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The Victorian Poor Law in Crisis and Change: Southampton, 1870–1895*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 July 2014

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Extract

The Poor Law Amendment Act of 1834 signaled a revolution that was more apparent than real. Studies of the operation of the Act have shown that enforcement was neither complete nor uniform; local authorities failed to build the workhouses required by the Act and were therefore unable to make the invidious but (according to the Act) essential distinction between paupers (people destitute enough to qualify to enter these institutions), and the merely poor, who were supposed to fend for themselves. Instead, Guardians continued to give allowances from the poor rates without requiring that the recipients become paupers and enter the workhouse. While the English Poor Law between 1834 and 1860 was characterized by a situation of administrative variety and confusion as unions failed to comply with the 1834 Act, the economic crises of the 1860s produced important reforms: the Union Chargeability Act (1865) improved financing; many unions built modern workhouses; at the same time, collateral care for the needy such as the aged began to emerge within the Poor Law. Then in 1870 the central Poor Law authority announced a policy of strict enforcement, recommending the suspension of outdoor relief to the able-bodied, a far-reaching change in Poor Law practice.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © North American Conference on British Studies 1987

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Footnotes

*

My thanks are expressed to Mr. F.C. Mather of Southampton University and to Linda Levy Peck of Purdue University for help with earlier versions of this paper.

References

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26 Repealed by the Local Government Board's Provisional Orders Confirmation (Caistor Union etc.) Act, 1877, 40 and 41 Vict.

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28 George Lungley was a director of the Southampton Chamber of Commerce, a “shipbuilder and superintendent of the emigration department”; William Bone was proprietor of Brinton and Bone, Brick and Tile Makers and Merchants; Henry Webb was probably a cabinet maker and upholsterer. Directories on which this paragraph is based include Cox, Stevens, and Kelly's.

29 Southampton Incorporation, Printed Accounts and Abstracts. Civic Records Office, Southampton (henceafter cited as C.R.O.). Quite untypical of ex-officio members was the Liberal magistrate Major-General Tryon J.P., who publicly disassociated himself from the strict enforcement policies of the Board of Guardians and between 1876 and 1877 attended forty-one meetings of the Board. Contested elections for the Board remained rare. Local Government Board, Poor Law Unions (Contested Elections of Guardians), 1 March 1878, p. 2Google Scholar.

30 Southampton Times, 10 February 1877.

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35 Thane, Pat, “Women and the Poor Law in Victorian and Edwardian Britain,” History Workshop 6 (Autumn 1978):2951CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Walkowitz, Judith, Prostitution and Victorian Society: Women, Class, and the State (Cambridge, 1980)CrossRefGoogle Scholar, analyzes the economic position of part of the female under-class in Southampton.

36 E.P.L.H. part 2, 1:447–48, and E.P.L.P., pp. 174–79.

37 Cited in Memorandum from the President of the Local Government Board to all Boards of Guardians, Annual Report of the Local Government Board, 1878, PP, 1878, vol. 65. Thane, Pat, Foundations of the Welfare State (London, 1982), pp. 3435Google Scholar points out that this policy had the effect of forcing mothers out into the work-force.

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46 Removal Papers of the Southampton Incorporation, 1877–8. SC/AG/14/14. C.R.O.

47 Sometimes the cost of removals, including legal costs, and charges for transporting paupers are listed separately but more often they are combined. For example in the years 1876 to 1879 the entry is, “Conveyance of Paupers and pauper lunatics, visiting lunatics, tracing settlements, serving summonses, etc.” Southampton Incorporation, Accounts and Abstracts.

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59 Annual Report of the Provident Dispensary, 1880, C.R.O.; Third Annual Report of the Southampton COS, p. 11.

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61 Is Out-Door Relief a Curse?Hants. Independent, 18 December 1880Google ScholarPubMed; Southampton Times, 27 November 1880, p. 3Google ScholarPubMed; Southern Observer, 27 January 1877, p. 5Google ScholarPubMed reports a discussion of eligibility for free treatment at the Dispensary.

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63 Annual Report of the Provident Dispensary, 1880. Lambert, Royston, “A Victorian National Health Service: State Vaccination,” Historical Journal 5 (1962): 118CrossRefGoogle Scholar. After 1885 the Medical Relief (Disqualifications Removal) Act further removed the stigma of pauperization from recipients of poor law medical services.

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68 Southampton Times, 10 February 1877, p. 2Google ScholarPubMed. “The Guardians would not have discontinued outrelief to the old and respectable people, if the COS had not taken it up,” Evidence of John Jones, Stepney Union, Select Committee of the House of Lords on Poor Law Relief, Parliamentary Papers, 1888, IX, C.363, p. 134Google Scholar. The Webbs wrote, “In the urban Unions an immediate reaction was a great development of unorganized and indiscriminate charity of one sort or another, of which the COS and its adherents entirely disapproved, but which they were unable to check” (E.P.L.H. part 2, 1:462).

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76 Southampton Times, 28 April 1877. But in 1891 COS organizers announced themselves “surprised and grieved, after sixteen years' strenuous advocacy of principles which they all genuinely hoped would have been adopted by … their fellow townsmen to find that their supporters numbered less than one hundred, and that the pecuniary aid they received had not yet reached £100 a year.” Southampton Times, 19 December 1891, p. 3Google ScholarPubMed.

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93 Southampton Times, 24 May 1890.

94 Southern Reformer, 26 November 1880, pp. 45Google Scholar (C.R.L.). Mrs. P.H. Mather kindly drew my attention to this valuable, though short-lived, periodical.

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