Quebec church records show grandmothers were 'essential to survival' in early days of New France - Action News
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Montreal

Quebec church records show grandmothers were 'essential to survival' in early days of New France

The researchers used baptismal, marriage and death records from the 17th and 18th centuries to show a woman whose mother lived nearby had a far better chance of raising children who survived to adulthood than a woman without her mother's support.

Universit de Sherbrooke, Bishop's researchers found women with mothers nearby had more and healthier children

R. Outhet and his family posed for this photo in Montreal in 1865. A new study exploring the 'grandmother effect' concludes New France grew exponentially in the pre-industrial era, partly because of the proximity of mothers to their daughters' growing families. (McCord Museum)

Researchers drawing from a vastdata setof Quebec church records from the 17th and 18th centuriessay the steep population jump in New France may have been prompted by an unlikely categoryof people: grandmothers.

The data shows that the closer in geographic proximity a woman livedto her daughter, the more children her daughter was likely to haveand the more likely those childrenwere to survive.

Sacha Engelhardt, the lead researcher on the study published in Current Biology, says the findings give insight into human life history. (Submitted by Sacha Engelhardt)

The researchers, from Universit de Sherbrooke and Bishop's University, used church records because priests kept meticulous trackof baptisms, marriagesand deaths in each parish.

"It's a very rich data set, where almost every decade the population would double, almost," said Sacha Engelhardt, a Universitde Sherbrooke postdoctoral fellow and lead author of the study, published inthe scientific journal Current Biology.

The researchers analyzedthe records of pre-industrial settlers in the St. Lawrence Valley between 1608 and 1799, and they determined grandmothers were "essential to survival."

"We were very interested in assessing the potential for grandmothers to help their daughters and thus indirectly increase their genetic footprint through a great number of grandchildren," said Engelhardt.

Engelhardt set out to understand menopause and thelifespan of women in their post-reproductive years.

Humans are one of the rare species that live well beyond their reproductive years, he said.

The "grandmother hypothesis"could explain why.

The study concluded that women who had mothers living nearby had more surviving children,because the grandmother would be a "potential for help."

Women of childbearing agewith mothers in close proximity had, on average, two more children than those without mothers living nearby,and the number of children who survivedto age 15 increased by about one.

Mrs. William Notman holds her granddaughter Annie in her arms in Montreal in 1864. Annie's mother died giving birth to her. (McCord Museum)

Engelhardt said the child survival rate is significant in a population where one in two children died as infants.

The distance between the mother and grandmother wascrucial, the study found.

For every additional 100 kilometres of separation between a mother and daughter, the daughterwould have about 0.6 fewer offspring.

Engelhardt said the "grandmother effect"is not present in all human populations, so he thought drawing on data from anexpanding population spread out overlarge distances, asin the case of Quebec in the pre-industrial era, would provide a better sense of the grandmother's "potential for help."

The research gives insight into human life history, he said.