In Their Own Write: Contesting the New Poor Law 1834-1900

Lead Research Organisation: Nottingham Trent University
Department Name: Sch of Arts and Humanities

Abstract

During the last three decades, research on the Old Poor Law (1601-1834) has reinvented our understanding of that institution. This discretionary welfare system gave most people a right to apply for support but no right to receive it, and practice could vary wildly between communities. Older notions that the economic position of the individual parishes that administered welfare dictated who got what, have given way to an acknowledgement that a complex configuration of custom, the personality of individual officials, residual models of philanthropy and humanitarianism and the exact constellation of local poverty, dictated much in policy terms. One of the most exciting aspects of this reinterpretation has been the rediscovery in large numbers of pauper voices (in the form of pauper letters seeking relief) and pauper agency, such that we now understand that paupers were not the passive subjects of the poor law but had the space, rhetoric and confidence to negotiate their place in it. Set against this backdrop, and notwithstanding the work of Hurren, Green and Hooker, the historiography of the New Poor Law has moved on remarkably little since the work of Anne Crowther in the early 1980s. Excepting David Green's work on London or that of King on Bolton, published micro-studies of individual unions have been rare and comparative studies still rarer. We thus still think of the 1834-45 period, during which most parishes were combined into the New Poor Law unions that dispensed welfare, as marking a definitive change in the nature, organisation, intent and outcome of English and Welsh welfare. A discretionary system was replaced by one that combined central direction and control with residual local decision-making and entirely local finance. The leitmotif of this new system was the workhouse and the ebb and flow of attempts to control and at times deny the outdoor relief that had underpinned the Old Poor Law. The dominant chronological narrative has been one in which the so-called crusade against outdoor relief in the 1870s and 1880s marks the final attempt to impose the New Poor Law as its 1834 architects intended. Failure led to the progressive narrowing of its scope, such that the coming of local democracy in the 1890s and the Liberal Welfare Reforms of the early twentieth century in effect ripped away the original foundations. Above all, the pauper was subject to this system, and a second leitmotif has been the coercion of paupers and the rise of the poor law scandal. Their voices, it has been assumed, were largely extinguished. Our project challenges this broad representation. In two pilot projects investigating The National Archives collection MH12 we have found that the pauper voice was not muted and pauper agency was not quashed. Paupers and their advocates continued to write to local officers to try and negotiate relief but the arrival of central authority and oversight offered a new route for the exercise of the pauper voice in the form of letters to London-based officials. In this more developed project we want to undertake a systematic sampling (see CFS) of this vast collection. We will locate and transcribe an estimated 11,000 of these letters, making those transcripts available to the academic/non-academic community. Having transcribed them we will develop new methodological tools (see CFS) for classifying and understanding this corpus, rules which will draw on and be relevant to the considerable range of disciplines which have been concerned with so-called ego documents or more accurately ordinary writing. Our analysis of this material will be driven by key questions centring on the degree to which paupers had agency and used it to negotiate their relief in a system to which they had previously merely been thought subject. Drawing comparative lessons from the pre-1834 period we will offer a New Poor Law history from below, as well as keying into wider debates about literacy, the nature of state power and the class.

Planned Impact

WHO: The involvement of TNA in this project, with its heavily used website and extensive public and school programmes, provides the platform for substantial non-academic engagement and impact. We have identified categories of beneficiary and the mechanisms for ensuring and measuring benefit in two pilot projects conducted by CI P Carter. We expect to engage:

(i) The professional heritage sector such as Historic England and National Trust, as well as local authority and independent museums, who will use the voices we find, the stories we construct and the experiences of the poor that underpin our analysis to give more nuanced site interpretation.

(ii) Visitors to the professional heritage sector who will benefit from a deeper and more sophisticated interpretation of welfare pasts.

(iii) Varied leisure historians (primarily family and local/regional historians) who we will proactively encourage to use the sampled and transcribed data for their own research.

(iv) School teachers and their students undertaking key stage 4 and 5 who will be able to use the sources and stories we create as a resource.

HOW: Drawing on the mechanisms identified as part of our pilot projects, each team member will have responsibility for organising an engagement strand and for monitoring benefit through participation sheets, surveys and feedback analysis. CI P Carter has extensive experience of benefit monitoring given his role at TNA. Collectively, we will:

(i) Organise an ongoing programme of talks for local and family history groups, staff in the professional heritage sector and staff and visitors at venues such as the Southwell Workhouse (Nottinghamshire), Llanfyllin Workhouse (Powys), the Gressenhall Farm and Workhouse Museum (Norfolk), with whom we already have strong links.

(ii) Organise webinars. TNA will organise and widely publicise, as part of their ongoing webinar series, annual "In Their Own Write" webinars. Each webinar will provide an overview of the New Poor Law and the archival collection from which the letters are found, along with updates on the geographic spread of material collected during the project. Webinars will highlight the content and queries raised by the letters using transcribed copies. We would also provide detailed advice allowing onsite 'discovery' of the letters themselves should people wish to search for similar material outside the project scope. Take-away data will be available via the project website, through which we will also deal with ongoing queries and engagements.

