Because of the number of items of clothing on the list it is likely that it was produced over a number of years. It appears that Ieuan was a fairly generous employer - some items were made from his own cloth and no charge was made for these. It is interesting to note the prices of various items, e.g. 3d for a pair of gloves and 8 shillings for a felt hat from Chester. Aprons and smocks were usually made from linen but jerkins and petticoats were made from cloth or flannel. As well as the utilitarian items such as smocks and petticoats, Elin was also provided with more ornamental items such as collars and a ribbon to tie back her hair.

[Further reading: Megan Ellis,' Dress and dress materials for a serving maid, circa 1600', National Library of Wales Journal vol.1 (winter 1939). Aberystwyth : National Library of Wales]
Payments to a serving maid, c.1600, page 1 of 6
  • Thomas Martyn continues to describe the work of Mr and Mrs Norgrove, the owners of Hafod Inn.  He praises the port and sherry to be had which is
'by far the best we had tasted in all Wales'.
Martyn tells the landlord  that the women are more industrious than the men and he agrees
'except for mowing and digging they worked much better than the men altho' they were paid but seven pence per day, when the men received a shilling which he considered as very unfair'.
A Tour to South Wales, 1801, page 135