Workhouse populations, 1851-1911

DOI

This dataset constitutes a sample of individuals resident in nineteenth and early twentieth century workhouses (residential institutions for the poor). These data were collected for preliminary investigations of the demographic characteristics of the workhouse-resident population between 1851 and 1911, as part of wider research by Samantha Williams on the workhouse. The sample represents between 45% and 78% of the entire England and Wales workhouse population reported for each decennial Census from 1851 to 1911 but not including 1871, and comprises complete enumerations of between 400 and 730 workhouses. Additionally there is a 10% subsample of workhouses present in every Census year. This dataset is derived from Schurer and Higgs' Integrated Census Microdata dataset held at the UK Data Archive, which comprises all persons enumerated in the England and Wales Censuses of 1851 through 1911, not including 1871, and may be linked to that resource.The workhouse was a central feature of the new poor law (1834-1948), intended to house, feed and occupy those unable to provide for themselves, in a controlled environment. Parishes were grouped into some 600 poor law unions. By 1841 around 320 new workhouses had been built, and by 1870 some 520, whilst other unions adapted existing workhouses. The purpose of this project was to build an evidential foundation for the first really comprehensive and systematic study of workhouse populations, providing a nationwide picture of the institutionalised poor from 1851 until 1911, using data extracted from the Integrated Census Microdata (I-CeM) digitised England and Wales decennial population census dataset, UKDA study number 7481. A subsample of workhouses that were successfully extracted from every available Census enables closer study of trends over time. This research forms part of a larger study on the workhouse being undertaken by Samantha Williams, including analysis of pauper offences and punishments in selected workhouses.

This is a non-random, maximal sample derived from the whole population datasets that the 1851 to 1911 Integrated Census Microdata dataset (ICeM) represent. The sample constitutes residents of all workhouses that were readily identifiable from the string values of Integrated Census Microdata addresses, institution names, institution descriptions, registration district names or registration subdistrict names. It only includes workhouses that could be extracted in their entirety, that is where the total number of persons extracted was +/- 2% of the reported residents in that workhouse in 1881 to 1911, or 100 to 115% of reported workhouse paupers in that Registration District in 1851 to 1861. It is mappable in nineteenth century Registration Districts using CAMPOP shapefiles. Only personal identifier, workhouse identifier, geographical variables, age and sex of individuals is included in this dataset but it may be linked to ICeM for further variables, including names and addresses available under special licence conditions.

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-853999
Metadata Access https://datacatalogue.cessda.eu/oai-pmh/v0/oai?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_ddi25&identifier=878c3ed52c06bd0ab5deb46a046880b54beefbe4c2700e4e2a7d2da83d0901aa
Provenance
Creator Williams, S, University of Cambridge; Newton, G, University of Cambridge; Satchell, M, University of Cambridge
Publisher UK Data Service
Publication Year 2020
Funding Reference Cambridge University Humanities Research Grants
Rights Samantha William, University of Cambridge. Kevin Schurer, University of Leicester; The UK Data Archive has granted a dissemination embargo. The embargo will end in December 2021 and the data will then be available in accordance with the access level selected.
OpenAccess true
Representation
Resource Type Numeric; Text
Discipline History; Humanities
Spatial Coverage England and Wales