Difference between revisions of "Poor Law" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Category:Politics and social sciences]]
 
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[[Image:Workhouse_Nantwich.jpg|thumb|right|280 px|Former [[workhouse]] at Nantwich, dating from 1780]]
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British '''Poor Laws''' were a body of [[law]]s designed during the [[Elizabethan era]] to provide relief for the poor population living throughout the [[United Kingdom]]. Such laws began in sixteenth century England and prevailed until after [[World War II]] and the establishment of the [[welfare state]].
  
[[Image:Workhouse_Nantwich.jpg|thumb|right|280 px|Former [[workhouse]] at Nantwich, dating from 1780]]
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Poor Laws provided relief in various forms, including care for the elderly, sick, and infant poor, and the establishment of supportive work programs for all able-bodied poor. Such programs were often run through local parishes until 1830, whereupon the state of [[poverty]] was recognized as a state of [[morality|immorality]]. The characterization as a "pauper" thus became an additional burden, implying not only incapacity but also depravity. At that time, Poor Laws were amended to offer [[workhouse]] employment for all able-bodied poor, and mandated conditions of unpleasantness regarding housing conditions for their poor residents. Such conditions prevailed to prevent people from abusing acts of [[charity]]. Unfortunately, due to such efforts to dissuade those capable of working and supporting themselves, the conditions in workhouses were appalling, and many of those legitimately in need of help suffered excessively. Even so, there were often insufficient places in the workhouses to satisfy the needs of the poor population.
The '''Poor Law''' was the system for the provision of [[social security]] in operation in [[England]] and the rest of the [[United Kingdom]] from the [[16th century]] until the establishment of the [[Welfare State]] in the [[20th century]]. It was made up of several Acts of Parliament and subsequent Amendments. The extreme longevity of the Poor Law meant that some of the generalisations made about it (for example, the use of [[workhouse|workhouses]]) refer to only a part of its history.
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In the twentieth century, public housing and other [[social services]] began to develop outside the scope of the Poor Law; means tests were developed, and relief that was free of the stigma of pauperism became available. Following the end of [[World War II]], Poor Laws were replaced by systems of [[public welfare]] and [[social security]]. Yet the problem of poverty remains. Its solution involves more than state-run programs; it requires a change in the hearts and minds of people to care for each other as one [[family]].
  
 
==The classification of the poor==
 
==The classification of the poor==
For much of the period of the Poor Law, the dependent poor were classified in terms of three groups:
 
*  The [[impotent poor]] could not look after themselves or go to work. They included the ill, the infirm, the elderly, and children with no-one to properly care for them. It was generally held that they should be looked after.
 
*  The [[able-bodied poor]] normally referred to those who were unable to find work - either due to cyclical or long term [[unemployment]] in the area, or a lack of skills. Attempts to assist these people, and move them out of this category, varied over the centuries, but usually consisted of relief either in the form of work or money.
 
*  The [[Vagrancy (people)|'vagrants']] or 'beggars', sometimes termed 'sturdy rogues', were deemed those who could work but had refused to. Such people were seen in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries as potential criminals, apt to do mischief when hired for the purpose. They were normally seen as people needing punishment, and as such were often whipped in the market place as an example to others, or sometimes sent to so-called 'houses of correction'.
 
  
==Poor relief before 1601 (Tudor Poor Law)==
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For much of the period of the Poor Laws, [[poverty|poor]] members of the community were classified in terms of three groups.
Before the [[English Reformation]] it was considered a [[Christian]] duty to care for the sick and needy. With the break with Rome some of this attitude was lost which meant that there needed to be increasing legislation in order that 'deserving poor' should be cared for [http://www.victorianweb.org/history/poorlaw/elizpl.html]. Tudor Poor Laws aimed to deal with vagrancy, laws aimed at reducing begging while appearing humanitarian more prompted by a desire for social stability. Tudor Poor Laws were harsh towards the able bodied poor - whippings and beatings were acceptable punishments. <!-- Poverty and Public Health 1815-1949 BY Rosemary Tees  Is this a reference?  Unclear.—>
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#The "[[impotent poor]]" were a group who could not look after themselves or go to work. They included the ill, the infirm, the elderly, and children with no-one to properly care for them. It was generally held that they should be looked after.
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#The "[[able-bodied poor]]" normally referred to those who were unable to find work, either due to cyclical or long term [[unemployment]], or a lack of skills. Attempts to assist these people, and move them from this state, varied over the centuries, but usually consisted of relief, either in the form of work or money.  
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#"[[Vagrancy|vagrants]]" or "beggars," sometimes termed "sturdy rogues," were deemed those who could work but refused to find employment. In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries such people were seen as potential [[crime|criminals]], and apt to do mischief. They were normally seen as people needing [[punishment]], and as such were often whipped in the market place as an example to others, or sometimes sent to so-called "houses of correction."
  
*'''1552''' - Parishes began to register those considered 'poor'.
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Before the [[English Reformation]] of the sixteenth century it was considered a [[Christian]] duty to care for the sick and needy. With the [[Church of England]]’s break from the [[Roman Catholic Church]], some of this attitude was lost, which meant it became necessary for legislation to be created in order to care for the "deserving poor." [[Tudor Poor Laws]], first introduced in 1495, aimed to deal with vagrancy, peasant begging, and charity, and were prompted by a desire for social stability. Such laws were harsh towards the able bodied poor as whippings and beatings were acceptable punishments. In the early sixteenth century, parishes began to register those of their communities considered "poor." By 1563, it became legally acceptable for [[Justices of the Peace]] to collect money from their communities on behalf of poor relief efforts. Under this legislation, all poor community members were to be classified as one of the three defined groups of poor.  
*'''1563''' - [[Justices of the Peace]] began to collect money for poor relief. The poor were grouped for the first time into the [[impotent poor]], idle poor and able-bodied poor (unemployed).  
 
