London Metropolitan Archives Greenwich Board

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Load more

LONDON METROPOLITAN ARCHIVES Page 1 GREENWICH BOARD OF GUARDIANS GBG Reference Description Dates MINUTES AND REPORTS GBG/001 Signed minutes: indexed 1836 Dec 01 - 1 volume 1837 GBG/002 Signed minutes: indexed 1838 Jan 04 - 1 volume 1838 GBG/003 Signed minutes: indexed 1839 Jan 03 - 1 volume 1840 GBG/004 Signed minutes: indexed 1840 Apr 02 - 1 volume 1841 GBG/005 Signed minutes: indexed 1841 Jun 03 - 1 volume 1842 GBG/006 Signed minutes: indexed 1842 May 26 - 1 volume 1843 GBG/007 Signed minutes: indexed 1843 Aug 24 - 1 volume 1844 GBG/008 Signed minutes: indexed 1844 Sep 12 - 1 volume 1846 GBG/009 Signed minutes: indexed 1846 Mar 19 - 1 volume 1847 GBG/010 Signed minutes: indexed 1847 Apr 29 - 1 volume 1848 GBG/011 Signed minutes: indexed 1848 Jun 01 - 1 volume 1849 GBG/012 Signed minutes: indexed 1849 Aug 09 - 1 volume 1850 GBG/013 Signed minutes: indexed 1850 Oct 24 - 1 volume 1851 GBG/014 Signed minutes: indexed 1851 Nov 27 - 1 volume 1853 LONDON METROPOLITAN ARCHIVES Page 2 GREENWICH BOARD OF GUARDIANS GBG Reference Description Dates GBG/015 Signed minutes: indexed 1853 Mar 17 - 1 volume 1854 GBG/016 Signed minutes: indexed 1854 Jul 06 - 1 volume 1856 GBG/017 Signed minutes: indexed 1856 Aug 14 - 1 volume 1859 GBG/018 Signed minutes: indexed 1859 Mar 16 - 1 volume 1861 GBG/019 Signed minutes: indexed 1861 Aug 15 - 1 volume 1864 GBG/020 Signed minutes: indexed 1864 Mar 16 - 1 volume 1867 GBG/021 Signed minutes: indexed 1867 Mar 21 - 1 volume 1870 GBG/022 Signed minutes: indexed 1870 Mar 16 - 1 volume 1873 GBG/023 Signed minutes 1873 May 01 - 1 volume 1876 GBG/024 Signed minutes 1876 Mar 30 - 1 volume 1878 GBG/025 Signed minutes: indexed 1878 Nov 14 - 1 volume 1881 GBG/026 Signed minutes: indexed 1881 Feb 24 - 1 volume 1883 GBG/027 Signed minutes: indexed 1883 Mar 21 - 1 volume 1885 GBG/028 Signed minutes: indexed 1885 May 14 - 1 volume 1887 LONDON METROPOLITAN ARCHIVES Page 3 GREENWICH BOARD OF GUARDIANS GBG Reference Description Dates GBG/029 Signed minutes: indexed 1887 Sep 29 - 1 volume 1889 GBG/030 Signed minutes: indexed 1889 Sep 26 - 1 volume 1891 GBG/031 Signed minutes: indexed 1891 Oct 29 - 1 volume 1894 GBG/032 Signed minutes: indexed 1894 Feb 22 - 1 volume 1896 GBG/033 Signed minutes: indexed 1896 Aug 06 - 1 volume 1898 GBG/034 Signed minutes: indexed 1899 Jan 05 - 1 volume 1899 GBG/035 Signed minutes: indexed 1899 Apr 27 - 1 volume 1900 GBG/036 Signed minutes: indexed 1900 Apr 26 - 1 volume 1901 GBG/037 Signed minutes: indexed 1901 Apr 18 - 1 volume 1902 GBG/038 Signed minutes: indexed 1902 Apr 24 - 1 volume 1903 GBG/039 Signed minutes: indexed 1903 Apr 23 - 1 volume 1904 GBG/040 Signed minutes: indexed 1904 Apr 21 - 1 volume 1905 GBG/041 Signed minutes: indexed 1905 Apr 20 - 1 volume 1906 GBG/042 Signed minutes: indexed 1906 Apr 19 - 1 volume 1907 LONDON METROPOLITAN ARCHIVES Page 4 GREENWICH BOARD OF GUARDIANS GBG Reference Description Dates GBG/043 Signed minutes: indexed 1907 Apr 18 - 1 volume 1908 GBG/044 Signed minutes: indexed 1908 Apr 16 - 1 volume 1909 GBG/045 Signed minutes: indexed 1909 Apr 29 - 1 volume 1910 GBG/046 Signed minutes: indexed 1910 Apr 21 - 1 volume 1911 GBG/047 Signed minutes: