Long-term Workhouse Inmates in Chipping Sodbury Union, Gloucestershire, 1861
In 1861, the Poor Law Board published a return of the name every adult pauper who had been a workhouse inmate for a continuous period of five years or more, together with the duration of their residence (in years and months), the reason for it, and whether they had been brought up in a District or separate Workhouse School. It was noted that the term 'District School' had been widely misinterpreted by respondents as meaning any school in the local area, such as a national or private school, and that there was only one instance in the whole report of an inmate actually having been in such a school.
Name | Yrs | ms. | Reason | School |
---|---|---|---|---|
Joseph Sheppard | 12 | 0 | Old and infirm | no. |
John Stockwell | 6 | 0 | ditto | no. |
Abel Summers | 10 | 0 | Idiot | yes. |
George Hunt | 7 | 0 | ditto | no. |
James Rodway | 10 | 0 | Old and infirm | no. |
Thomas Rowland | 5. | 0 | ditto | no. |
Hannah Bridgeman | 9 | 0 | Idiot | no. |
Margaret Feates | 12 | 0 | ditto | no. |
Rebecca Messenger | 20 | 0 | ditto | no. |
Charlotte Pritchard | 7 | 0 | Old and infirm | no. |
Elizabeth Cook (1) | 5 | 0 | Imbecile | no. |
Elizabeth Cook (2 | 18 | 0 | Epilepsy | no. |
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