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The Girl Who Lived On Her Clothes

The People of Paisley and the New Poor Law, 1839–76

by Wendy Gordon (Author)
©2024 Monographs XII, 220 Pages

Summary

Criticized as parsimonious and cruel in the later 1800s, the Poor Law for Scotland was first passed in 1845 as a frankly humanitarian measure in response to desperate poverty on display in Paisley and elsewhere in the early 1840s. Poor Law Inspector James Shaw Brown of Paisley Burgh Parish, a compassionate, detail-oriented bureaucrat, was charged with alleviating suffering while limiting expense. In his four-decade career he served the poor, the parochial board, and rate payers of the parish, weaving their conflicting needs and demands though the arcane rules of the law. Inspector Brown and colleagues across the nation interpreted and debated the meaning of the law in correspondence and the courts for decades before it approached its final form. This book delves into Inspector Brown’s life and records to reveal how poverty and the poor law shaped life experiences for tens of thousands of ordinary Scots in the middle years of the nineteenth century.

Details

Pages
XII, 220
Year
2024
ISBN (Softcover)
9781800799905
Language
English
Keywords
Poor Laws Paisley (town in Scotland) Poverty Scotland Family history demographics Local government
Published
Oxford, Berlin, Bruxelles, Chennai, Lausanne, New York, 2024. XII, 220 pp., 4 fig. col., 4 tables, 2 maps.

Biographical notes

Wendy Gordon (Author)

Wendy M. Gordon is Professor of History at SUNY Plattsburgh, where she has flourished since 1998. She received her Ph.D. from Central Michigan University, conferred jointly with the University of Strathclyde. She previously wrote Mill Girls and Strangers: Single Women’s Independent Migration in England, Scotland and the United States (2002).

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Title: The Girl Who Lived On Her Clothes