The social and economic position of lodgers in Europe and North America has attracted considerable scholarship, yet the financial and interpersonal relationships between lodgers and boarders and their hosts in working-class homes is somewhat underdeveloped. This article examines patterns of lodging and boarding in working-class homes in Scotland between 1861 and 1911, focusing upon multiple layers of connection between paying guests and householders. This article demonstrates that connections had national and ethnic roots, and that taking in lodgers and boarders was of prime cultural and economic importance for many. The ability to offer space played a crucial role in the social and economic status of single, separated and widowed women, an...
Lodging, or else taking in lodgers, was a common way of life for many seventeenth and eighteenth-ce...
This thematic section of ABE Journal considers the contribution of Scotland and “Scottishness” to th...
This article explores the shifting relationship between Scottish Travellers, voluntary and mission a...
Lodging and boarding were well established housing options which played an important economic and so...
Recent research using coroners' inquests (both the original records and ensuing newspaper reports) h...
Lodging and boarding were well established housing options which played an important economic and so...
This article considers relationships between artisans and aristocrats on estates and elsewhere in Sc...
During the 1920s emigration from Scotland exceeded the natural growth of population. Yet relatively ...
This article presents an analysis of British urban working-class housing conditions in 1904, using a...
This article examines the stereotype of the middle-class Victorian woman limited to a life of domest...
Large-scale migration within and to the nineteenth-century British Isles was a feature of a dynamic ...
This article presents an analysis of British urban working-class housing conditions in 1904, using a...
This thesis examines domestic service practises among some members of the Yorkshire gentry during th...
The Paisley in the mid-nineteenth century is discussed in terms of the patterns of living which the...
This study explores the effects of private British boarding school on womenlandowners' identity and ...
Lodging, or else taking in lodgers, was a common way of life for many seventeenth and eighteenth-ce...
This thematic section of ABE Journal considers the contribution of Scotland and “Scottishness” to th...
This article explores the shifting relationship between Scottish Travellers, voluntary and mission a...
Lodging and boarding were well established housing options which played an important economic and so...
Recent research using coroners' inquests (both the original records and ensuing newspaper reports) h...
Lodging and boarding were well established housing options which played an important economic and so...
This article considers relationships between artisans and aristocrats on estates and elsewhere in Sc...
During the 1920s emigration from Scotland exceeded the natural growth of population. Yet relatively ...
This article presents an analysis of British urban working-class housing conditions in 1904, using a...
This article examines the stereotype of the middle-class Victorian woman limited to a life of domest...
Large-scale migration within and to the nineteenth-century British Isles was a feature of a dynamic ...
This article presents an analysis of British urban working-class housing conditions in 1904, using a...
This thesis examines domestic service practises among some members of the Yorkshire gentry during th...
The Paisley in the mid-nineteenth century is discussed in terms of the patterns of living which the...
This study explores the effects of private British boarding school on womenlandowners' identity and ...
Lodging, or else taking in lodgers, was a common way of life for many seventeenth and eighteenth-ce...
This thematic section of ABE Journal considers the contribution of Scotland and “Scottishness” to th...
This article explores the shifting relationship between Scottish Travellers, voluntary and mission a...