Abstract
Abstract
Over the course of the nineteenth century children increasingly became
social, economic and scientific concerns. Their physical and mental
well-being was deemed intrinsic to the future development of Britain and its
Empire, and thus maintaining healthy youngsters was, by the turn of the
twentieth century, considered a national priority. This article explores the
interconnectivity between poverty and the child residents of pauper lunatic
asylums in England. It draws on a corpus of extant patient case files from
four pauper lunatic asylums between 1851 and 1907 and engages with detailed
information about the children and their mental conditions. Additionally,
there will be a focus on understanding family backgrounds, parental
occupations, the correlation between diagnoses and class, and methods of
‘treatment’ designed to equip children for independent working lifestyles.
The overarching objective is to consider the socio-economic ramifications of
child mental illness for parents and families and better understand how
Victorian institutions accommodated this specific class of patient.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Urban Studies,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),History,Geography, Planning and Development
Reference73 articles.
1. The National Archives (hereafter TNA), Census Returns
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828792 [11th December
2017].
2. Emaciated, Exhausted, and Excited: The Bodies and Minds of the Irish in Late Nineteenth-Century Lancashire Asylums
3. TNA, Census Returns of England and Wales, RG 12/1195,
1891c, fol. 14, p. 21, GSU roll. 6096305 [13th
December 2017].
Cited by
3 articles.
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