Westbury, 340
Westbury-on-Severn, 340
West Firle, 327, 329, 332, 340
Westminster, 102 n., 128 n., 331, 338, 340
West Ward, 340
Weymouth, 340
Wheatenhurst, 340
Whitby, 340
Whitchurch (Hants), 340
Whitchurch (Salop), 327, 344, 338, 339, 340, 341
Whitechapel, 158 n., 170, 171, 260, 340
Whitehaven, 340
Whittlesey, 340
Whorwellsdown, 340
Wigan, 330
Wight, Isle of, 340
Wigton, 340
Williton, 340
Wilton, 340
Wimborne, 340
Wincanton, 340
Winchcombe, 341
Winchester, 341
Windsor, 341
Winslow, 341
Wisbeach, 341
Witney, 341
Wolstanton, 341
Wolverhampton, 341
Woodstock, 341
Woolwich, 239 n., 329, 332, 341
Wootton Bassett, 327
Worcester, 341
Worksop, 341
Wycombe, 341
Yeovil, 341
About This Book
The authors present a systematic chronological analysis of official Poor Law policy, extracting prescriptions from statutes, orders, circulars, reports and correspondence and arranging them by class of pauper—able-bodied, vagrants, the sick, women, children and the aged—to reveal shifts in central authority and administrative practice. They explain a meticulous method of isolating individual policy items, sorting them by subject and date, and assembling continuous narratives with precise references. The narrative traces how relief practices and legal prescriptions changed over time and culminated in a concise statement of contemporary principles and specific recommendations for medical relief and child apprenticeship, aiming to clarify policy development rather than to advocate particular reforms.