Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
work houses
5 Answers
Do the records of work houses still exist and are they on the internet please
two relations have died in workhouses and I wondered if there were any contemporaneous records I could access ?
thanks
PP
two relations have died in workhouses and I wondered if there were any contemporaneous records I could access ?
thanks
PP
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Peter Pedant. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.There are a number of records that relate to our ancestors that were unfortunate enough to need to be admitted to the workhouse.
Firstly there are the admission records, which every poor law union kept of those admitted to the workhouse. They would include the details of each individual and the reason for their addmitance.
Other records would concern the infirmaries that were a part of the workhouse in almost every town.
The 1834 New Poor Law was never going to erradicate poverty and if anything it was more concerned it keeping the poor out than taking them in, with an attitude across all it's institutions that the poor were shiftless and to blame for their own poverty stricken situation.
Any surviving records would be in the County Record Offices, these will be listed in the CRO caralogue, but it is worth noting that the workhouses were always included in any census return, and so it might be wortth looking at the census first.
people were not necessarily long term residents in a workhouse, there as overcrowding and lack of funds to keep the really deserving fed let alone the shirkers.
Online I would imagine you would find some detailed lists of inmates, certainly some of the london workhouses have had their admission registers transcibed and put on various sites.
Firstly there are the admission records, which every poor law union kept of those admitted to the workhouse. They would include the details of each individual and the reason for their addmitance.
Other records would concern the infirmaries that were a part of the workhouse in almost every town.
The 1834 New Poor Law was never going to erradicate poverty and if anything it was more concerned it keeping the poor out than taking them in, with an attitude across all it's institutions that the poor were shiftless and to blame for their own poverty stricken situation.
Any surviving records would be in the County Record Offices, these will be listed in the CRO caralogue, but it is worth noting that the workhouses were always included in any census return, and so it might be wortth looking at the census first.
people were not necessarily long term residents in a workhouse, there as overcrowding and lack of funds to keep the really deserving fed let alone the shirkers.
Online I would imagine you would find some detailed lists of inmates, certainly some of the london workhouses have had their admission registers transcibed and put on various sites.
Here are a few links that tell you what records survive and where they are as an example:
http://www.boltonmuseums.org.uk/bolton-archive s/archives-indexes/workhouse-registers/
http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/YKS/Misc/Tran scriptions/NRY/PickeringWorkhouseIndex.html
http://www.manchester-family-history-research. co.uk/new_page_5.htm
This is an example of an actual transcription available online:
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.c om/~boltongenealogy/turtonworkhouse.htm
http://www.boltonmuseums.org.uk/bolton-archive s/archives-indexes/workhouse-registers/
http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/YKS/Misc/Tran scriptions/NRY/PickeringWorkhouseIndex.html
http://www.manchester-family-history-research. co.uk/new_page_5.htm
This is an example of an actual transcription available online:
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.c om/~boltongenealogy/turtonworkhouse.htm
there is a pamphlet by Jeremy Gibson in his Gibson guides series that will give you a county by county list of any extant records.
I have lots of his guides and I thought I had this one but i must have lent it out, you can get them from local family history societies or from the FFHS:
http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/Gibson.html
I have lots of his guides and I thought I had this one but i must have lent it out, you can get them from local family history societies or from the FFHS:
http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/Gibson.html