indexed 1911 Apr 27 - 1 volume 1912 GBG/048 Signed minutes: indexed 1912 Apr 25 - 1 volume 1913 GBG/049 Signed minutes: indexed 1913 Apr 24 - 1 volume 1914 GBG/050 Signed minutes: indexed 1914 Apr 23 - 1 volume 1915 GBG/051 Signed minutes: indexed 1915 Apr 22 - 1 volume 1916 GBG/052 Signed minutes: indexed 1916 Apr 26 - 1 volume 1917 GBG/053 Signed minutes: indexed 1917 May 03 - 1 volume 1918 GBG/054 Signed minutes: indexed 1918 Apr 18 - 1 volume 1919 GBG/055 Signed minutes: indexed 1917 Apr 17 - 1 volume 1920 GBG/056 Signed minutes: indexed 1920 Apr 29 - 1 volume 1921 LONDON METROPOLITAN ARCHIVES Page 5 GREENWICH BOARD OF GUARDIANS GBG Reference Description Dates GBG/057 Signed minutes 1921 Apr 28 - 1 volume 1922 GBG/058 Signed minutes 1922 Apr 27 - 1 volume 1922 GBG/059 Signed minutes 1922 Nov 09 - 1 volume 1923 GBG/060 Signed minutes 1923 Apr 26 - 1 volume 1923 GBG/061 Signed minutes 1923 Sep 13 - 1 volume 1923 GBG/062 Signed minutes 1924 Jan 03 - 1 volume 1924 GBG/063 Signed minutes 1924 Apr 24 - 1 volume 1924 GBG/064 Signed minutes 1924 Sep 11 - 1 volume 1924 GBG/065 Signed minutes 1925 Jan 01 - 1 volume 1929 GBG/066 Signed minutes 1925 Apr 23 - 1 volume 1925 GBG/067 Signed minutes 1925 Sep 10 - 1 volume 1926 GBG/068 Signed minutes 1926 Jan 14 - 1 volume 1926 GBG/069 Signed minutes 1926 Apr 22 - 1 volume 1926 GBG/070 Signed minutes 1926 Aug 26 - 1 volume 1926 LONDON METROPOLITAN ARCHIVES Page 6 GREENWICH BOARD OF GUARDIANS GBG Reference Description Dates GBG/071 Signed minutes 1926 Dec 02 - 1 volume 1927 GBG/072 Signed minutes 1927 Apr 21 - 1 volume 1927 GBG/073 Signed minutes 1927 Aug 11 - 1 volume 1927 GBG/074 Signed minutes 1928 Jan 12 - 1 volume 1928 GBG/075 Signed minutes 1928 Apr 19 - 1 volume 1928 GBG/076 Signed minutes 1928 Aug 23 - 1 volume 1928 GBG/077 Signed minutes 1928 Dec 13 - 1 volume 1929 GBG/078 Signed minutes 1929 Apr 18 - 1 volume 1929 GBG/079 Signed minutes 1929 Aug 22 - 1 volume 1929 GBG/080 Signed minutes 1929 Dec 12 - 1 volume 1930 GBG/081 Index to Board minutes 1921 Apr - 1 volume 1922 GBG/082 Index to Board minutes 1922 Apr - 1 volume 1923 GBG/083 Index to Board minutes 1923 Apr - 1 volume 1924 GBG/084 Index to Board minutes 1924 Apr - 1 volume 1925 LONDON METROPOLITAN ARCHIVES Page 7 GREENWICH BOARD OF GUARDIANS GBG Reference Description Dates GBG/085 Index to Board minutes 1925 Apr - 1 volume 1926 GBG/086 Index to Board minutes 1926 Apr - 1 volume 1927 GBG/087 Index to Board minutes 1927 Apr - 1 volume 1928 GBG/088 Index to Board minutes 1928 Apr - 1 volume 1929 GBG/089 Index to Board minutes 1929 Apr - 1 volume 1930 GBG/090 Building sub-committee: Report book 1900 Jan 11 - 1 volume 1902 GBG/091 Calvert Road Homes Committee: Signed 1916 Apr 06 - minutes 1921 1 volume GBG/092 Calvert Road Homes Rota Committee: Signed 1905 Jan 04 - reports 1927 1 volume GBG/093 Children's Accommodation Committee: Minutes 1916 May 02 - 1 volume 1920 GBG/094 Children's Accommodation Committee: Reports 1923 Jun 27 - 1 volume 1930 GBG/095 Children's Homes Committee: Signed minutes 1904 Jan 07 - 1 volume 1906 GBG/096 Children's Homes Committee: Signed minutes: 1906 Apr 12 - indexed 1908 1 volume GBG/097 Children's Homes Committee: Signed minutes 1908 Mar 26 - 1 volume 1910 LONDON METROPOLITAN ARCHIVES Page 8 