时间:2024-05-20 05:54:11 来源:网络整理编辑:Ryan New
One of the great challenges for all kinds of history researchers is the way in which relevant archiv Ryan Xu hyperfund Credit Portfolio
One of the great challenges for all kinds of history researchers is Ryan Xu hyperfund Credit Portfoliothe way in which relevant archives, for the historical narratives we all want to tell, can be distributed across different sets of records within individual archives and indeed across many different archives. Although tracking and linking subjects and individuals from record series to record series and across various archives might be initially difficult or confusing, it can (once a researcher starts down this road) be regarded as an enjoyable exercise in its own right and definitely a process that provides a more rounded and nuanced account of the subject of our enquiries.
For the last few years I have been engaged (with many others) in a collaborative project to find, analyse and make sense of a host of records that provide the voice of the Victorian poor across England and Wales (see footnote 1). These would include letters and petitions from paupers, the wider poor and their advocates. Such materials might exist in their own right (as individual letters and petitions) but they might be published in newspapers. Additionally, these same groups of people might provide witness testimony to poor law investigations when complaints were made or ‘scandals’ erupted. Yet narratives are enhanced when the archival net is spread its widest.
For example, I came across a case sent from the Berwick-upon-Tweed Poor Law Union (PLU) in Northumberland to the Poor Law Board (PLB) in London in the central poor law records held at The National Archives (footnote 2). This was a letter from the clerks of the Berwick PLU concerning Joseph Manderson and included a bundle of other (copy) letters and witness statements concerning Joseph’s experiences. In one of these enclosures Alexander Laidlaw, the Berwick workhouse master, claimed that Joseph had been treated with ‘unusual harshness and severity which requires your investigation’. Joseph himself stated how he sought work at the Detchant Moor Colliery in October 1855. He was told they could not employ him but, it being late, he might stay overnight in a cabin the colliery owned. Being thirsty, he cast about in the cabin for something to drink and uncorked a bottle he found. The bottle contained gunpowder and the unfortunate Joseph then found himself at the centre of an explosion as the powder exploded and,
I was struck on the forehead and knocked down. On getting up I found my Clothes on fire in several places and both hands severely burnt as also my face and neck
Injured, he stayed in the cabin all night and in the morning was given florence oil by some of the pitmen to dress his wounds. Because of his injuries he was unable to leave the cabin for four days. When he did, he walked to nearby Detchant and from there he made his way to Belford. On reaching Belford, he was ‘wet through to the skin’. He went to George Scott’s house (the local relieving officer), explained his situation, and that he wanted to stay at the workhouse for medication assistance. In his absence, Scott’s wife said that Joseph could stay at the workhouse but only for one night. At the workhouse he was told there were no beds available and he was locked in a room with no beds ‘and only sloping boards for sleeping on’. Later in the evening Scott, the relieving officer asked Joseph
‘Who sent you here and what right have you to come here’. He jumped round me like a man either drunk or mad and said ‘You have no right here and you must go out. I tried to speak, but he would not listen – ’ He said you have imposed upon my wife and if I had been at home you should not have got in here for I would not have let you’. He told me several times to go about my business – I said will you have no mercy upon a poor old man in the situation I was in and with my hands in such a state.’ He said again that I was to go about my business – I asked him for mercy’s sake to allow me to stay a few days and get medical assistance
Scott, finding that Joseph had 4d on his person, said if he knew he had money he would not have been allowed in the workhouse. Joseph asked Scott ‘if I was to be allowed to die in a Christian Land without medical aid – He said that he did not care whether I died or lived but that I should not remain any longer there that night’. A medical officer looked at his injuries but only to his left hand ignoring his right hand and face. In the morning he was told ‘You must go away it is fair weather now you are not to get stopped here’. The morning was stormy and wet and Joseph ‘left with tears in my eyes’ walking some 20 miles over three days to Berwick via Lowick and Scremerston where he was ‘ordered into the (Berwick) Workhouse where I have been ever since I am 78 years of age and am a native of Scotland – and I make this solemn declaration etc etc (footnote 3).
