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7 Intriguing Historical Facts About Stepparents

observer's picture

• Adoption of a stepchild was not an option until the nineteenth century.

• High mortality rates were the primary reason people became stepparents during colonial times. Today, divorce rates are to blame.

• In Maryland, stepfathers would fight biological grandparents for custody, not on the grounds of a child's best interest, but because of his investment in the maintenance of a child and his need for their services.

• Stepmothers only had legal existence in the shadow of their husbands. It wasn't until a widowed father made his wife a guardian did she have any rights with regard to her step children.

• Stepmothers had a weaker claim to custody than stepfathers.

• Courts were more willing to "remove a child from a stepfather than from a father for what was frequently referred to as "evil usage" or "hard usage" of their stepchildren."

• Children from first families resented the inheritance rights of adopted stepchildren, so most stepchildren and stepparents coexisted in the ambiguous relationships that we still see today.

Comments

observer's picture

Huu?

Anon2009's picture

Wow, that must've been interesting! Am I right in assuming they gave their stories that twist because nobody wanted to think that a mother could do that to their own kids?

observer's picture

Ok tale tellers...

"Children from first families resented the inheritance rights of adopted stepchildren, so most stepchildren and stepparents coexisted in the ambiguous relationships that we still see today."

How many modern stepparents realize the reason they're not recognized as being anyone significant is because of greedy biokids of days of old? Who in their right mind would voluntarily accept take on the responsibilities?