Difference between revisions of "Workhouse" - New World Encyclopedia

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==The End of Workhouses==
 
==The End of Workhouses==
At the end of the 19th century, conditions of workhouses gradually began to improve. During this period, most residents of workhouses consisted of the elderly, the sick and orphaned children. Resident diets improved, becoming better with more variation, and daily tasks became less strained. Often, orphaned children were sent from the workhouse to special schools or countryside cottages. By 1930 most workhouses had become extinct, with the majority of the buildings sold off or demolished. Few facilities became Public Assistant Institutions, providing accommodation for the, disabled, elderly, chronically sick and homeless.  
+
At the end of the 19th century, conditions of workhouses gradually began to improve. During this period, most residents of workhouses consisted of the elderly, the sick and orphaned children. Resident diets improved, becoming better with more variation, and daily tasks became less strained. Often, orphaned children were sent from the workhouse to special schools or countryside cottages. By 1930 most workhouses had become extinct, with the majority of the buildings sold off or demolished. Few facilities became Public Assistant Institutions, providing accommodation for the, disabled, elderly, chronically sick and [[homeless]].  
  
 
===Poor Farms===
 
===Poor Farms===
In the mid 19th century, the [[United States]] developed an idea similar to the workhouse termed a [[Poor Farm]]. In mid 19th century America, poverty was viewed as a dishonoring, guilty state, justifying a rather uncharitable treatment resembling a [[Reformatory]] or forced [[penal labor]]. On poor farms, poor populations could be put to hard, manual labor and were often subject to [[corporal punishment|physical punishment]].  
+
In the mid 19th century, the [[United States]] developed an idea similar to the workhouse termed a [[Poor Farm]]. At this time in America, poverty was viewed as a dishonoring, guilty state, justifying a rather uncharitable treatment resembling a [[reformatory]] or forced [[penal labor]]. On poor farms, poor populations could be put to hard, manual labor and were often subject to [[corporal punishment|physical punishment]].  
  
Often, a poorhouse was situated on the grounds of a poor farm on which able-bodied residents were required to work; such farms were common throughout the [[United States]] in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Poor farms were of a similar economic complex as a [[prison farm]] or other penal or 'charitable' public institutions. Most poor farms were working farms that produced at least some of the produce, grain, or livestock that they consumed.  Residents were expected to provide labor to the extent that their health would allow, both in the fields and in housekeeping or care for other residents.  Rules were strict and accommodations minimal.
+
Often, a poorhouse was situated on the grounds of a poor farm on which able-bodied residents were required to work. Such farms were of a similar economic complex as a [[prison farm]] or other penal or 'charitable' public institutions. Most poor farms were working farms that produced at least some of the produce, grain, or livestock that they consumed.  Residents were expected to provide labor to the extent that their health would allow, both in the fields and in housekeeping or care for other residents.  Rules were strict and accommodations minimal.
  
 
Poor farms were [[Counties of the United States|county]]-run, and supported a significant number of paupers, elderly and disabled people at public expense.  The use of poor farms significantly declined after the passage of the [[Social Security Act]] in 1935. By 1950 most poor farm institutions had disappeared.
 
Poor farms were [[Counties of the United States|county]]-run, and supported a significant number of paupers, elderly and disabled people at public expense.  The use of poor farms significantly declined after the passage of the [[Social Security Act]] in 1935. By 1950 most poor farm institutions had disappeared.

Revision as of 21:35, 10 July 2007


A workhouse or poorhouse is a publicly maintained facility for the support and housing of dependent or needy persons, typically run by a local government entity such as a county or municipality. The term is commonly applied to such a facility that houses the destitute elderly; institutions of this nature were founded in 17th century England and were widespread in the United States prior to the adoption of the Social Security program in the 1930’s. Facilities housing indigents who are not elderly are typically referred to as homeless shelters, or simply "shelters," in current usage.

History

Former workhouse at Nantwich, dating from 1780.

The first record of the word workhouse has been dated back to 1631 in a report by the mayor of Abingdon, England in which he established “a workhouse to set poor people to work.” [1] In British history, a workhouse was a place where people who were unable to support themselves could go to live and work. Though the 1601 Elizabethan Poor Law made no mention of workhouses, the act did state that “materials should be bought to provide work for the unemployed able-bodied."[2] The act also proposed the building of housing for the impotent poor, which included the elderly and chronically sick. An act following the end of Queen Elizabeth’s reign known as the Act for the Relief of the Poor held parishes legally responsible for the poor. The act was funded by a poor-rate tax paid by local property owners.

