working class life in victorian london. in the nineteenth century there were developments in...

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Working Class Life in Victoria n London

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Page 1: Working Class Life in Victorian London. In the nineteenth century there were developments in technology that meant many people stopped working on the

Working Class Life in

Victorian

London

Page 2: Working Class Life in Victorian London. In the nineteenth century there were developments in technology that meant many people stopped working on the

Working Class Life in Victorian London

• In the nineteenth century there were developments in technology that meant many people stopped working on the land and instead moved to towns and cities to work in factories.

• This meant cities were overcrowded and the working classes may have had up to thirty people living in one room.

• Children as young as three worked in factories.

• Those who could not cope were forced to join workhouses.

• Three out of every 20 babies die before their first birthday.

• Life expectancy is about 40 years.

Page 3: Working Class Life in Victorian London. In the nineteenth century there were developments in technology that meant many people stopped working on the

• Workhouses varied in size. The smallest housed only 50 people, while the largest housed several thousand.

• They were self contained communities.

• Apart from the basic rooms such as a dining-hall for eating, day-rooms for the elderly, and dormitories for sleeping, workhouses often had their own bakery, laundry, tailor's and shoe-maker's, vegetable gardens and orchards, and even a piggery for rearing pigs.

VICTORIAN WORKHOUSES

Page 4: Working Class Life in Victorian London. In the nineteenth century there were developments in technology that meant many people stopped working on the
Page 5: Working Class Life in Victorian London. In the nineteenth century there were developments in technology that meant many people stopped working on the

The Women’s Yard

Page 6: Working Class Life in Victorian London. In the nineteenth century there were developments in technology that meant many people stopped working on the

Entering the Workhouse

• Entry to the workhouses was voluntary, but it was certainly the last choice for people. People ended up in the workhouse for a variety of reasons.

• Usually, it was because they were too poor, old or ill to support themselves. This may have resulted from such things as a lack of work during periods of high unemployment, or someone having no family willing or able to provide care for them when they became elderly or sick.

• Unmarried pregnant women were often disowned by their families and the workhouse was the only place they could go during and after the birth of their child.

• Prior to the establishment of public mental asylums in the mid-nineteenth century (and in some cases even after that), the mentally ill and mentally handicapped poor were often consigned to the workhouse.

Page 7: Working Class Life in Victorian London. In the nineteenth century there were developments in technology that meant many people stopped working on the

The Dining Hall

Page 8: Working Class Life in Victorian London. In the nineteenth century there were developments in technology that meant many people stopped working on the

The Daily Routine• Workhouse inmates — at least those who were capable

of it — were given a variety of work to perform, much of which was involved in running the workhouse.

• The women mostly did domestic jobs such as cleaning, or helping in the kitchen or laundry.

• Some workhouses had workshops for sewing, spinning and weaving or other local trades. Others had their own vegetable gardens where the inmates worked to provide food for the workhouse.

Page 9: Working Class Life in Victorian London. In the nineteenth century there were developments in technology that meant many people stopped working on the

More often than not, meals followed a weekly rotation, with meat featured on only a limited number of "meat days."

The weekly menu at Hertford in 1729 comprised:

Breakfast Dinner Supper

Sunday Bread & Cheese Meat Broth

Monday Broth Pease-Porridge Bread and Cheese

Tuesday Bread & Cheese Hasty-Pudding Bread and Cheese

Wednesday Bread & Cheese Meat Broth

Thursday Broth Frumety Bread and Cheese

Friday Bread & Cheese Ox-Head Broth

Saturday Broth Hasty-Pudding Bread and Cheese

Workhouse Food

Page 10: Working Class Life in Victorian London. In the nineteenth century there were developments in technology that meant many people stopped working on the

Pease-Porridge•A baked vegetable product, which mainly consists of split yellow or Carlin peas, water, salt, and spices, often cooked with a bacon or ham joint.

Hasty-Pudding

•A pudding or porridge of grains cooked in milk or water.

Frumety

•A dish consisting of wheat, milk, sugar, and spices.

Broth

•Meat liquor, 1 pint; barley, 2 oz; leeks or onions, 1 oz; parsley and seasoning.

Gruel

•Oatmeal, 2 oz; treacle, ½ oz; salt and sometimes allspice; water.