Nance, Claire and Mahamdi, Malika (2025) Accent change in the wake of the Industrial Revolution: Tracing derhoticisation across historic north Lancashire. Journal of Sociolinguistics. ISSN 1360-6441 (In Press)
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Abstract
This paper applies a social model of historical dialect evolution in nineteenth century Britain (Kerswill, 2018) to analysis of sociophonetic data. Our aim is to assess where new dialect formation is likely to occur, and where it is not. Using recordings from 27 speakers we first analyse coda rhoticity in north Lancashire, UK. The speakers were born 1890– 1917 in three urban settlements which contrast in social makeup and history. The quantitative analysis shows strong maintenance of rhoticity in speakers from Preston, less so in Lancaster, and almost no rhoticity in Barrow-in-Furness, an industrial boom town. We then use historical census data to analyse population origin, growth, occupation, and fertility rates to argue that new dialect formation occurred in Barrow during the late 19th century, leading to accelerated derhoticisation. Overall, our analysis supports a model of urban historical dialect change which includes population origins, social networks, and population dynamics.