The majority of poor relief during this time took the form of charitable grants, clothing or food. The workhouse system began to evolve in the 17th century as a way for parishes to decrease the amount of poor-rate taxes. The 1723 passing of the Workhouse Test Act made it possible for parishes to offer workhouse employment in return for board and lodging in place of charitable grants. In 1782 the passing of Gilbert’s Union Act simplified the procedure for parishes to establish workhouses by allowing a group of parishes to form a Gilbert Union. This act allowed for able-bodied poor to be exempt from workhouses until sufficient work could be found for them.

In the early 19th century, the general social conception of poverty transformed from a sympathetic viewpoint toward one of intolerance. Poverty became largely viewed as the result of fecklessness, immorality, idleness and drunkenness. Many believed too liberal a welfare regime would merely encourage these vices and discourage self-improvement and honest labor. This coupled with the Industrial Revolution, a growing population and move toward urbanization, English society faced increasing levels of poverty that the former parish system was unable to cope with.

In response, the 1834 Poor Law Amendment Act was passed which organized the 15,000 or so parishes in England into Poor Law Unions. Each union was managed by a Board of Guardians and administered by a Poor Law Commission who looked after a mixed workhouse of varying ages and abilities. New buildings were designed to separate the inmates into certain categories. Under such a program, poor relief would only be granted to those willing to enter the bleak conditions of a workhouse. If an able-bodied man wished to enter the workhouse, his entire family was forced to enter with him.

Workhouse Conditions

Poorhouse Inmates

In the 1830’s, workhouse conditions were deliberately harsh to deter the able-bodied idle poor from relying on them. Men and women were segregated and children were separated from their parents. Aged pauper couples who by definition were neither idle nor criminal were not allowed to share a bedroom. By entering a workhouse paupers were held to have forfeited responsibility for their children. Education was provided but pauper children were often forcibly apprenticed without the permission or knowledge of their parents. This may well have been done for the best motives but was desperately cruel nonetheless. Inmates surrendered their own clothes and wore a distinctive uniform.

There were many well-meaning measures such as education for children and the provision of doctors and chaplains. However most workhouses were run on a shoestring and these philanthropic gestures often fell far short. In many ways the treatment in a workhouse was little different from that in a prison leaving many inmates feeling that they were being punished for the crime of poverty. Some workhouse masters embezzled the money intended for blankets, food and other important items for their own personal use. Visitors reported rooms full of sick or elderly inmates with threadbare blankets and the windows wide open to the freezing weather.

The workhouse system was the mainstay of poor relief through the Victorian era. Overall they were places of dread to the laboring and indigent poor. Reformers like Charles Booth and Seebohm Rowntree revealed that there was widespread poverty in Victorian England and that the workhouse system was not helping. Books such as Charles Dickens' Oliver Twist highlighted such abuse.

Diet

The meals supplied in the workhouse had to meet the condition of less eligibility, a principle stemming from the Poor Law Amendment Act of 1834. The principle enforced workhouse conditions to be extremely harsh in order to deter the impoverished from taking advantage of the workhouse system. Conditions were callous, and while adequate, the food was boring and of poor quality. Until 1842 all meals were eaten in silence and in the 1830's some workhouses did not allow cutlery to complete the humiliation.

Breakfast in a workhouse usually consisted of bread and gruel. Dinner often consisted of a poor quality vegetable soup. For supper a workhouse member could expect bread and cheese. Due to this poor diet the members of a workhouse often suffered from malnutrition.

In the 1850’s the then vicar of Stoughton and Racton in West Sussex wrote to the Guardians of the Westbourne Workhouse requesting that, as a matter of Christian charity, second helpings of gruel were provided on Christmas Day. He was informed in no uncertain terms that if the rations were raised above the minimum required to keep body and soul together the result would be laziness fecklessness and hordes of otherwise able-bodied people clamoring to be received.

Discipline

The workhouse master could implement rules in order to create a system of rewards and punishments which aimed to instill discipline within the inmates. For breaking rules paupers could be punished with any type of specific punishments set out by the Poor Law Commission. Examples included beatings, confinement cells and reductions in rations. Work was provided to keep the inmates busy, though it was usually boring, hard and degrading. Examples included crushing bones, stone breaking and picking oakum. Cooking and cleaning in the workhouse kept many busy.

In 1846 the notorious Andover scandal revealed a shocking state of affairs at the Hampshire workhouse. The Master, ex-sergeant major Colin M'Dougal, ran a reign of terror. Starving paupers were reduced to sucking the marrow from the bones intended to be ground for fertilizer.