GREENWICH BOARD OF GUARDIANS GBG Reference Description Dates GBG/098 Children's Homes Committee: Signed minutes 1910 Oct 06 - 1 volume 1913 GBG/099 Children's Homes Committee: Signed minutes 1913 May 15 - 1 volume 1915 GBG/100 Children's Homes Committee: Signed minutes 1915 Sep 16 - 1 volume 1919 GBG/101 Children's Homes Committee: Signed minutes 1919 Aug 28 - 1 volume 1921 GBG/102 Children's Homes Committee: Signed minutes 1921 May 05 - 1 volume 1926 GBG/103 Children's Homes Committee: Signed minutes: 1926 Apr 29 - indexed 1930 1 volume GBG/104 Children's Homes Committee: Index to minutes (incomplete) 1 volume GBG/105 Children's Homes Rota Committee: Signed 1923 Nov 15 - reports (including Finance and Stores 1948 Committee reports 1 volume GBG/106 Conduit House committee: Signed minutes 1905 Mar 03 - 1 volume 1906 GBG/107 Contracts Committee: Signed minutes: indexed 1923 Jul 04 - 1 volume 1930 GBG/108 Deptford Dispensary: Visitors' signed reports 1898 May 25 - 1 volume 1905 GBG/109 Deptford Dispensary: Visitors' signed reports 1905 Oct 04 - 1 volume 1914 GBG/110 Deptford Dispensary: Visitors' signed reports 1914 Jul 15 - 1 volume 1918 LONDON METROPOLITAN ARCHIVES Page 9 GREENWICH BOARD OF GUARDIANS GBG Reference Description Dates GBG/111 Deptford Dispensary: Visitors' signed reports 1922 Oct 17 - 1 volume 1927 GBG/112 Deptford Dispensary: Visitors' signed reports 1927 Apr 27 - 1 volume 1930 GBG/113 Engineering Committee: Signed minutes 1910 Dec 09 - 1 volume 1914 GBG/114 Finance Committee: Signed minutes: indexed 1923 Jun 20 - 1 volume 1925 GBG/115 Finance Committee: Signed minutes: indexed 1925 Apr 29 - 1 volume 1927 GBG/116 Finance Committee: Signed minutes: indexed 1927 Apr 26 - 1 volume 1930 GBG/117 Finance Committee: Signed reports 1883 Jan 04 - 1 volume 1889 GBG/118 Finance Committee: Signed reports 1889 Feb 28 - 1 volume 1894 GBG/119 Finance Committee: Signed reports 1894 Oct 04 - 1 volume 1897 GBG/120 Finance Committee: Signed reports 1897 Oct 28 - 1 volume 1903 GBG/121 Finance Committee: Signed reports 1903 Mar 26 - 1 volume 1909 GBG/122 Finance Committee: Signed reports 1909 Apr 13 - 1 volume 1910 GBG/123 Finance Committee: Signed reports 1910 Aug 30 - 1 volume 1912 GBG/124 Finance Committee: Signed reports 1912 Jan 30 - 1 volume 1914 LONDON METROPOLITAN ARCHIVES Page 10 GREENWICH BOARD OF GUARDIANS GBG Reference Description Dates GBG/125 Finance Committee: Signed reports 1914 Oct 20 - 1 volume 1916 GBG/126 Finance Committee: Signed reports 1916 Jul 25 - 1 volume 1918 GBG/127 Finance Committee: Signed reports 1919 Jan 07 - 1 volume 1921 GBG/128 Finance Committee: Signed reports 1921 Feb 22 - 1 volume 1922 GBG/129 Finance Committee: Signed reports 1925 Apr 28 - 1 volume 1927 GBG/130 Finance Committee: Signed reports 1927 May 10 - 1 volume 1929 GBG/131 Greenwich DispensaryVisitors' signed reports 1898 Jul 06 - 1 volume 1905 GBG/132 Greenwich DispensaryVisitors' signed reports 1905 Sep 20 - 1 volume 1914 GBG/133 Greenwich DispensaryVisitors' signed reports 1914 Aug 12 - 1 volume 1921 GBG/134 Greenwich DispensaryVisitors' signed reports 1921 Dec 29 - 1 volume 1930 GBG/135 Grove Park Workhouse
Recommended publications
  • Scandal, Child Punishment and Policy Making in the Early Years of the New Poor Law Workhouse System