*'''1572''' - First local poor tax to fund poor relief.
 
*'''1576''' - Idea of a workhouse first suggested. It is first suggested that JPs could provide materials for which the able-bodied could work in return for relief.
 
*'''1579''' - Justices of the Peace authorised to collect funds for poor relief. The post of [[Overseer of the Poor]] was created. [http://www.victorianweb.org/history/poorlaw/elizpl.html]
 
  
==The Act of 1601==
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==Elizabethan Poor Law==
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In 1572, the first local poor [[tax]] was approved to fund poor relief, followed by the implementation of social [[workhouse]]s and the 1601 passage of the Poor Law Act, also know as the [[Elizabethan Poor Law]]. This act allowed for the boarding of young [[orphan]]ed children with families willing to accept them for a monthly payment paid to them by a local parish. The act also allowed provided materials to "set the poor on work," offered relief to people who were unable to work, and established various [[apprenticeship]]s for able-bodied children.
  
The '''Poor Law Act 1601''' also known as the '''Elizabethan Poor Law''' and '''Old Poor Law''' (after the passing of the [[Poor Law Amendment Act 1834]]) formalised earlier practices of [[poor relief]]. It created a [[collectivist]] national system, paid for by levying local rates (or property taxes). It made provision:
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Relief for those too ill or old to work, the so called [[impotent poor]], often came in the form of monthly payments, donations of [[food]], or donations of [[clothing]]. Some aged poor might also have been accommodated in parish alms houses, or private [[charitable institution]]s. Meanwhile, able-bodied beggars who had refused work were often placed in houses of correction. Provision for the [[able-bodied poor]] in the workhouse, which provided accommodation at the same time as work, was relatively unusual. Assistance given to the deserving poor that did not involve an institution like the workhouse was known as [[outdoor relief]].
  
*To board out (making a payment to families willing to accept them) those young children who were orphaned or whose parents could not maintain them,  
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===Poor Relief Act===
*to provide materials to "set the poor on work"  
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There was much variation in the application of poor laws and there remained a large tendency for the destitute to migrate toward the more generous parishes, often situated in towns. This led to the [[Settlement Act of 1662]], also known as the [[Poor Relief Act of 1662]]. This act allowed for provisional relief to only be available to established residents of a parish. Such affiliations could be traced mainly through birth, [[marriage]], or [[apprenticeship]], and all [[pauper]] applicants had to prove their membership to a certain "settlement." If they could not, they were removed to the next parish that was nearest to the place of their birth, or where they might prove some connection. Some paupers were moved hundreds of miles. Though each parish that the poor passed through was not responsible for them, they were responsible for the supply of food, drink, and shelter for at least one night.  
*To offer relief to people who were unable to work — mainly those who were "lame, impotent, old, blind," and  
 
*"The putting out of children to be apprentices."
 
  
Relief for those too ill or old to work, the so called ''[[impotent poor]]'', was in the form of a payment or items of food ('the parish loaf') or clothing. Some aged people might be accommodated in parish alms houses, though these were usually private charitable institutions. Meanwhile able-bodied beggars who had refused work were often placed in houses of correction. However, provision for the many [[able-bodied poor]] in the [[workhouse]], which provided accommodation at the same time as work, was relatively unusual, and most workhouses developed later. Assistance given to the deserving poor that did not involve an institution like the workhouse, was known as '[[outdoor relief]]'.
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The Poor Relief Act was criticized in later years for its effect in distorting the labor market through the power given to parishes to let them remove "undeserving" poor. Other legislation proved punitive, such as an act passed in 1697, which required the poor to wear a "badge" of red or blue cloth on the right shoulder with an embroidered letter "P" and the initial of their parish.  
  
There was much variation in the application of the law and there was a tendency for the destitute to migrate towards the more generous parishes, usually situated in the towns. This led to the '''Settlement Act 1662''' also known as the [[Poor Relief Act 1662]] - this  allowed relief only to established residents of a parish - mainly through birth, marriage and apprenticeship. A pauper applicant had to prove a 'settlement'.If they could not, they were removed to the next parish that was nearest to the place of their birth, or where they might prove some connection. Some paupers were moved hundreds of miles. Although each parish that they passed through was not responsible for them, they were supposed to supply food and drink and shelter for at least one night. The Act was criticised in later years for its effect in distorting the labour market, through the power given to parishes to let them remove 'undeserving' poor.
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==Eighteenth century Poor Law reforms==
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The eighteenth century [[workhouse]] movement began with the establishment of the [[Bristol Corporation of the Poor]], an organization founded by an Act of Parliament in 1696. The corporation established a workhouse which combined housing and care of the poor with an affiliated house of correction for petty offenders. Following the example of [[Bristol]], more than twelve further towns and cities established similar corporations over the next two decades.
  