(iii) Organise workshops and talks at TNA focusing on the records in which pauper letters are found and providing the archival contextual 'sister' surviving documents. The workshop sessions will be highly participatory and, because they will be run at and advertised by the TNA, we expect to garner a significant audience of leisure historians and heritage staff.

(iv) Co-ordinate research team members to write for a non-academic audience in the form of blogs, magazines and tweets.

(v) Create a 'Pauper History' research group spanning the midlands (roughly 40 miles around the University of Leicester. This will draw upon family, local and other leisure historians who would be interested in working with the data produced by the research team and around which we will build onsite research seminars and related activities.

(vi) Build teaching packs for Schools, working within the existing framework at TNA.

(vii) Pitch for a BBC Radio4 series (also entitled "In Their Own Write") in which we will examine, through extracts from the pauper letters, the thoughts, feelings and anxieties of the 19th century poor. The PI King has extensive media and commissioning experience.

These themes are developed at greater length in the attached Pathways to Impact document.
 
Description Few subjects in European welfare history attract as much attention as the nineteenth-century English and Welsh New Poor Law. In the words of David Englander its founding statute was "the single most important piece of social legislation ever enacted", and the coming of its institutions - from penny-pinching Boards of Guardians to the dreaded workhouse - has generally been seen as a catastrophe for ordinary working people. Yet, until now it has been impossible to know how the poor themselves felt about the New Poor Law and its measures, how they negotiated its terms, and how their interactions with the local and national state shifted and changed across the nineteenth century.
For the first time, In Their Own Write exposes this hidden history. Based on an unparalleled collection of first-hand testimony - pauper letters and witness statements interwoven with letters to newspapers and correspondence from poor law officials and advocates - drawn from The National Archives collection MH12 the book reveals lives marked by hardship, deprivation, bureaucratic intransigence, parsimonious officialdom, and sometimes institutional cruelty. Yet, the stories also challenge the dominant view that the poor were totally powerless and lacked agency in these interactions. Instead, In Their Own Write clearly demonstrates that both they and their advocates were determinedly adept at navigating the new bureaucracy, at holding local and national officials to account, and influencing the outcomes of relief negotiations for themselves and for their wider communities. Fascinating and compelling, these stories amount to nothing less than a new history of welfare from below
Exploitation Route We are currently working on a Follow On Funding grant that will put our data and associated lesson plans into every school in Britain. We are also working on a new policy orientated project - the future welfare citizen - that looks at the future of the European welfare state.
Sectors Creative Economy,Education,Leisure Activities, including Sports, Recreation and Tourism,Government, Democracy and Justice,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections

URL https://intheirownwriteblog.com/about/
 
Description 1 To engage and change the perceptions/enhance the skills of a variety of stakeholders with broadly defined interests in the history of welfare. 2 To influence policy thinking, formation, outcomes and wider public thinking about welfare by developing the public argument that welfare pasts are essential to inform the welfare future post-covid. Who: • Aim 1 is focussed on volunteers, school children, the general public, and stakeholder organisations including workhouse museums nationally and internationally. A significant portion of this impact is in hand (see separate document) but the activities are ongoing. • Aim 2 focuses on politicians, think-tanks, international organisations, overseas governments, civil servants and stakeholders in the welfare arena How • Impact activities under Aim 1 include: teaching packs and associated lesson plans for every School in Britain distributed via The National Archives; a national short story competition for school children; resources (with traceable usage) distributed via TNA website; volunteer testimony and measurable inputs, standing at 11,000 hours to date; documented advice to museums. Future activities include a further AHRC Follow on Funding grant to make an album; the history and policy seminar series; and an international advice network for welfare organisations. • Impact activities under Aim 2 include: documented advice to the Labour Party on the New Deal for the Disabled; History and Policy seminar series; policy briefings and a series of theatre interventions with a disabled acting company. Future activities include the development of an international policy network, provision of evidence to Parliamentary calls, briefings to political parties and a particular focus on disability and disability benefits.
First Year Of Impact 2021
Sector Creative Economy,Education,Leisure Activities, including Sports, Recreation and Tourism,Government, Democracy and Justice,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections
Impact Types Cultural,Societal,Policy & public services

 
Description Workhouse History and Heritage Network 
Organisation Gressenhall Farm and Workhouse
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Charity/Non Profit 
PI Contribution WHHN is a set of workhouse museums with whom we have newly engaged. We have staged a seminar programme (workhouse voices) with an average attendance of 77 thus far, and are organising an AHRC network bid
Collaborator Contribution These practical organisations help us to better understand and locate our textual records. The first fruits of the partnership can be seen in the Journal of Interdisciplinary History article newly reported in the output section this time round.
Impact Reported in the relevant sections
Start Year 2020