Aquila Children's Magazine AQUILA Magazine Best Bits | Page 23

Are you Oliver Twist? You could probably survive at least a few weeks in a Victorian workhouse. Joking aside, remember not only would you have had to endure many tough conditions all at once, you would also have been separated from your parents and siblings. Are you still sure you’d be able to make it? MOsTlY b s Yes, you’re easy-going but you’d probably not last more than a day in a Victorian workhouse. You’d be up at 6am and working by 7am, and apart from a short break for a really bland and nutrition-less lunch, you’d work all the way through to 6pm and be expected to be in bed by 8pm. And that’s not mentioning the type of work you’d be doing...did someone say bone crushing? MOsTlY c s You’re lucky workhouses are a thing of the past. You wouldn’t survive longer than five minutes. With your love of luxuries, it is hard to imagine the harsh conditions that the Victorian poor had to endure – as well as relinquishing all power and all individual identity – in many ways the workhouse was worse than prison. Poverty was rife in Victorian Britain (Hmmm, I’m pretty certain it ’s still about today, ed) . There were many reasons for this. For one thing, the Industrial Revolution, which had begun around 1760, meant that machines were now doing jobs that were traditionally done by people. There was less paid work to go round. The class system was also inflexible. It meant that there was little chance that you would grow up to be any wealthier than your parents. In 1834, the New Poor Law Act was passed. The idea behind it was to ‘help the poor help themselves’. One of the main features of the New Poor Law was that England and Wales were divided into areas called unions. Within each Poor Law Union a workhouse was built. Workhouses were places able-bodied people without jobs or homes could go to if they wanted food and shelter – but they had to work for it. (I’m guessing we’re not talking about cosy 9-5 desk jobs here, are we?) Workhouses weren’t prisons, in most cases poor people entered them voluntarily and, with notice, they could leave voluntarily, but the treatment they received and conditions inside were bleak. Workhouses also didn’t cater for vagrants, who were seen as a ‘lower class of person’ to the ‘deserving poor’. However, on the flipside, it is believed that these institutions saved thousands of Victorian Britons from starvation. TaKiNg iT FuRtHeR If you had been in government in the Victorian times, what would you have done differently to help people in poverty? Hutton MOsTlY a s