Audiobook: Workhouse Characters
- Download Preface audio
- Download EUNICE SMITH—DRUNK audio
- Download DETAINED BY MARITAL AUTHORITY audio
- Download A WELSH SAILOR audio
- Download THE VOW audio
- Download BLIND AND DEAF audio
- Download AND, BEHOLD, THE BABE WEPT audio
- Download MARY, MARY, PITY WOMEN! audio
- Download THE SUICIDE audio
- Download PUBLICANS AND HARLOTS audio
- Download OLD INKY audio
- Download A DAUGHTER OF THE STATE audio
- Download IN THE PHTHISIS WARD audio
- Download AN IRISH CATHOLIC audio
- Download AN OBSCURE CONVERSATIONIST audio
- Download MOTHERS audio
- Download YOUR SON'S YOUR SON audio
- Download TOO OLD AT FORTY audio
- Download IN THE LUNATIC ASYLUM audio
- Download THE SWEEP'S LEGACY audio
- Download AN ALIEN audio
- Download WIDOWS INDEED! audio
- Download THE RUNAWAY audio
- Download A GIRL! GOD HELP HER! audio
- Download ON THE PERMANENT LIST audio
- Download THE PAUPER AND THE OLD-AGE PENSION audio
- Download THE EVACUATION OF THE WORKHOUSE audio
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Description
In 1904, Margaret Nevinson, a respectable lady and active suffragette, joined the board of guardians in Hampstead Heath. The guardians had responsibility over the parish workhouse. In the UK, before the 1930s, one could not receive welfare assistance unless he or she entered the workhouse. A house for which one had to work. The conditions were so poor, sometimes even poorer then conditions in prison. The workhouse inspired many novels, the most famous is Oliver Twist. This collection of short stories is about the horrors Margaret saw, chiefly about things women had to endure. A married woman collected money and found a house for her and her children, but could not leave the workhouse as she was, by law, "the property of her husband." This particular story was adapted from her one-act play "In The Workhouse" which helped change that law only two years later. In another story, a smart lady who studied at the University Of Cambridge sinks into depression after the death of her husband and finds herself drunk at the workhouse. In 26 tales, Nevinson details the horrors of the system, one after the other, in an engaging and elegant style which appealed to the public. This book is perfect for fans of Charles Dickens, and for all those who love feminism and social history. - Summary by Stav Nisser.
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