Some of the legislation was punitive. In 1697 an act was passed requiring the poor to wear a "badge" of red or blue cloth on the right shoulder with an embroidered letter "P" and the initial of their parish. However, this was often disregarded. Alcock complained, in 1752, that "these marks of distinction have had but little effect, and for that Reasons, I suppose, have been almost everywhere neglected." {{Citequote}}
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From the late 1710s, the newly established [[Society for the Promotion of Christian Knowledge]] began to promote the idea of parochial workhouses. The Society published several pamphlets on the subject, and supported Sir [[Edward Knatchbull]] in his successful efforts to steer the [[Workhouse Test Act]] through Parliament in 1723. The act gave legislative authority for the establishment of parochial workhouses, by both single parishes and as joint ventures between two or more parishes. More importantly, the Act helped to publicize the idea of establishing workhouses to a national audience.  
  
=== Amendments to the 1601 Act===
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By 1776, more than one thousand parish and corporation workhouses had been established throughout England and Wales, housing almost 100,000 [[pauper]]s. Although many parishes and pamphlet writers expected to earn money from the labor of the poor in workhouses, the vast majority of people obliged to take up residence in workhouses were the ill, elderly, or young children, whose labor proved largely unprofitable. The demands, needs, and expectations of the poor also ensured that workhouses came to take on the character of general social policy institutions, and often housed night shelters, geriatric wards, and [[orphanage]]s.
*1662 -[[Poor Relief Act 1662]] (Settlement Acts)
 
*1723 -[[Workhouse Test Act]]
 
*1782 -[[Gilbert's Act]]
 
*1795 -[[Speenhamland]]
 
  
==The eighteenth century==
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In 1782, poor law reformer [[Thomas Gilbert]] finally succeeded in passing an act that established poor houses solely for the aged and the infirmed, and introduced a system of outdoor relief for the able-bodied. This was the basis for the development of the [[Speenhamland system]], which made significant financial provisions for low-paid workers.
The eighteenth-century workhouse movement began at the end of the seventeenth century with the establishment of the Bristol Corporation of the Poor, founded by Act of Parliament in 1696. The corporation established a workhouse which combined housing and care of the poor with a house of correction for petty offenders. Following the example of Bristol some twelve further towns and cities established similar corporations in the next two decades. Because these corporations required a private Act, they were not suitable for smaller towns and individual parishes.
 
  
Starting with the parish of Olney, Buckinghamshire in 1714 several dozen small towns and individual parishes established their own institutions without any specific legal authorization. These were concentrated in the South Midlands and in the county of Essex. From the late 1710s the Society for the Promotion of Christian Knowledge began to promote the idea of parochial workhouses. The Society published several pamphlets on the subject, and supported Sir Edward Knatchbull in his successful efforts to steer the Workhouse Test Act through parliament in 1723. The act gave legislative authority for the establishment of parochial workhouses, by both single parishes and as joint ventures between two or more parishes. More importantly, the Act helped to publicise the idea of establishing workhouses to a national audience. By 1776 some 1912 parish and corporation workhouses had been established in England and Wales, housing almost 100,000 paupers. Although many parishes and pamphlet writers expected to earn money from the labour of the poor in workhouses, the vast majority of people obliged to take up residence in workhouses were ill, elderly, or children whose labour proved largely unprofitable. The demands, needs and expectations of the poor also ensured that workhouses came to take on the character of general social policy institutions, combining the functions of creche, and night shelter, geriatric ward and orphanage.
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==Nineteenth century Poor Law reforms==
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Widespread dissatisfaction with the poor law system grew at the beginning of the nineteenth century. The 1601 system was felt to be too costly and was widely perceived as pushing more people toward [[poverty]] even while it helped those who were already in poverty. Social reformer [[Jeremy Bentham]] argued for a disciplinary, punitive approach to social problems, whilst the writings of political economist [[Thomas Malthus]] focused attention on the problem of overpopulation, and the growth of illegitimacy. Economist [[David Ricardo]] argued that there was an "iron law of wages." In the view of such reformers, the establishment of poor relief sought to undermine the position of the "independent laborer."
  
In 1782, Thomas Gilbert finally succeeded in passing an act that established poor houses solely for the aged and infirm and introduced a system of outdoor relief for the able-bodied. This was the basis for the development of the Speenhamland system, which made financial provision for low-paid workers.
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In the period following the [[Napoleonic Wars]], several reformers altered the function of the "poorhouse" into the model for a deterrent workhouse. The first of the deterrent workhouses in this period was at Bingham, Nottinghamshire. The second, established at Becher's workhouse in Southwell, is now maintained by the [[National Trust]]. George Nicholls, the overseer at Southwell, was to become a Poor Law Commissioner in the reformed system.
 
 
== The reform of the Poor Law==
 
 
 
Dissatisfaction with the system grew at the beginning of the 19th century. The 1601 system was felt to be too costly and was widely perceived as encouraging the underlying problems - pushing more people into poverty even while it helped those who were already in poverty. [[Jeremy Bentham]] argued for a disciplinary, punitive approach to social problems, whilst the writings of [[Thomas Malthus]] focused attention on the problem of overpopulation, and the growth of illegitimacy. [[David Ricardo]] argued that there was an "iron law of wages." The effect of poor relief, in the view of the reformers, was to undermine the position of the "independent labourer."
 
 
 
In the period following the Napoleonic Wars, several reformers altered the function of the "poorhouse" into the model for a deterrent workhouse. The first of the deterrent workhouses in this period was at Bingham, Notts. The second was Becher's workhouse in Southwell, now maintained by the National Trust. George Nicholls, the overseer at Southwell,was to become a Poor Law Commissioner in the reformed system.
 
 
 
The [[1817 Report of the Select Committee on the Poor Laws]] condemned the Poor Law as causing poverty itself.
 
