This three-year research project began in January 2014 and investigated whether, during the Victorian period, the professions formed a distinct self-sustaining social group with its own mores and values. The project looked at 16,000 individuals drawn from census data for Alnwick, Brighton, Bristol, Dundee, Greenock, Leeds, Merthyr Tydfil, Morpeth, and Winchester. The research project was funded by the UK Economic & Social Research Council and was based at the Universities of Oxford and Northumbria.
100265 (Mary James : mother), 100261 (Frank James : father), 100266 (Fanny James : sibling), 100268 (Edith James : sibling), 100269 (Maude Mary James : sibling), 100270 (Frank Treharne James : sibling), 100272 (Florence James : sibling), 100271 (Ethel James : sibling), 100273 (Mary Gertrude James : sibling), 100274 (Annie James : sibling), 100275 (William James : sibling), 100276 (Constance Eliza James : sibling), 100282 (Rachel Adelaide Louisa James : wife)