"Revolting to humanity": oversights, limitations, and complications of the English Legitimacy Act of 1926

Womens Hist Rev. 2011;20(1):31-46. doi: 10.1080/09612025.2011.536384.

Abstract

This article analyses three areas that limited the effectiveness of the English Legitimacy Act of 1926. First, re-registration was public, expensive, and time-consuming. Second, the Treasury Office used the change in the law of intestacy to refuse more distant relatives' claims on estates. Third, the law separated legitimacy from nationality, thus denying citizenship to legitimated children born abroad of British fathers and foreign mothers. In short, both because of parliamentary oversights and civil servants' narrow interpretations of the law, relatively few children took advantage of the Act, and the minority who did, rather than being 'illegitimate' or 'legitimate', were a third category, the 'legitimated'.

Publication types

  • Historical Article

MeSH terms

  • Family Characteristics / ethnology
  • Family Characteristics / history
  • Family Relations* / ethnology
  • Family Relations* / legislation & jurisprudence
  • Family* / ethnology
  • Family* / history
  • Family* / psychology
  • History, 20th Century
  • Humans
  • Legislation as Topic* / economics
  • Legislation as Topic* / history
  • Parenting / ethnology
  • Parenting / history
  • Parenting / psychology
  • United Kingdom / ethnology
  • Wills* / economics
  • Wills* / ethnology
  • Wills* / history
  • Wills* / legislation & jurisprudence
  • Wills* / psychology