  
 
==The Royal Commission on the Poor Law==
 
==The Royal Commission on the Poor Law==
The [[1832 Royal Commission into the Operation of the Poor Laws]] was written by a commission of eight, including [[Nassau William Senior]], and served by [[Edwin Chadwick]] as Secretary. The Royal Commission's primary concerns were with illegitimacy (or "bastardy"), reflecting the influence of Malthusians, and the fear that the practices of the Old Poor Law were undermining the position of the independent labourer. Two practices were of particular concern: the "roundsman" system, where overseers hired out paupers as cheap labour, and the Speenhamland system, which subsidised low wages with out relief.
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In 1832, the [[Royal Commission into the Operation of the Poor Laws]] was written by a commission of eight members, including English economist [[Nassau William Senior]], and social reformer [[Edwin Chadwick]]. The Royal Commission's primary concerns were with illegitimacy reflecting the influence of Malthusians, and the fear that the practices of the Old Poor Law were undermining the position of the independent laborer. Two practices were of particular concern to the commissioners: The "roundsman" system, where overseers hired out [[pauper]]s as cheap [[labor]], and the Speenhamland system, which subsidized low [[wages]] without relief.
 
 
===Findings of the Commission===
 
The 13 volume report pointed to the conclusion that the poor law itself was the cause of poverty. The report differentiated between poverty, which was seen as necessary, as it was fear of poverty which made people work, and [[indigence]] - the inability to earn enough to live on.
 
 
 
*"[[less eligibility]]": that the position of the [[pauper]] should be less eligible (that is, less to be chosen) than that of the independent labourer. 
 
* the "[[workhouse]] test," that relief should only be available in the workhouse.  The reformed workhouses were to be uninviting, so that anyone capable of coping outside them would choose not to be in one.
 
 
 
When the act was introduced however it had been partly watered down.  The workhouse test and the idea of "less eligibility" were never mentioned themselves and the recommendation of the Royal Commission - that '[[outdoor relief]]' (relief given outside of a workhouse) should be abolished - was never implemented.
 
 
 
The report recommended separate workhouses for the aged, infirm, children, able-bodied females and able-bodied males. The report also stated that parishes should be grouped into unions inorder to spread the cost of workhouses and a central authority should be established in order to enforce these measures .
 
 
 
The Poor Law Commission took two years to write its report, the recommendations passed easily through Parliament support by both main parties the [[British Whig Party|Whigs]] and the [[Tories]]. The bill gained Royal Assent in 1834. Of those who opposed the Bill - of whom there were few were more concerned about the centralisation which the bill would bring rather than the underpinning philosophy of [[utilitarianism]].
 
 
 
== The 1834 Poor Law Amendment Act ==
 
 
 
 
 
The Bill established a [[Poor Law Commission]] to oversee the national operation of the system.  This included the forming together of small parishes into Poor Law Unions and the building of workhouses in each union for the giving of poor relief.
 
 
 
The Amendment Act did not ban all forms of [[outdoor relief]]. Not until the 1840s would the only method of relief be for the poor to enter a Workhouse.  The Workhouses were to be made little more than prisons and families were normally separated upon entering a Workhouse.
 
 
 
When the new Amendment was applied to the industrial North of [[England]] (an area the law had never considered during reviews), the system failed catastrophically as many found themselves temporarily unemployed, due to recessions or a fall in stock demands, so called 'cyclical unemployment' and were reluctant to enter a Workhouse, despite it being the only method of gaining aid.
 
 
 
The abuses and shortcomings of the system are documented in the novels of [[Charles Dickens]] and [[Frances Trollope]].  Despite the aspirations of the reformers, the [[Poor Law]] was unable to make the Workhouse as bad as life outside.  The primary problem was that in order to make the diet of the Workhouse inmates "less eligible" than what they could expect outside, it would be necessary to starve the inmates beyond an acceptable level.  It was for this reason that other ways were found to deter entrance to the Workhouses.  These measures ranged from the introduction of prison style uniforms to the segregation of 'inmates' into yards - there were normally male, female, boy and girls yards.
 
  
Fierce hostility and organised opposition from workers, politicians and religious leaders eventually lead to the Amendment Act being amended, removing the very harsh measures of the Workhouses to a certain degree.  The [[Andover workhouse scandal]], where conditions in the [[Andover, Hampshire|Andover]] Union Workhouse were found to be inhumane and dangerous, prompted a government review and the abolishment of the [[Poor Law Commission]] which was replaced with a [[Poor Law Board]].  From now on a Committee of Parliament was to administer the Poor Law, with a cabinet minister as head.
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Upon its publication, the 13 volume report pointed to the conclusion that the poor law itself was the cause of [[poverty]]. The report differentiated between poverty, which was seen as necessary, as it was fear of poverty which made people work, and [[indigence]], or the inability to earn enough to live on.
  