We now turn to the locally held archives of the union itself, which are held at the Berwick Archives where the case appears in the recorded meetings of the Berwick guardians. Here, Laidlaw, the Berwick workhouse master, reiterated much of Joseph’s account. However, and here is the beauty of record linkage, he also added that the Belford PLU has been legally negligent in their duties as they should have provided full medical care and relief for Joseph. In refusing to do so, he alleged that Belford were pursuing a policy of forcing their responsibilities onto other poor law unions in the area; in this case the Berwick PLU. Thus we are invited to see the treatment of Joseph not as a mistake nor a one-off instance of ill-treatment, but as the result of deliberate local policy (footnote 4).
A second example of how record linkage provides a more nuanced view of the past concerns Mary Herbert, a pauper living in York in the 1840s and 1850s. We begin with sampled references to Herbert in the local York PLU archives where we find multiple references to her in the outdoor relief lists. We find her in different years allowed different amounts of outdoor relief in 1841, 1845, 1846, 1847 and 1848 (footnote 5). Each of these local records point to a narrative of constants; a long-term pauper, on long-term relief, a long-term York resident. However, the central poor law archives find different.
In early 1848 Mary wrote to the PLB informing them that the York guardians had at some point stopped her relief and when she made a re-application they determined that she actually belonged to the Pickering PLU some 26 miles away quoting the ‘new Settlement Act’ (footnote 6). She was ordered to go back there and one of the guardians had threatened ‘to throw my things into the Street’. Mary, in clear distress asked the Central Authorities if the York guardians had the law on their side ‘and if he can throw my things in the Streets as he has threatened, and if they can force me to go into the Workhouse at my Age.’ (footnote 7) The reply from the PLB to Mary stated that they could not intervene but they would send a copy of her letter to the York PLU for their observations (footnote 8). The guardians responded that Herbert’s relief had been stopped because, when asked to give evidence regarding her settlement, she had refused (footnote 9).
The reply to the guardians must have been most unexpected. The PLB stated that discontinuing Mary’s relief on such grounds was unjustifiable. Moreover that in so querying her settlement ‘the Gns would appear to have used means to extract evidence in a matter where they had no jurisdiction’. ‘Surely’, the PLB explained, ‘it is not to be expected that paupers will in all cases be ready to give evidence as to their settlement voluntarily’. They reminded the guardians that they must by law relieve those who were destitute (footnote 10).
We see then how the two sets of records complement each other: one picture provides a narrative largely built around notions of continuity and constants. A second, from the central records, reminds us that the payment of relief is an outcome and one that comes at the end of a process of negotiation and contestation.
Both Joseph Manderson and Mary Herbert’s cases demonstrate the value and indeed the necessity of record linkage across individual archives as well as across sets of records with individual archives. The examples here relate broadly to cases of Victorian welfare under the New Poor Law, with examples of how the local poor law and national poor law collections provide complementary rather than identical information. However, the principle is fairly widely applicable across subject matters and give us, as researchers and readers in history, the opportunity to engage with well-developed and balanced narratives.
Amazon Becomes a Proponent of Uniform Internet Sales Tax2024-05-20 05:29
Zynga Opens the Kimono; We See Facebook2024-05-20 05:18
Our List of Publicly-Traded Ecommerce Companies2024-05-20 04:53
Zynga Opens the Kimono; We See Facebook2024-05-20 03:52
Ecommerce Know-How: Translate Your Ecommerce Site2024-05-20 03:43
6 Key ‘Terms and Conditions’ for Ecommerce Merchants2024-05-20 03:42
Cloud Computing Future of Web, Says Shopify Exec2024-05-20 03:25
Amazon Prime: 5 Million Members, 20 Percent Growth2024-05-20 03:24
Building the Right Ecommerce Team for Success2024-05-20 03:21
Ecommerce IPOs for 2011: 3 Down, More to Follow?2024-05-20 03:08
Lessons Learned: Lori Karmel of We Take The Cake2024-05-20 05:18
6 Common Ecommerce Mistakes2024-05-20 05:03
10 Resolutions for Your Pay-Per-Click Account2024-05-20 04:30
Selling on Amazon: Pros and Cons2024-05-20 04:30
How to Source Products from China, and Sell There Too2024-05-20 04:13
Zynga Opens the Kimono; We See Facebook2024-05-20 04:08
Google’s High-Speed Fiber Network Still Progressing2024-05-20 04:00
Types of eCommerce Business Buyers2024-05-20 03:59
Ecommerce Know-How: Alternative Financing2024-05-20 03:37
Microsoft Announces Major Vulnerability in All IE Browsers2024-05-20 03:26