    Scandal, Child Punishment and Policy Making in the Early Years of the New Poor Law Workhouse System

    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by University of Lincoln Institutional Repository ‘Great inhumanity’: Scandal, child punishment and policy making in the early years of the New Poor Law workhouse system SAMANTHA A. SHAVE UNIVERSITY OF LINCOLN ABSTRACT New Poor Law scandals have usually been examined either to demonstrate the cruelty of the workhouse regime or to illustrate the failings or brutality of union staff. Recent research has used these and similar moments of crisis to explore the relationship between local and central levels of welfare administration (the Boards of Guardians in unions across England and Wales and the Poor Law Commission in Somerset House in London) and how scandals in particular were pivotal in the development of further policies. This article examines both the inter-local and local-centre tensions and policy conseQuences of the Droxford Union and Fareham Union scandal (1836-37) which exposed the severity of workhouse punishments towards three young children. The paper illustrates the complexities of union co-operation and, as a result of the escalation of public knowledge into the cruelties and investigations thereafter, how the vested interests of individuals within a system manifested themselves in particular (in)actions and viewpoints. While the Commission was a reactive and flexible welfare authority, producing new policies and procedures in the aftermath of crises, the policies developed after this particular scandal made union staff, rather than the welfare system as a whole, individually responsible for the maltreatment and neglect of the poor. 1. Introduction Within the New Poor Law Union workhouse, inmates depended on the poor law for their complete subsistence: a roof, a bed, food, work and, for the young, an education.
  • Vagrants and Vagrancy in England, 1485-1553

    Vagrants and Vagrancy in England, 1485-1553

    W&M ScholarWorks Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects Theses, Dissertations, & Master Projects 1986 Basilisks of the Commonwealth: Vagrants and Vagrancy in England, 1485-1553 Christopher Thomas Daly College of William & Mary - Arts & Sciences Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.wm.edu/etd Part of the European History Commons Recommended Citation Daly, Christopher Thomas, "Basilisks of the Commonwealth: Vagrants and Vagrancy in England, 1485-1553" (1986). Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects. Paper 1539625366. https://dx.doi.org/doi:10.21220/s2-y42p-8r81 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Theses, Dissertations, & Master Projects at W&M ScholarWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects by an authorized administrator of W&M ScholarWorks. For more information, please contact [email protected]. BASILISKS OF THE COMMONWEALTH: Vagrants and Vagrancy in England, 1485-1553 A Thesis Presented to The Faculty of the Department of History The College of William and Mary in Virginia In Partial Fulfillment Of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts fcy Christopher T. Daly 1986 APPROVAL SHEET This thesis is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts . s F J i z L s _____________ Author Approved, August 1986 James L. Axtell Dale E. Hoak JamesEL McCord, IjrT DEDICATION To my brother, grandmother, mother and father, with love and respect. iii TABLE OE CONTENTS Page ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS .................................. v ABSTRACT.......................................... vi INTRODUCTION ...................................... 2 CHAPTER I. THE PROBLEM OE VAGRANCY AND GOVERNMENTAL RESPONSES TO IT, 1485-1553 7 CHAPTER II.
  • The Poor Law of 1601

