Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Poor Law
- Old Poor Law
- Elizabethan Poor Law
- 1601-1834
- Poor fell back on relief provided by
the parish e.g. old, sick, disabled.
- relief was paid for by
propertied classes
through local taxes
called poor rates -
administered by parish
overseers.
- Indoor relief and
outdoor relief -
deserving poor and
able bodied poor
- Act of Settlement
- 1701
- Anyone who was a Roman
Catholic or married one became
disqualified to inherit the throne -
continue succession of protestant
line.
- Gilbert's Act
- 1782
- 'relief of the poor act'
proposed by THOMAS
GILBERT
- Counties were
organised into parishes
which could set up
workhouses - aimed to
be humane
- Speenhamland/Allowance System
- 1795
- Speedhamland authorities
decided to top up peoples wages
with allowances based on the
price of bread/size of the family.
- For families whose
wages were low and
could not afford to
support their family.
- However, it allowed for
farmers to pay low wages
in the knowledge that pay
would be supplemented
by authorities -encouraged
laziness.
- 1832 Royal Commission into
Poor Law
- Set up by the Whigs.
- EDWIN
CHADWICK was
one of the
leaders.
- The 26 assistants knew what they
were looking for and CHADWICK was
set against poor law - there was little
hope for it.
- Long term concerns about poor law:
cost, corruption, encouraging poverty,
poor began seeing relief as their right.
- Short term concerns about relief:
Agricultural distress which turned
violent - SWING RIOTS, fear of
revolution due to French
Revolution
- 3000 places were visited - 1/5 of
poor law districts - info collected
and published in 13 volumes.
- Evidence =
unreliable - badly
phrased leading
questions BUT it was
the first survey of its
time - but poor law
was never going to
remain -
predetermined.
- The report was
published in 1834 -
criticised poor law for its
corruption and claimed
poor law was a root of
poverty and radical
change was needed to
improve cost and
efficiency
- Pressures to Change Poor Law
- Changes to
Britain: expansion
of industry,
population growth,
urbanisation, more
living in the north
and constitutional
monarchy.
- French Wars
1793-1815-
curtailed import of
corn, food
shortages, high
taxation, fear of
revolutionary ideas
- High food
prices:Wheat:
1800-09 84s8d per
quarter, 1810-19
91s5d per quarter,
1820-29 59s10d per
quarter
- Corn Laws: introduced by
the Tories as they felt
Britain needed to be
self-sufficient - did not
want cheap food to flood
britain once the war had
ended.
- Post-war depression: problems
with returning soldiers, effects of
over expansion of staple
industries e.g. coal, iron,
increased unemployment - years
1817-19 = years of crisis.
- Poor harvests
= food
shortages
and higher
food prices.
- Radical Protests:
Forces govt to
introduce Six Acts,
suspend Habeas
Corpus, policy of
repression.
- Implementation of Poor Law
- PLAA did not lead to
immediate
establishment of a
new system
- Pace of change was slow
across the country -
authorities had to deal with a
number of problems before
they could implement the
new law
- Local objections - Commissioners had
to set up new unions of parishes -
orginally planned to be equal size -
around 30 parishes per workhouse -
assistant commissioners were under
pressure to get qucik results but
interests of local landowners often
prevailed.
- Building new workhouses
- often delay in this as
building a new one
required a majority of
local board of guardians =
slow process, although old
workhouses could be
altered
- Gilberts unions - Commissioners had
to deal with workhouses previously
set up under old acts e.g. Gilberts
Act 1782 - often refused to be
brought into the new system
- Select Vestries - set
up under Sturges
Bourne Act 1819
remained outside the
control of new unions
- Imposing commissions
authority - greatest,
longest term problem,
insufficient commissioners
which had to cover large
areas - impossible to give
each unions their requisite
2 years visit
- Somerset house
- Problems in the region were
mirrored in this centre - it
was impossible for
underpaid and understaffed
house to cope with the
paperwork - this failing
tended to be ignored
meaning commission was
less efficient than expected
- Success?
- By 1840 = 14,000 Parishes incorporated
into Poor Law Unions - 800 remained outside the system
- Rural south =
outstanding success -
by 1839 - 300 new
workhouses been built.
- Outdoor Relief
- Theoretically banned under
PLLA - made new
workhouses vital. Ban
began everywhere by 1842
- 3/4 of the country banned
from giving relief to the
able bodied - it could only
be given for parish work.
- 1842 = Labour Test Orders,
1844 = Outdoor Relief
Prohibitory Orders, 1852 =
Outdoor Relief Regulation Order
- By 1871 only 1 in 6 unions
were operating under 1844
law - banning outdoor relief
to able bodied
- This was one of the central
planks of the new PLAA which was impossible to
implement
- Opposition to Poor Law
- 1) Terror of the workhouse
- Became known as Bastilles
- French for prison - they
came to symbolise a harsh
new authority where they
were punished for their
poverty
- The harsh conditions
suggested poverty itself was a
crime
- Reasons for opposition:
Hatred, fear, fear of wage cuts
and centralisation took away
control of local governments
- Conditions: deliberately designed to be
repellent, new buildings designed miles
away from home - unpleasant, threatening
and foreboding rather than familiar and
friendly like the old ones - helped to fuel
rumours about the new poor law.
- Rumours - they
have been built for
the sole purpose of
exterminating the
poor. THOMAS
MALTHUS "The
Book of Murder"
- 1832 Anatomy Act - allowed
workhouses to deliver bodies
of deceased inmates to
medical schools for
dissection/experimentation
- Deserving poor: under the old
poor law, officials made a
distinction between those
whose poverty was self-inflicted
- hardworking people = fearful of
being thrown with roughest of
society inside workhouses
- 2) Driving down
wages: one of the
claims was it
forced labourers
to take any form
of employment no
matter how badly
paid to avoid the
workhouse
- Confirmed by the Commission
- Northern
Factory Towns:
resistance more
fierce - linked
with TEN HOUR
MOVEMENT.
- CHADWICK urged for it to introduced
- but ignored. Commissioners tried to
set up poor law in time of depression.
a mob of 6/7000 people disrupted
proceedings and smashed down the
gates - threatening to pull down
buildings and attacking guardians
- Todmordern - most
determined resistance - area
refused to build a workhouse
until 1877
- 3) Concerns about guardians: many
operatives resisted to protect their
existing powers - feared building costs
would be prohibitive with excessive
maintenance costs
- Local authorities believed that
workhouses would be too small
to cope with demand
- Rural rate payers
realised outdoor
relief would be
cheaper
- Many also believed
the new law would
destroy the
paternalistic bond
between the rich
and the poor - used
as a means of social
control
- Rural England - resistance
often took form of riots and
disorder - Anthem Workhouse
May 1835
- Quelled by reading
the Riot Act, swearing
in front of constables
and reinforcements
from Police/Yeomanry
- These events did not result in blocking the new law - significant.