Pressures for change: 1780-1834
Individuals and regional differences (North)
Nottinghamshire = the 5th-most industrialised county in Britain
- but their relief was way below the national average.
- However, they experimented with implementation of poor law reform.
- Reverend J.T. Becher made 'deterrent workhouses' with an emphasis on segregation of inmates.
-- He insisted on kindness, however, to the aged and infirm.
In Gloucestershire, J.H. Lloyd Baker (a JP) introduced rigorous reforms and within two years the number of paupers fell from 977 to 125.
- The method of his success was to abolish outdoor relief and make the workhouse so terrible that only the very desperate would seek admission
The Reverend Robert Lowe of Bingham, Nottinghamshire agreed with the concept of deterrence
- advocating that outdoor relief should be abolished entirely. - - He tried to make the workhouse a place of fear.
George Nicholls, a retired sea captain, moved to Southwell, Nottinghamshire and was appointed overseer by Reverend J.T. Becher.
- He also agreed with Lowe, and came to the conclusion that the allowance systems themselves were responsible for the continuation of poverty.
- He claimed to have eliminated outdoor relief through his well-regulated workhouse.
Reverend Thomas Whately, Berkshire, adopted a somewhat different approach.
- When able-bodied poor applied for relief, he offered them work at a lower rate than that which was generally paid in the parish.
- He claimed that 63 long-term recipients immediately left the parish.
--- Parishes in London, Bristol, and Norwich subsequently adopted similar policies.
Headley and Selbourne, two villages in Hampshire, witnessed a combined operation against threshing machines, tithes and overseers of the poor.
Labourers extracted written assurances of the reduction of the tithe and pulled down two workhouses in both parishes.
In Wiltshire, the major landowner John Bennett MP had drawn up a particularly harsh allowance scale for poor relief in 1817
- 13 years later, became the target of violent demonstrations.
- He led a troop of yeomanry against the rioters but sorted their grievances in the local vestry meeting.
In the village of Brede, Sussex, a group of labourers launched a movement against the overseers, namely Mr Abel, who was hated for his use of the parish cart to remove paupers.
- The frightened gentry agreed to their demands.
- William Cobbett had lectured at various places in the county, and it was popularly believed that he was deliberately inciting the paupers to arson.