Thursday, November 11, 2021

Regency Women: Pin Money and Private Expenses

From Jane Austen's World:

Pin money, also sometimes referred to as an allowance, was the money that genteel Regency women used for personal expenses, such as dresses, hats, shoes, and other things of that sort. She kept an accounting of it herself and must balance her own budget.

The history of the term “pin money” dates back to the 1500s: “At that time, pin money was a substantial sum that was used for important purchases. The expression is linked to the price of straight pins, once items that were very rare and expensive, and part of the necessary purchases to run a household” (Grammarist). Over time, the term became synonymous with a woman’s personal money.

For the most part, genteel Regency women were entirely reliant on their male relatives for any “loose cash” for their own personal expenses. As an unmarried woman, she would only have what money her father or a close male relative gave to her (or left to her). Once married, she only had what her husband gave to her or what she was entitled to as part of her marriage settlement. (Read more.)
Share

1 comment:

julygirl said...

In my day I handled the finances and the checkbook and my husband asked for his allowance even though he was the 'breadwinner'. He understood I was the one who spent most of the money and knew the status of the checkbook. How things changed. LOL