===Amendments to the Amendment Act===
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The volume also served to define the term [[less eligibility]], which mandated the position of the [[pauper]] to be less eligible, or less to be chosen, than that of the independent laborer. Under this idea, the reformed [[workhouse]]s were to be uninviting, so that anyone capable of coping outside of them would choose not to enter one. The report also recommended separate workhouses for all aged, infirmed, children, able-bodied females, and able-bodied men. The report also mandated that parishes be grouped into various unions in order to spread the cost of workhouses, and that a central authority should be established in order to enforce such measures.
*[[Outdoor Labour Test Order]]
 
*[[Outdoor Relief Prohibitory Order]]
 
  
==The Poor Laws in Ireland, Scotland, and Wales==
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The Poor Law Commission took two years to write its report; the recommendations passed easily through Parliament support by both the [[British Whig Party|Whigs]] and the [[Tories]]. The bill eventually gained Royal Assent in 1834. The few who opposed the Bill were more concerned about the centralization that the bill would bring rather than the underpinning philosophy of [[utilitarianism]].
In 1838 the Poor Laws were extended into [[Ireland]], although a few poorhouses had been built before that time. The workhouses were supervised by a Poor Law Commissioner in Dublin. The [[Irish Poor Laws]] were even harsher on the poor than the English Poor Laws; furthermore, the Irish unions were underfunded, and there were too few workhouses in Ireland.  As a result, the [[Irish Potato Famine]] became a humanitarian catastrophe.
 
  
Scotland launched its own Poor Law system in 1579. As the [[Act of Union]] which united England and Scotland did not alter Scotland's legal system, this Poor Law system did not disappear after 1707.  Reforms similar to the English reforms of 1834 were made in 1845.
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===The 1834 Poor Law Amendment Act===
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In 1834, the Poor Law Amendment Act was passed. which allowed for various forms of [[outdoor relief]]. Not until the 1840s, would the only method of relief for the poor be to enter a [[workhouse]]. Such workhouses were to be made little more than [[prison]]s; families were normally separated upon entering. The abuses and shortcomings of such systems are documented in the novels of [[Charles Dickens]] and [[Frances Trollope]].  
  
The English Poor Laws applied in Wales.
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However, despite the aspirations of various reformers, the Poor Law was unable to make the workhouse as bad as life outside. The primary problem was that in order to make the diet of the Workhouse inmates "less eligible" than what they could expect beyond the workhouse, it would be necessary to starve the inmates beyond an acceptable level. It was for this reason that other ways were found to deter entrance to the workhouses. These measures ranged from the introduction of prison style uniforms to the segregation of "inmates" into yards.  
  
==Poor Law Policy 1847-1900==
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Fierce hostility and organized opposition from workers, politicians, and religious leaders eventually lead to further amendments of the Amendment Act, removing the harshest measures of the workhouses. The [[Andover workhouse scandal]], where conditions in the [[Andover, Hampshire|Andover]] Union Workhouse were found to be inhumane and dangerous, prompted a government review and the abolishment of the [[Poor Law Commission]], which was replaced with a [[Poor Law Board]] under which a Committee of Parliament was to administer the Poor Law, with a cabinet minister as head.
===Commission replaced with a Board===
 
After 1847 the [[Poor Law Commission]] was replaced with a [[Poor Law Board]]. This was because of the [[Andover workhouse scandal]] and the criticism of [[Henry Parker]] who was responsible for the Andover union as well as the tensions in Somerset House caused by Chadwicks failure to become a [[Poor Law Commissioner]].
 
  
===Union Chargeability Act===
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In 1838, the Poor Laws were extended into [[Ireland]], although a few poorhouses had been established before that time. The workhouses were supervised by a Poor Law Commissioner in [[Dublin]]. The [[Irish Poor Laws]] were even harsher on the poor than the English Poor Laws; furthermore, the Irish unions were under funded, and there were too few workhouses in Ireland. As a result, the [[Irish Potato Famine]] became a humanitarian catastrophe.
The Poor Law had been altered in 1834 because of increasing costs. The [[Union Chargeability Act]] was passed in 1865 in order to make the financial burden of pauperism be placed upon the whole unions rather than individual parishes. Most Boards of Guardians were middle class and committed to keeping Poor Rates as low as possible
 
  
===Increasing powers for local government===
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==Poor Law policy 1865-1900==
After the 1867 Reform Act there was increasing welfare legislation. As this legislation required local authorities' support the Poor Law Board was replaced with a [[Local Government Board]] in 1871.  County Councils were formed in 1888, District Councils in 1894. This meant that public housing, unlike health and income maintenance, developed outside the scope of the Poor Law. The infirmaries and the workhouses remained the responsibility of the Guardians until 1930. This change was in part due to changing attitudes on the nature and causes of poverty - there was for the first time an attitude that society had a responsibility to protect its more vulnerable members.
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In 1865, the [[Union Chargeability Act]] was passed in order to make the financial burden of [[pauper]]ism placed upon the whole unions rather than individual parishes. Most Boards of Guardians were middle class and committed to keeping Poor Rates as low as possible
  
==The end of the Poor Law==
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After the 1867 Reform Act, there was increasing [[welfare]] legislation. As this legislation required local authorities' support, the Poor Law Board was replaced with a [[Local Government Board]] in 1871.  County Councils were formed in 1888, District Councils in 1894. This meant that public housing, unlike health and income maintenance, developed outside the scope of the Poor Law. The infirmaries and the workhouses remained the responsibility of the Guardians until 1930. This change was in part due to altering attitudes on the nature and causes of poverty; there was for the first time an attitude that society had a responsibility to protect its most vulnerable members.
  
The reforms of the Liberal Government 1906-14 (see [[Liberal reforms]]) made several provisions to provide social services without the stigma of the Poor Law, including [[Old age pension]]s and [[National Insurance]], and from that period fewer people were covered by the system. [[Means test]]s were developed during the inter-war period, not as part of the Poor Law, but as part of the attempt to offer relief that was not affected by the stigma of [[pauper]]ism.
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The reforms of the Liberal Government from 1906 to 1914, made several provisions to provide [[social services]] without the stigma of the Poor Law, including [[Old age pension]]s and [[National Insurance]]. From that period, fewer people were covered by the system. [[Means test]]s were developed during the inter-war period, not as part of the Poor Law, but as part of the attempt to offer relief that was not affected by the stigma of pauperism.
  