    The Poor Law of 1601

    Tit) POOR LA.v OF 1601 with 3oms coi3ii3rat,ion of MODSRN Of t3l9 POOR -i. -S. -* CH a i^ 3 B oone. '°l<g BU 2502377 2 University of Birmingham Research Archive e-theses repository This unpublished thesis/dissertation is copyright of the author and/or third parties. The intellectual property rights of the author or third parties in respect of this work are as defined by The Copyright Designs and Patents Act 1988 or as modified by any successor legislation. Any use made of information contained in this thesis/dissertation must be in accordance with that legislation and must be properly acknowledged. Further distribution or reproduction in any format is prohibited without the permission of the copyright holder. Chapter 1. Introductory. * E. Poor Relief before the Tudor period w 3. The need for re-organisation. * 4. The Great Poor La* of 1601. w 5. Historical Sketch. 1601-1909. " 6. 1909 and after. Note. The small figares occurring in the text refer to notes appended to each chapter. Chapter 1. .Introductory.. In an age of stress and upheaval, institutions and 9 systems which we have come to take for granted are subjected to a searching test, which, though more violent, can scarcely fail to be more valuable than the criticism of more normal times. A reconstruction of our educational system seems inevitable after the present struggle; in fact new schemes have already been set forth by accredited organisations such as the national Union of Teachers and the Workers' Educational Association. V/ith the other subjects in the curriculum of the schools, History will have to stand on its defence.
  • Caring for the Poor, Sick and Needy. a Brief History of Poor Relief in Scotland

    Caring for the Poor, Sick and Needy. a Brief History of Poor Relief in Scotland

    Caring for the poor, sick and needy. A brief history of poor relief in Scotland Aberdeen City Archives Contents 1. A brief history of poor relief up to 1845 2. A brief history of poor relief after 1845 3. Records of poor relief in Scotland: a. Parochial Board/Parish Council Minute Books b. Records of Applications c. General Registers of the Poor d. Children’s Separate Registers e. Register of Guardians f. Assessment Rolls g. Public Assistance Committee Minutes 4. Records for Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire 5. Further Reading 2 1. A brief history of poor relief up until 1845 The first acts of parliament to deal with the relief of the poor were passed in 1424. Most of these and subsequent acts passed in the 15th and 16th centuries. dealt with beggars and little information on individuals survives from this time. After the Reformation, the responsibility for the poor fell to the parish jointly through the heritors, landowners and officials within burghs who were expected to make provision for the poor and were also responsible for the parish school til 1872 and the church and manse til 1925, and the Kirk Sessions (the decision making body of the (or local court) of the parish church, made up of a group of elders, and convened (chaired) by a minister. The heritors often made voluntary contributions to the poor fund in preference of being assessed, and the kirk sessions raised money for the poor from fines, payments for carrying out marriages, baptisms, and funerals, donations, hearse hiring, interest on money lent, rent incomes and church collections.
  • ARCHITECTURE, POWER, and POVERTY Emergence of the Union

