Workhouse Lives : Staffing Institutions under the Old and New Poor Laws (States, People, and the History of Social Change)

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Workhouse Lives : Staffing Institutions under the Old and New Poor Laws (States, People, and the History of Social Change)

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  • 製本 Paperback:紙装版/ペーパーバック版/ページ数 396 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9780228027812

Full Description

Following the passage of the 1834 New Poor Law, parishes in England and Wales were organized into unions, each of which had at least one workhouse, a public institution where impoverished individuals and families were housed, fed, and put to work. Beyond bricks and regulations, the workhouse was shaped and animated by those who ran it. Workhouse Lives reconstructs the careers and experiences of workhouse staff: masters and matrons, nurses, schoolmasters, porters, chaplains, taskmasters, relieving officers, and inspectors.

In the workhouse, roles overlapped, lines of responsibility blurred, and power was constantly negotiated. As the functions of the welfare state expanded, staff were expected to manage dormitories and medical wards, teach children and offer spiritual guidance, resolve disputes, keep records, administer vaccinations, arrange foster placements, and conduct sanitary inspections. Violence was a regular feature of workhouse life, arising from clashes between staff and inmates, conflicts among inmates (including domestic violence), and staff disputes. Officers might abuse their authority, sometimes brutally, while others acted with care and compassion. What moulded the lives of everyone within the workhouse was less the administrative structure than the character of the person appointed to each role. This dynamic continues to resonate in modern welfare systems, which, however bureaucratized, are embodied by the people working on the front lines.

Touching on histories of welfare, labour, poverty, literacy, material culture, and state formation, Workhouse Lives illuminates the personalities, motivations, and community connections of staff whose lives have long been hidden.

Contents

Tables and Figures vii
Acknowledgements xi
Abbreviations xiii

1 Introduction 3
Samantha A. Shave and Steven King

2 The Workhouse Master 30
Natalie Carter and Paul Carter

3 "Mrs Hollings ... still declines to resign": Workhouse Matrons, 1834-1855 57
Sue Hawkins

4 Schoolmasters and Schoolmistresses Under the New Poor Law 85
Peter Jones

5 Workhouse Nurses in the Northwest of England, 1834-1914 120
Stuart Wildman

6 Taskmasters and Old Poor Law Workhouses, c.1750-1834 149
Susannah Ottaway and Alannah Tomkins

7 The Workhouse Porter 176
Elizabeth Hurren and Steven King

8 Workhouse Chaplains in the Early Years of the New Poor Law, c.1834-1847 202
Samantha A. Shave

9 The Relieving Officer: A Liminal Role 231
Julie-Marie Strange

10 Assistant Poor Law Commissioners and the Reforming of the Workhouse System Under the New Poor Law 260
Myungsu Kang

11 Workhouse Inspectors in Sussex 286
Mary Rudling

12 Social Explorers, 1837-1935 316
Peter Higginbotham

Bibliography 343
Contributors 361
Index 367

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