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After two years of revisions, the Parliament finally passed the Married Womens Property Act of 1870. It allowed for married women to keep their wages and investments independent of their husbands, inherit small sums, hold property either rented or inherited from close family, and made both parents liable for children.
English womans property when she married came under the control of her husband. Explanation: ing to married women property act, the property which was owned by women in the form of gift, investment or inheritance is naturally transferred to her husband.
The Married Womens Property Act 1870 provided that wages and property which a wife earned through her own work or inherited would be regarded as her separate property and by the Married Womens Property Act 1882, this principle was extended to all property, regardless of its source or the time of its acquisition.
Starting in Ontario in 1884 and Manitoba in 1900, the Married Womens Property Act gave married women in these provinces the same legal rights as men, which allowed women to be able to enter into legal agreements and buy property.
After two years of revisions, the Parliament finally passed the Married Womens Property Act of 1870. It allowed for married women to keep their wages and investments independent of their husbands, inherit small sums, hold property either rented or inherited from close family, and made both parents liable for children.
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The effect of The Married Womens Property Act 1882 was that: A wife could hold her own wages and investments independent from her husband. A wife could inherit up to 200.00 in her own right and keep the money. Both the husband and wife could be made liable to support their children.
Every woman who marries after the commencement of this Act shall be entitled to have and to hold as her separate property and to dispose of in manner aforesaid all real and personal property which shall belong to her at the time of marriage, or shall be acquired by or devolve upon her after marriage, including any wage

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