    ARCHITECTURE, POWER, and POVERTY Emergence of the Union

    ARCHITECTURE, POWER, AND POVERTY Emergence of the Union Workhouse Apparatus in the Early Nineteenth-Century England A Thesis Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of Cornell University in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts by Gökhan Kodalak January 2015 2015, Gökhan Kodalak ABSTRACT This essay is about the interaction of architecture, power, and poverty. It is about the formative process of the union workhouse apparatus in the early nineteenth-century England, which is defined as a tripartite combination of institutional, architectural, and everyday mechanisms consisting of: legislators, official Poor Law discourse, and administrative networks; architects, workhouse buildings, and their reception in professional journals and popular media; and paupers, their everyday interactions, and ways of self-expression such as workhouse ward graffiti. A cross-scalar research is utilized throughout the essay to explore how the union workhouse apparatus came to be, how it disseminated in such a dramatic speed throughout the entire nation, how it shaped the treatment of pauperism as an experiment for the modern body-politic through the peculiar machinery of architecture, and how it functioned in local instances following the case study of Andover union workhouse. BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH Gökhan Kodalak is a PhD candidate in the program of History of Architecture and Urbanism at Cornell University. He received his bachelor’s degree in architectural design in 2007, and his master’s degree in architectural theory and history in 2011, both from Yıldız Technical University, Istanbul. He is a co-founding partner of ABOUTBLANK, an inter-disciplinary architecture office located in Istanbul, and has designed a number of award-winning architectural and urban design projects in national and international platforms.
  • Almshouse, Workhouse, Outdoor Relief: Responses to the Poor in Southeastern Massachusetts, 1740-1800” Historical Journal of Massachusetts Volume 31, No

    Almshouse, Workhouse, Outdoor Relief: Responses to the Poor in Southeastern Massachusetts, 1740-1800” Historical Journal of Massachusetts Volume 31, No

    Jennifer Turner, “Almshouse, Workhouse, Outdoor Relief: Responses to the Poor in Southeastern Massachusetts, 1740-1800” Historical Journal of Massachusetts Volume 31, No. 2 (Summer 2003). Published by: Institute for Massachusetts Studies and Westfield State University You may use content in this archive for your personal, non-commercial use. Please contact the Historical Journal of Massachusetts regarding any further use of this work: [email protected] Funding for digitization of issues was provided through a generous grant from MassHumanities. Some digitized versions of the articles have been reformatted from their original, published appearance. When citing, please give the original print source (volume/ number/ date) but add "retrieved from HJM's online archive at http://www.westfield.ma.edu/mhj. Editor, Historical Journal of Massachusetts c/o Westfield State University 577 Western Ave. Westfield MA 01086 Almshouse, Workhouse, Outdoor Relief: Responses to the Poor in Southeastern Massachusetts, 1740-1800 By Jennifer Turner In Duxbury, Massachusetts, local folklore emphasizes that before the current Surplus Street was named, it was called Poverty Lane because it led to the “poor” farm, and before it was Poverty Lane, local residents knew it as Folly Street, over which one’s folly led to the Almshouse.1 Although such local folklore suggests a rather stringent attitude towards giving alms to the poor in colonial society, the issue of poor relief absorbed much of the attention of town officials before and after the American Revolution. Throughout the colonial period and early republic, many Massachusetts towns faced growing numbers of needy men, women and children in need of relief.
  • Government and Social Conditions in Scotland 1845-1919 Edited by Ian Levitt, Ph.D

    -£e/. 54 Scs. S«S,/io SCOTTISH HISTORY SOCIETY FIFTH SERIES VOLUME 1 Government and Social Conditions in Scotland Government and Social Conditions in Scotland 1845-1919 edited by Ian Levitt, ph.d ★ EDINBURGH printed for the Scottish History Society by BLACKWOOD, PILLANS & WILSON 1988 Scottish History Society ISBN 0 906245 09 5 Printed in Great Britain ^ e ia O' >40 PREFACE A work of this kind, drawing on material from a wide variety of sources, could not have been possible without the active help and encouragment of many people. To name any individual is perhaps rather invidious, but I would like to draw special attention to the assistance given by the archivists, librarians and administrative officers of those authorities whose records I consulted. I would hope that this volume would in turn assist a wider understanding of what their archives and libraries can provide: they offer much for the history of Scotland. I must, however, record my special thanks to Dr John Strawhorn, who kindly searched out and obtained Dr Littlejohn’s report on Ayr (1892). I am greatly indebted to the following for their kind permission to use material from their archives and records: The Keeper of Records, the Scottish Record Office The Trustees of the National Library of Scotland The Archivist, Strathclyde Regional Council The Archivist, Ayr District Archives The Archivist, Edinburgh District Council The Archivist, Central Regional Council The Archivist, Tayside Regional Council Midlothian District Council Fife Regional Council Kirkcaldy District Council
  • Thomas Hainsworth (Ainsworth) (B

