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Social History of Medicine 1996 9(3):335-355; doi:10.1093/shm/9.3.335
© 1996 by Society for the Social History of Medicine
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Articles

The New Poor Law and the County Pauper Lunatic Asylum—The Devon Experience 1834–1884

BILL FORSYTHE, JOSEPH MELLING and RICHARD ADAIR*

* Richard Adair, Department of Economic and Social History, Bill Forsythe, Department of Social Work and Probation Studies, and Joseph Melling, Department of Economic and Social History, University of Exeter, Exeter EX4 4RJ, UK.

SUMMARY In this article we examine the impace of the policies and practices of the Guardians of the New Poor Law Unions on the management of pauper Launatics in four Devon Poor Law Unions in the criticle period 1834–84. The central role of the Victorian Poor Law in provision made for the insane has only recently been recognized in the research leterature. Scholars have been much more concerned with the activities of professionalizing physicians and the general project of state management than they have with the micro-politics of the local Poor Law and the magistracy who were responsible for the legal disposition of the insane. In this paper we argue that not only were the Guardians of the Poor Law Unions central in the determination of the lunatic's journey through the institutional systems provided in the mid-nineteenth century, but also that there were significant variations within the Poor Law System which made for contrasting systems of disposal of lunatics as between the Unions themselves. These variations in disposal of lunatics in Devon raise important questions of ideology, policy, and practice which, if repeated elsewhere, point to a need to refine significantly our assumptions regarding the disposal of pauper lunatics in England and Wales in the fifty years following the 1834 Poor Law Amendment Act.

Keywords: Poor Law; asylums; insanity; Devon; magistrates; local government


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R. Ellis
The Asylum, the Poor Law, and a Reassessment of the Four-Shilling Grant: Admissions to the County Asylums of Yorkshire in the Nineteenth Century
Soc Hist Med, April 1, 2006; 19(1): 55 - 71.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]



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