The experience of urban poverty, 1723-82 : parish, charity and credit

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The experience of urban poverty, 1723-82 : parish, charity and credit

Alannah Tomkins

Manchester University Press , Distributed exclusively in the USA by Palgrave, 2006

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Includes bibliographical references (p. [256]-282) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This comparative study of urban poverty is the first to chart the irregular pulse of poverty's encounters with officialdom. It exploits an unusual methodology to secure new perspectives from familiar sources. The highly localised characteristics of the welfare economy generated a peculiarly urban environment for the poor. Separate chapters examine the parameters of workhouse life when the preconceptions of contemporaries have been stripped away; the reach of institutional charities such as almshouses, schools and infirmaries; and the surprisingly broad clientele of urban pawnbrokers. Detailed analysis of the poor is achieved via meticulous matching of individuals who fell within the purview of two or more authorities. The result is a unique insight into the survival economics of urban poverty, arising not from a tidy network of welfare but from a loose assembly of options, where the impoverished positioned themselves repeatedly to fit official, philanthropic, or casual templates of the 'deserving'. This book will be essential reading for historians of English poverty and welfare, and eighteenth-century social and economic life. -- .

Table of Contents

List of tables, figures and appendices Acknowledgments Abbreviations 1. Introduction 2. Life in Urban Workhouses 3. Traditional Forms of Voluntary Charity 4. 'Medical' Welfare and Provincial Infirmaries 5. Charity Schools and the Treatment of Poor Children 6. Pawnbroking and the use of credit 7. Conclusion Appendices Bibliography -- .

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