 
One aspect of the Poor Law that continued to cause resentment was that the burden of poor relief was not shared equally by rich and poor areas but, rather, fell most heavily on those areas in which poverty was at its worst. This was a central issue in the [[Poplar Rates Rebellion]] led by [[George Lansbury]] and others in 1921.
 
One aspect of the Poor Law that continued to cause resentment was that the burden of poor relief was not shared equally by rich and poor areas but, rather, fell most heavily on those areas in which poverty was at its worst. This was a central issue in the [[Poplar Rates Rebellion]] led by [[George Lansbury]] and others in 1921.
  
Workhouses were officially abolished by the [[Local Government Act 1929]], which from 1 April 1930 abolished the Unions and transferred their responsibilities to the [[county council]]s and [[county borough]]s. Some however persisted into the 1940s. The remaining responsibility for the Poor Law was given to local authorities before final abolition in 1948.
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Workhouses were officially abolished by the [[Local Government Act of 1929]], which from April 1930, abolished the Unions and transferred their responsibilities to the [[county council]]s and [[county borough]]s. Some workhouses, however, persisted into the 1940s. The remaining responsibility for the Poor Law was given to local authorities before final abolition in 1948.
  
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==References==
  
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*Boyer, George. 2006. ''An Economic History of the English Poor Law, 1750-1850''. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521031869
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*Fideler, Paul A. 2006. ''Social Welfare in Pre-industrial England: The Old Poor Law Tradition''. Palgrave-Macmillan. ISBN 0333688953
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*Rose, Michael E. 1971. ''The English Poor Law 1780-1930''. London: David & Charles. ISBN 0715349783
  
== External links ==
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==External Links==
*[http://www.workhouses.org.uk/ History/chronology of poor law, transcripts of main Acts, much on workhouses, unions etc.]
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All links retrieved November 24, 2022.
*[http://eh.net/encyclopedia/article/boyer.poor.laws.england Article on the Poor Laws from EH.NET's Encyclopedia]
 
*[http://econlib.org/library/YPDBooks/Reports/rptPLC.html Report of the Royal Poor Law Commission 1834]
 
*[http://51.1911encyclopedia.org/P/PO/POOR_LAW.htm Poor Law] - [[1911 Encyclopædia Britannica]] article
 
*[http://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/types/status_page.jsp?unit_status=PLU Poor Law Unions at visionofbritain.org.uk]
 
*[http://users.ox.ac.uk/~peter/workhouse/UnionsEngland.html List of Poor Law Unions in England]
 
  
*[http://dspace.dial.pipex.com/town/terrace/adw03/peel/pltopic.htm The Poor Law at a ''Web of English History'']
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*[http://www.workhouses.org.uk/ Poor Laws]  
*A famous depiction of women in the Victorian workhouse - [http://www.liverpoolmuseums.org.uk/picture-of-month/furtherReading.asp?id=146&venue=2 'A scene in the Westminster Union, 1878']
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*[http://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/types/status_page.jsp?unit_status=PLU Poor Law Unions].
* [http://www2.rgu.ac.uk/publicpolicy/introduction/historyf.htm British Social Policy 1601-1948]
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*[http://econlib.org/library/YPDBooks/Reports/rptPLC.html Report of the Royal Poor Law Commission, 1834].  
* [http://www.catalogue.nationalarchives.gov.uk/RdLeaflet.asp?sLeafletID=167 Poor Law research guide] from The National Archives, UK
 
* [http://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/main/w-vh/w-visits/w-findaplace/w-theworkhouse.htm Southwell Workhouse - National Trust]
 
* [http://users.ox.ac.uk/~peter/workhouse/ Workhouse - The Story of Workhouses]
 
  
 
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Latest revision as of 08:51, 24 November 2022

Former workhouse at Nantwich, dating from 1780

British Poor Laws were a body of laws designed during the Elizabethan era to provide relief for the poor population living throughout the United Kingdom. Such laws began in sixteenth century England and prevailed until after World War II and the establishment of the welfare state.

Poor Laws provided relief in various forms, including care for the elderly, sick, and infant poor, and the establishment of supportive work programs for all able-bodied poor. Such programs were often run through local parishes until 1830, whereupon the state of poverty was recognized as a state of immorality. The characterization as a "pauper" thus became an additional burden, implying not only incapacity but also depravity. At that time, Poor Laws were amended to offer workhouse employment for all able-bodied poor, and mandated conditions of unpleasantness regarding housing conditions for their poor residents. Such conditions prevailed to prevent people from abusing acts of charity. Unfortunately, due to such efforts to dissuade those capable of working and supporting themselves, the conditions in workhouses were appalling, and many of those legitimately in need of help suffered excessively. Even so, there were often insufficient places in the workhouses to satisfy the needs of the poor population.

In the twentieth century, public housing and other social services began to develop outside the scope of the Poor Law; means tests were developed, and relief that was free of the stigma of pauperism became available. Following the end of World War II, Poor Laws were replaced by systems of public welfare and social security. Yet the problem of poverty remains. Its solution involves more than state-run programs; it requires a change in the hearts and minds of people to care for each other as one family.

The classification of the poor

For much of the period of the Poor Laws, poor members of the community were classified in terms of three groups.