    Thomas Hainsworth (Ainsworth) (B

    Thomas Hainsworth (Ainsworth) (b. 1840 - d. 1909) 11th December 2019 Karen Mackie Thomas Hainsworth was born on 20th December 1840 (1). His parents David and Esther Hainsworth had him baptised on 21st March at Leeds Parish Church (2) (this is St Peters, now Leeds Minster) (3). As a child he lived on Byron Street in Leeds (4). He had an older brother and sister, William and Mary (5). His birth and death records show his name as Hainsworth, but during most of his time in the workhouse his surname is recorded as Ainsworth on official records. In September 1850, when he was only nine years old, his mother, Esther died and was buried in Beckett St Cemetery (6). The following year his father, David, remarried (7). Around 1856, when Thomas was 16, he entered the Leeds Union Workhouse (8). However, his older brother was still living in the family home and remained there at least until the age of 25 (9). His father and stepmother remained local to Leeds, living at Penn St; and in Thorner at David’s death in 1886 (10). We do not have a discharge record to confirm whether Thomas remained in the workhouse for the remainder of his life. The 1871 census describes him as an imbecile from birth and this may explain his admission at a young age (11). He is described as having paralysis in the long-term inmates list of 1861 (12). Nonetheless, he worked as a labourer and coal miner throughout much of his life (13). In 1891, Thomas was described as a hawker and was placed in the infirmary at the workhouse (14).
  • 'Army of One': Mrs Nassau Senior, 1828-1877, the First Woman in Whitehall

    'Army of One': Mrs Nassau Senior, 1828-1877, the First Woman in Whitehall

    University of Nebraska - Lincoln DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln The George Eliot Review English, Department of 2008 Review of Jeanie, an 'Army of One': Mrs Nassau Senior, 1828-1877, the First Woman in Whitehall Sybil Oldfield Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/ger Part of the Comparative Literature Commons, Literature in English, British Isles Commons, and the Women's Studies Commons Oldfield, Sybil, "Review of Jeanie, an 'Army of One': Mrs Nassau Senior, 1828-1877, the First Woman in Whitehall" (2008). The George Eliot Review. 541. https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/ger/541 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the English, Department of at DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. It has been accepted for inclusion in The George Eliot Review by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. Sybil Oldfield,]eanie, an 'Army ojOne': Mrs Nassau Senior, 1828-1877, the First Woman in Whitehall (Sussex Academic Press, 2007), pp. 360. ISBN 978 1 84519 253 2 (hardback); 978 1 84519 254 9 (paperback) Sybil Oldfield is well-known for her work on humanitarian women, creative philanthropists and pacifists, and her new book is an important contribution to Victorian studies, a life-story told with admiration, sympathy and style, as cramful of character and emotion as a novel, and of great interest to George Eliot scholars. The neglect of Jeanie Senior, called Jeanie, pronounced Janie - her enthusiastic biographer puts 'sic' after deviations, eccentrically rather than pedantically since Jeanie was christened Jane Elizabeth and named Jane on her tomb and even in this book's index - is at first sight puzzling, because her ideals and zeal as radical reformer were comparable to those of Octavia Hill and Florence Nightingale, who knew and admired her.
  • Material Lives of the Poor and Their Strategic Use of the Workhouse During the final Decades of the English Old Poor Law

    Material Lives of the Poor and Their Strategic Use of the Workhouse During the final Decades of the English Old Poor Law

