1st Edition

The Workhouse System 1834-1929 The History of an English Social Institution

By M. A. Crowther Copyright 1981
    318 Pages
    by Routledge

    318 Pages
    by Routledge

    First published in 1981. Professor Crowther traces the history of the workhouse system from the Poor Law Amendment Act of 1834 to the Local Government Act of 1929.

    At their outset the large residential institutions were seen by the Poor Law Commissioners as a cure for nearly all social ills. In fact these formidable, impersonal, prison-like buildings – housing all paupers under one roof – became institutionalised: places where routine came to be an end in itself. In the early twentieth century some of the workhouses became hospitals or homes for the old or handicapped but many continued to form a residual service for those who needed long-term care.

    Crowther pays attention not only to the administrators but also to the inmates and their daily life. She illustrates that the workhouse system was not simply a nineteenth-century phenomenon but a forerunner of many of today’s social institutions.

    Acknowledgements;  Abbreviations;  A Note on Terminology;  Introduction;  Part One: Administrators;  1. From the Old Poor Law to the New  2. The Coming of the Bastiles  3. From Workhouse to Institution  4. The Twentieth-Century Workhouse  5. Officers 1834-1870  6. Officers 1870-1929  7. The Medical Staff and the Infirmaries;  Part Two: Inmates;  8. Workhouse Discipline and the Total Institution  9. The Workhouse and the Community  10. The Casual Poor;  Conclusion;  Notes;  Select Bibliography;  Index

    Biography

    M. A. Crowther