  1. The "impotent poor" were a group who could not look after themselves or go to work. They included the ill, the infirm, the elderly, and children with no-one to properly care for them. It was generally held that they should be looked after.
  2. The "able-bodied poor" normally referred to those who were unable to find work, either due to cyclical or long term unemployment, or a lack of skills. Attempts to assist these people, and move them from this state, varied over the centuries, but usually consisted of relief, either in the form of work or money.
  3. "vagrants" or "beggars," sometimes termed "sturdy rogues," were deemed those who could work but refused to find employment. In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries such people were seen as potential criminals, and apt to do mischief. They were normally seen as people needing punishment, and as such were often whipped in the market place as an example to others, or sometimes sent to so-called "houses of correction."

Before the English Reformation of the sixteenth century it was considered a Christian duty to care for the sick and needy. With the Church of England’s break from the Roman Catholic Church, some of this attitude was lost, which meant it became necessary for legislation to be created in order to care for the "deserving poor." Tudor Poor Laws, first introduced in 1495, aimed to deal with vagrancy, peasant begging, and charity, and were prompted by a desire for social stability. Such laws were harsh towards the able bodied poor as whippings and beatings were acceptable punishments. In the early sixteenth century, parishes began to register those of their communities considered "poor." By 1563, it became legally acceptable for Justices of the Peace to collect money from their communities on behalf of poor relief efforts. Under this legislation, all poor community members were to be classified as one of the three defined groups of poor.

Elizabethan Poor Law

In 1572, the first local poor tax was approved to fund poor relief, followed by the implementation of social workhouses and the 1601 passage of the Poor Law Act, also know as the Elizabethan Poor Law. This act allowed for the boarding of young orphaned children with families willing to accept them for a monthly payment paid to them by a local parish. The act also allowed provided materials to "set the poor on work," offered relief to people who were unable to work, and established various apprenticeships for able-bodied children.

Relief for those too ill or old to work, the so called impotent poor, often came in the form of monthly payments, donations of food, or donations of clothing. Some aged poor might also have been accommodated in parish alms houses, or private charitable institutions. Meanwhile, able-bodied beggars who had refused work were often placed in houses of correction. Provision for the able-bodied poor in the workhouse, which provided accommodation at the same time as work, was relatively unusual. Assistance given to the deserving poor that did not involve an institution like the workhouse was known as outdoor relief.

Poor Relief Act

There was much variation in the application of poor laws and there remained a large tendency for the destitute to migrate toward the more generous parishes, often situated in towns. This led to the Settlement Act of 1662, also known as the Poor Relief Act of 1662. This act allowed for provisional relief to only be available to established residents of a parish. Such affiliations could be traced mainly through birth, marriage, or apprenticeship, and all pauper applicants had to prove their membership to a certain "settlement." If they could not, they were removed to the next parish that was nearest to the place of their birth, or where they might prove some connection. Some paupers were moved hundreds of miles. Though each parish that the poor passed through was not responsible for them, they were responsible for the supply of food, drink, and shelter for at least one night.

The Poor Relief Act was criticized in later years for its effect in distorting the labor market through the power given to parishes to let them remove "undeserving" poor. Other legislation proved punitive, such as an act passed in 1697, which required the poor to wear a "badge" of red or blue cloth on the right shoulder with an embroidered letter "P" and the initial of their parish.

Eighteenth century Poor Law reforms

The eighteenth century workhouse movement began with the establishment of the Bristol Corporation of the Poor, an organization founded by an Act of Parliament in 1696. The corporation established a workhouse which combined housing and care of the poor with an affiliated house of correction for petty offenders. Following the example of Bristol, more than twelve further towns and cities established similar corporations over the next two decades.

From the late 1710s, the newly established Society for the Promotion of Christian Knowledge began to promote the idea of parochial workhouses. The Society published several pamphlets on the subject, and supported Sir Edward Knatchbull in his successful efforts to steer the Workhouse Test Act through Parliament in 1723. The act gave legislative authority for the establishment of parochial workhouses, by both single parishes and as joint ventures between two or more parishes. More importantly, the Act helped to publicize the idea of establishing workhouses to a national audience.

By 1776, more than one thousand parish and corporation workhouses had been established throughout England and Wales, housing almost 100,000 paupers. Although many parishes and pamphlet writers expected to earn money from the labor of the poor in workhouses, the vast majority of people obliged to take up residence in workhouses were the ill, elderly, or young children, whose labor proved largely unprofitable. The demands, needs, and expectations of the poor also ensured that workhouses came to take on the character of general social policy institutions, and often housed night shelters, geriatric wards, and orphanages.

In 1782, poor law reformer Thomas Gilbert finally succeeded in passing an act that established poor houses solely for the aged and the infirmed, and introduced a system of outdoor relief for the able-bodied. This was the basis for the development of the Speenhamland system, which made significant financial provisions for low-paid workers.

Nineteenth century Poor Law reforms

Widespread dissatisfaction with the poor law system grew at the beginning of the nineteenth century. The 1601 system was felt to be too costly and was widely perceived as pushing more people toward poverty even while it helped those who were already in poverty. Social reformer Jeremy Bentham argued for a disciplinary, punitive approach to social problems, whilst the writings of political economist Thomas Malthus focused attention on the problem of overpopulation, and the growth of illegitimacy. Economist David Ricardo argued that there was an "iron law of wages." In the view of such reformers, the establishment of poor relief sought to undermine the position of the "independent laborer."

