SOCIAL CARE IN NORTHERN ENGLAND: THE ALMSHOUSES OF COUNTY DURHAM,NORTHUMBERLAND, CUMBERLAND AND WESTMORLAND IN THE NINETEENTH AND TWENTIETH CENTURIES |
| |
Abstract: | AbstractMany of the population of the north-east and Cumbria lived on the verge of poverty and found earnings cut through illness, unemployment, old age or quiet trade times. Social welfare was provided by state and private sector and included the almshouse, charity, admission to the workhouse or the paying of out-relief to the poor in their own home. Care in the almshouses was only available to a small number of the population. The vast majority of the population were left to fend for themselves in old age or widowhood. Using the 1881 and 1901 census, the paper will analyse the demography of the sample almshouses, and in particular, the population over age 60 in almshouse and workhouse. Case studies of St Annes Hospital and the Aged Miner Homes highlight the lack or provision of accommodation for this age group. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|