I checked my wife's and my lines for Lajes do Pico and came up with an 
average of 67 years the youngest died at 25 the oldest at 82. They were all 
born between 1733 and 1788.

Antonio

On Wednesday, June 11, 2014 11:22:48 AM UTC-7, IslandRoutes wrote:
>
> I'm working through the Achada marriages in the mid to late 1700.  As I've 
> been taking notes on all of them, I've been stricken by something.  A good 
> majority of the mothers are deceased by the time their children marry.  I 
> have made any determination of ages.  But, I suspect many didn't make it 
> into or past their 50s.  The fathers did fare a little better.
>
> Does anyone know if what I'm seeing during that century in Achada is the 
> norm for the Azores?  I know from other research that pregnancy and child 
> birth took many women before the 1900.  It didn't really seem to matter 
> where the woman lived (my 2nd great grandmother died in San Francisco in 
> the 1870 after complications of childbirth...and I can list other anecdotal 
> examples).
>
> Anyway, it's just something that caught my eye.  When you see them listed 
> as deceased one after another it kind of catches you off guard.
>

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