In the period following the Napoleonic Wars, several reformers altered the function of the "poorhouse" into the model for a deterrent workhouse. The first of the deterrent workhouses in this period was at Bingham, Nottinghamshire. The second, established at Becher's workhouse in Southwell, is now maintained by the National Trust. George Nicholls, the overseer at Southwell, was to become a Poor Law Commissioner in the reformed system.

The Royal Commission on the Poor Law

In 1832, the Royal Commission into the Operation of the Poor Laws was written by a commission of eight members, including English economist Nassau William Senior, and social reformer Edwin Chadwick. The Royal Commission's primary concerns were with illegitimacy reflecting the influence of Malthusians, and the fear that the practices of the Old Poor Law were undermining the position of the independent laborer. Two practices were of particular concern to the commissioners: The "roundsman" system, where overseers hired out paupers as cheap labor, and the Speenhamland system, which subsidized low wages without relief.

Upon its publication, the 13 volume report pointed to the conclusion that the poor law itself was the cause of poverty. The report differentiated between poverty, which was seen as necessary, as it was fear of poverty which made people work, and indigence, or the inability to earn enough to live on.

The volume also served to define the term less eligibility, which mandated the position of the pauper to be less eligible, or less to be chosen, than that of the independent laborer. Under this idea, the reformed workhouses were to be uninviting, so that anyone capable of coping outside of them would choose not to enter one. The report also recommended separate workhouses for all aged, infirmed, children, able-bodied females, and able-bodied men. The report also mandated that parishes be grouped into various unions in order to spread the cost of workhouses, and that a central authority should be established in order to enforce such measures.

The Poor Law Commission took two years to write its report; the recommendations passed easily through Parliament support by both the Whigs and the Tories. The bill eventually gained Royal Assent in 1834. The few who opposed the Bill were more concerned about the centralization that the bill would bring rather than the underpinning philosophy of utilitarianism.

The 1834 Poor Law Amendment Act

In 1834, the Poor Law Amendment Act was passed. which allowed for various forms of outdoor relief. Not until the 1840s, would the only method of relief for the poor be to enter a workhouse. Such workhouses were to be made little more than prisons; families were normally separated upon entering. The abuses and shortcomings of such systems are documented in the novels of Charles Dickens and Frances Trollope.

However, despite the aspirations of various reformers, the Poor Law was unable to make the workhouse as bad as life outside. The primary problem was that in order to make the diet of the Workhouse inmates "less eligible" than what they could expect beyond the workhouse, it would be necessary to starve the inmates beyond an acceptable level. It was for this reason that other ways were found to deter entrance to the workhouses. These measures ranged from the introduction of prison style uniforms to the segregation of "inmates" into yards.

Fierce hostility and organized opposition from workers, politicians, and religious leaders eventually lead to further amendments of the Amendment Act, removing the harshest measures of the workhouses. The Andover workhouse scandal, where conditions in the Andover Union Workhouse were found to be inhumane and dangerous, prompted a government review and the abolishment of the Poor Law Commission, which was replaced with a Poor Law Board under which a Committee of Parliament was to administer the Poor Law, with a cabinet minister as head.

In 1838, the Poor Laws were extended into Ireland, although a few poorhouses had been established before that time. The workhouses were supervised by a Poor Law Commissioner in Dublin. The Irish Poor Laws were even harsher on the poor than the English Poor Laws; furthermore, the Irish unions were under funded, and there were too few workhouses in Ireland. As a result, the Irish Potato Famine became a humanitarian catastrophe.

Poor Law policy 1865-1900

In 1865, the Union Chargeability Act was passed in order to make the financial burden of pauperism placed upon the whole unions rather than individual parishes. Most Boards of Guardians were middle class and committed to keeping Poor Rates as low as possible

After the 1867 Reform Act, there was increasing welfare legislation. As this legislation required local authorities' support, the Poor Law Board was replaced with a Local Government Board in 1871. County Councils were formed in 1888, District Councils in 1894. This meant that public housing, unlike health and income maintenance, developed outside the scope of the Poor Law. The infirmaries and the workhouses remained the responsibility of the Guardians until 1930. This change was in part due to altering attitudes on the nature and causes of poverty; there was for the first time an attitude that society had a responsibility to protect its most vulnerable members.

The reforms of the Liberal Government from 1906 to 1914, made several provisions to provide social services without the stigma of the Poor Law, including Old age pensions and National Insurance. From that period, fewer people were covered by the system. Means tests were developed during the inter-war period, not as part of the Poor Law, but as part of the attempt to offer relief that was not affected by the stigma of pauperism.

One aspect of the Poor Law that continued to cause resentment was that the burden of poor relief was not shared equally by rich and poor areas but, rather, fell most heavily on those areas in which poverty was at its worst. This was a central issue in the Poplar Rates Rebellion led by George Lansbury and others in 1921.

Workhouses were officially abolished by the Local Government Act of 1929, which from April 1930, abolished the Unions and transferred their responsibilities to the county councils and county boroughs. Some workhouses, however, persisted into the 1940s. The remaining responsibility for the Poor Law was given to local authorities before final abolition in 1948.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Boyer, George. 2006. An Economic History of the English Poor Law, 1750-1850. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521031869
  • Fideler, Paul A. 2006. Social Welfare in Pre-industrial England: The Old Poor Law Tradition. Palgrave-Macmillan. ISBN 0333688953
  • Rose, Michael E. 1971. The English Poor Law 1780-1930. London: David & Charles. ISBN 0715349783

External Links

All links retrieved November 24, 2022.

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