At the heart of popular and historiographical understandings of the English and Welsh New Poor Law (1834-1929) stands the workhouse. Driven by a methodological and philosophical focus on scandals, we have come to understand the workhouse as a dark place, one of confinement and harsh treatment which the poor were powerless to resist except through riots and only then in extremis. Yet by bringing together a suite of interdisciplinary methods not often utilised in approaches to the history of welfare and applying them to new sources emerging from large-scale research projects on the New Poor Law, we can offer a very different reading of pauper experiences. Like most welfare historians, in this article we count (numbers of lunatic inmates for i...
At the heart of the English and Welsh Old Poor Law (1601–1834) lay a set of timeless questions: who ...
Within the past decade research from the 'welfare from below' perspective has increasingly sought to...
The image of the Victorian workhouse is one of a "bastille": a building designed to be a deterrent w...
At the heart of popular and historiographical understandings of the English and Welsh New Poor Law (...
This article is the first to use a combination of three different types of inventories from Dorset t...
The deterrent workhouse was a central expression of the new poor law and with it strict rules for th...
To date, there has been little attempt to address the archaeological evidence of the New Poor Law (N...
The workhouse remains a totemic institution for social historians, yet we still know very little abo...
This article uses a microhistorical approach to investigate the “workhouse experience” of a single p...
Histories of the English workhouse and its satellite institutions have concentrated on legal change,...
This fascinating study investigates the experience of English poverty between 1700 and 1900 and in t...
From 1834 the New Poor Law was a key provider of state-funded welfare for the very poor in nineteent...
The working-age poor were the section of the poor who most preoccupied the Poor Law Commissioners an...
Historians have long been fascinated with the institution and institutionalisation of workhouses est...
This thesis, Pauper Narratives in the Welsh Borders: 1750-1840, will make a substantial contribution...
At the heart of the English and Welsh Old Poor Law (1601–1834) lay a set of timeless questions: who ...
Within the past decade research from the 'welfare from below' perspective has increasingly sought to...
The image of the Victorian workhouse is one of a "bastille": a building designed to be a deterrent w...
At the heart of popular and historiographical understandings of the English and Welsh New Poor Law (...
This article is the first to use a combination of three different types of inventories from Dorset t...
The deterrent workhouse was a central expression of the new poor law and with it strict rules for th...
To date, there has been little attempt to address the archaeological evidence of the New Poor Law (N...
The workhouse remains a totemic institution for social historians, yet we still know very little abo...
This article uses a microhistorical approach to investigate the “workhouse experience” of a single p...
Histories of the English workhouse and its satellite institutions have concentrated on legal change,...
This fascinating study investigates the experience of English poverty between 1700 and 1900 and in t...
From 1834 the New Poor Law was a key provider of state-funded welfare for the very poor in nineteent...
The working-age poor were the section of the poor who most preoccupied the Poor Law Commissioners an...
Historians have long been fascinated with the institution and institutionalisation of workhouses est...
This thesis, Pauper Narratives in the Welsh Borders: 1750-1840, will make a substantial contribution...
At the heart of the English and Welsh Old Poor Law (1601–1834) lay a set of timeless questions: who ...
Within the past decade research from the 'welfare from below' perspective has increasingly sought to...
The image of the Victorian workhouse is one of a "bastille": a building designed to be a deterrent w...