    Continuity and Change 30 (1), 2015, 71–103.©Cambridge University Press 2015. This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. doi:10.1017/S0268416015000090 Material lives of the poor and their strategic use of the workhouse during the final decades of the English old poor law JOSEPH HARLEY* ABSTRACT. This article is the first to use a combination of three different types of inven- tories from Dorset to examine the material lives of paupers inside and outside Beaminster workhouse. It argues that life was materially better for paupers on outdoor relief, compared with workhouse inmates and with paupers in the moments before they entered the workhouse. The article also examines how the poor used admission into the workhouse as part of their economy of makeshifts. The evidence demonstrates that the able-bodied poor used the workhouse as a short-term survival strategy, whereas more vulnerable inmates struggled to use this tactic. This article therefore furthers our understanding of the nature of poor relief and adds further weight to re- cent historical work that has emphasised pauper agency. 1. INTRODUCTION By the 1830s public opinion had turned against the way in which workhouses were managed.1 On one side, people viewed workhouses as the location of misery and injustice due to overcrowding, poor management and their prison- like character; others conversely viewed workhouses as institutions which made the poor idle and immoral, owing to the lack of discipline and the rela- tive material abundance found within the workhouse.2 A Royal Commission was set up in 1832 to investigate the state of the poor laws.
  • "Freedom": the New Poor Law and Emancipation

    "Freedom": the New Poor Law and Emancipation

    The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare Volume 36 Issue 2 June Article 6 2009 Building Their Readiness For Economic "Freedom": The New Poor Law and Emancipation Anne O'Connell York University Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.wmich.edu/jssw Part of the Inequality and Stratification Commons, Race and Ethnicity Commons, and the Social Work Commons Recommended Citation O'Connell, Anne (2009) "Building Their Readiness For Economic "Freedom": The New Poor Law and Emancipation," The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare: Vol. 36 : Iss. 2 , Article 6. Available at: https://scholarworks.wmich.edu/jssw/vol36/iss2/6 This Article is brought to you by the Western Michigan University School of Social Work. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Building Their Readiness For Economic "Freedom": The New Poor Law and Emancipation ANNE O'CONNELL York University School of Social Work Atkinson Faculty of Liberal and Professional Studies Contemporary studies that track the new racialization of poverty in Canada require an historical account. The history we invoke in North America is often borrowed from the British poor laws, a literature that is severed from its counterpart: the histories of racial slavery, racial thinking, White bourgeois power and the making of White settler societies. The effects of severing the his- tory of poor relief from racial classifications and racism(s) are far reaching. Systems of oppression come to be seen as separate structures in which the New Poor Law appears as a domestic policy in Britain unrelated to racial thinking and racial slavery. This paper argues that attempts at managing and civilizing the poor in Britain and Upper Canada were racial projects suited to colonial ambitions and enterprises.
  • 1851 Census Index for North West Kent

    1851 Census Index for North West Kent

    NORTH WEST KENT FAMILY HISTORY SOCIETY 1851 CENSUS INDEX FOR NORTH WEST KENT . LEWISHAM ’ 9.0. DARTFORD [in BROMLEY RD. SEVENOAKS RII Volume III Deptford St. Paul & St. Nicholas parishes Piece Nos. H.O.107/1584—85 ISBN()9513760447 North West Kent Family History Society 1851 CENSUS INDEX FOR NORTH WEST KENT Volume III Deptford St. Paul and St. Nicholas parishes Piece Numbers H0 107/ 1584, H0 107/ 1585 1990 Contents Introduction ii. Location of Census Microfilms and Transcripts iii. Historical Background _ iv. Arrangement of the Deptford 1851 Census Returns xi. Guide to Enumeration Districts and Folio Numbers xiv. Index of Streets 1—2. INDEX OF NAMES 3—166. Society Publications 167. (c) North West Kent Family History Society, 1990 ISBN 0 9513760 4 7 INTRODUCTION This volume is the third in the Society's series of indexes to the 1851 census of _ north west Kent, and is the result of some five years work. Its production would not have been possible without the help of a number of volunteers, and I would like to record my thanks and those of the Society to: — The transcribers and checkers who have helped with Deptford St. Paul and St. Nicholas — i. e. Bob Crouch, Rose Medley, Mary Mullett, Edna Reynolds, Helen Norris, Norman Sears, Len Waghorn and Malcolm Youngs. Of these, I would particularly like to single out Len Waghorn, who alone transcribed 20 of the 35 enumeration districts. -— Members of the Society with BBC or MS—DOS microcomputers, for their work on entering the data into computer files — i.