Nursemaid

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A nursemaid , or nursery maid, is mostly a historical term of employment for a female servant in an elite household. In the 21st century, the position is largely defunct, owing to the relatively small number of households who maintain large staffs with the traditional hierarchy.

The nursery maid reported to the nurse (what we would now call a nanny) and assisted her in taking care of the children of the family. Her duties included tidying and maintaining the nursery and other supportive chores. It was a junior role, working under the supervision of the experienced nanny. Only very wealthy households, or moderately well-off ones with many children, would employ multiple staff in the nursery. Any household wealthy enough to employ a nursemaid would have a full household staff (butler, housekeeper, cook, etc.).

Everything that a parent ordinarily might do, especially the more onerous tasks, could be turned over to a nursemaid. Feeding very young children and supervising somewhat older children at mealtime, seeing that the children are dressed properly, watching over the children as they play outside, and other such tasks could be left to a nursemaid while the lady of the house concerned herself with other affairs, such as furthering her husband's career.

By reason of her close involvement in most if not all of the daily affairs of the children, including maintaining proper standards of behavior, the nursemaid might easily establish the close kind of a relationship with the children that a mother would herself ordinarily form. In cases where the lady of the household has died, a nursemaid might become even more fully a surrogate mother.

[edit] Other meaning

Nursemaid may also refer to the practice at boarding schools where older students are assigned the responsibility of looking after new students to induct them to boarding school and boarding house life.[citations needed]