In the mid 1850’s, workhouse infirmaries showed slight improvements. In 1854 the superior facilities offered by the Wakefield workhouse led to the closure of the local hospital. In 1865 Florence Nightingale dispatched Agnes Jones and twelve nurses to improve the Liverpool Workhouse. Many of the former nurses were fired and various improvements were instituted. By 1900 many people were voluntarily entering workhouse infirmaries, drawn by the better standards of care. Though workhouse conditions would improve as the nineteenth century wore on, only a few lived up to the high-minded ideals of the founding systems.

Staff

In order to save money the Poor Law Commissioners paid abominably badly. Though the Governor of a Victorian prison received £600.00 per annum, a workhouse master running a similarly sized organization received on average £80.00 per annum. Inevitably workhouse service often attracted ill-qualified, brutal and incompetent directors. Workhouse masterships often attracted rootless ex-army officers with little experience of running large institutions. Master George Catch, an ex-policemen, ran a regime of corruption, tyranny and murder throughout several workhouses until eventually committing suicide.

Workhouse chaplains and doctors were paid less than half of what they could expect anywhere else. Medical officers had to pay for the drugs they supplied and the commonplace practice of employing illiterate paupers as nurses led to significant problems. However, workhouse teachers represented a particular problem. Workhouse guardians were keen to educate pauper children for the very good reason that if they could read and write they were less likely to return to the workhouse as adults. In Salisbury, Coventry and Deptford it was revealed that the appointed teacher, often one of the paupers, was in fact illiterate. Prior to Forster's Education Act of 1870 poor children were to receive no education at all.

As economic conditions improved throughout the 19th century, workhouses took in very few of the able bodied poor. By the late 19th century the overwhelming bulk of workhouse inmates were the elderly, orphaned or abandoned children, deserted wives and the mentally or physically ill. Without need to deter these unfortunate people by harsh conditions, there proved some structural improvement.

Despite harsh conditions, poor workhouse education and medical facilities marked an improvement on what was offered elsewhere to the poor population. Though the majority of workhouse horrors can be traced back to the first half of the nineteenth century, some workhouses proved models of efficiency and compassion. At Ashford workhouse many paupers wept at the retirement of their master, an ex naval officer.

The End of Workhouses

At the end of the 19th century, conditions of workhouses gradually began to improve. During this period, most residents of workhouses consisted of the elderly, the sick and orphaned children. Resident diets improved, becoming better with more variation, and daily tasks became less strained. Often, orphaned children were sent from the workhouse to special schools or countryside cottages. By 1930 most workhouses had become extinct, with the majority of the buildings sold off or demolished. Few facilities became Public Assistant Institutions, providing accommodation for the, disabled, elderly, chronically sick and homeless.

Poor Farms

In the mid 19th century, the United States developed an idea similar to the workhouse termed a Poor Farm. At this time in America, poverty was viewed as a dishonoring, guilty state, justifying a rather uncharitable treatment resembling a reformatory or forced penal labor. On poor farms, poor populations could be put to hard, manual labor and were often subject to physical punishment.

Often, a poorhouse was situated on the grounds of a poor farm on which able-bodied residents were required to work. Such farms were of a similar economic complex as a prison farm or other penal or 'charitable' public institutions. Most poor farms were working farms that produced at least some of the produce, grain, or livestock that they consumed. Residents were expected to provide labor to the extent that their health would allow, both in the fields and in housekeeping or care for other residents. Rules were strict and accommodations minimal.

Poor farms were county-run, and supported a significant number of paupers, elderly and disabled people at public expense. The use of poor farms significantly declined after the passage of the Social Security Act in 1935. By 1950 most poor farm institutions had disappeared.

Notes

  1. The Workhouse Retrieved June 22, 2007.
  2. The Workhouse Retrieved June 22, 2007.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Morrison, Kathryn. 1999. The Workhouse: A Study of Poor-Law Buildings. Royal Commission. ISBN 1873592361.
  • Fowler, Simon. 2007. The Workhouse: An Everyday Tale of Ultimate Degredation. The National Archives Press. ISBN 1905615035.
  • Driver, Felix. 2004. Power and Pauperism: The Workhouse System, 1834-1884. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521607477
  • Higginbotham, Peter. The Workhouse. Workhouses.org.uk. Retrieved 25 May 2007.
  • Longmate, Norman. 2003. The Workhouse. Pimlico. ISBN 0712606378
  • Stevenson, Karen. History of Long Term Care. ElderWeb.com Retrieved 25 May 2007.
  • Rossbret UK Institutions. Workhouse Life. Institutions.org.uk Retrieved 25 May 2007.

External Links

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