Opposition Flashcards

1
Q

Workhouse nickname?

A

Bastilles

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2
Q

What influenced this name?

A

The French Revolution

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3
Q

Why workhouses were repellent to the poor?

A

Situated at some distance form the applicant’s home, impersonal, threatening strict regime

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4
Q

What rumours circulated about the workhouses?

A

They had been built as extermination centres for the poor

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5
Q

What did Thomas Malthus propose?

A

That population growth would outstrip food production

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6
Q

What was the ‘Book of Murder’?

A

Anti-poor law propaganda based on 2 anonymous pamphlets discussing the possibility of gassing pauper children to reduce the population.

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7
Q

Why did the new workhouses make no distinctions between deserving and undeserving poor?

A

Everyone was thrown together in the same workhouse

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8
Q

Why did Commission proposals to move unemployed labourers to the North of England 1835-37 create outrage?

A

Labourers argued it was part of a government plan to drive down wages

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9
Q

Why did Old Poor Law Overseers oppose the new system? (Three reasons)

A

To protect their existing powers, because they believed they operated a successful and viable system in their own parish, cost of building the workhouse would be expensive and unsustainable.

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10
Q

Why were urban areas a special case?

A

Because industrial work put lots of workers out of work for short periods of time and then the workhouses would stand empty

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11
Q

What was the problem in agricultural areas with the idea of workhouses?

A

outdoor relief cost about half of what a workhouse would cost

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12
Q

Why did Richard Oastler oppose the new Poor Law?

A

he said it would break up society

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13
Q

Why was John Walter singled out for criticism?

A

He was Berkshire magistrate paying generous outdoor relief who opposed the new Poor Law in the Times

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14
Q

Why were influential landowners shocked?

A

The power of the new commission’s powers

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15
Q

How did opposition manifest itself in the rural areas of Britain?

A

Riot and disorder in the south e.g. Amersham – Riot Act 1835, Kent 1835, East Anglia 1844

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16
Q

How did opposition manifest itself in the industrial areas of Britain?

A

More violent than rural areas e.g Huddersfield 1837 opposition 6-7 thousand riot, Oastler refused to read the Riot Act

17
Q

Why did John Fielden help the Anti-Poor Law Campaign?

A

Radical MP, South Lancs, good factory owner, closed down his factory in protest at guardian elections, refuse to pay poor rates

18
Q

What conclusions can you draw about the Anti-poor Law Campaign?

A

Factory town of Lancashirestrong anti-poor law, movement short-lived, evangelical Tories,working-class radicals, Chartism