What Was Life Really Like In A Victorian Workhouse? | Secrets From The Workhouse | Absolute History

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  • čas přidán 28. 04. 2022
  • In Victorian England, the Workhouse formed the basis of society. The poor and destitute entered Workhouses to receive free health care and food. But in a society that viewed poverty as a crime, these workhouses were never meant to comfort. It was a means to punish the destitute and encourage future independence. In this two-part documentary, several UK celebrities explore how their ancestors survived the difficult environment of the Workhouse and discover some unexpected family secrets that shock and inspire them in turn.
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Komentáře • 2,4K

  • @deemccarthy8456
    @deemccarthy8456 Před 2 lety +2

    My lovely mum was in a work/poor house in Staffordshire from 1941 when she was 12 until 1944 when she was 15. Even today mum cannot talk about it. Both her parents had died and that's why she was sent there. She was from a very poor family so that was bad enough. Now and again she will speak of what happened and then gets so upset she cannot carry on. I feel so sad for my mum and others that were forced to live in those awful places. I count my blessings every single day.

  • @jadefire2817
    @jadefire2817 Před rokem +597

    Now I know why my Grandparents always said, "Turn out that light! Do you want us to end up in the poorhouse!?" It actually sounds worse than being homeless in the open air. We are

  • @RD-py9sv
    @RD-py9sv Před 2 lety +710

    "Poverty regarded as a crime." This sentiment hasn't changed. Same as the idea that it's the fault of said person for being poor. The only real difference is that the poor aren't dissected to repay their so-called debt to society. Mostly.

  • @Tinthia82
    @Tinthia82 Před rokem +652

    What's sad is that people are still treated like criminals for being poor.

  • @johnwright9372

    One of my female ancestors died in a Staffordshire Workhouse. My mother would respond to wasted food or damaged clothing with: "you'll have us in the Workhouse!" The scars ran deep, but memories are short and there are still people in Britain today who are callous enough to demonise the poor. They call themselves Tories.

  • @arielkoubi4277
    @arielkoubi4277 Před rokem +706

    I am not from a British decent and have no relatives that went through this system however, this documentary made me cry and realize that as a private citizen in my own community I am not doing enough for those in need. Things are about to change.

  • @jacquietremain5743
    @jacquietremain5743 Před 2 lety +859

    My mother Peggy missed out on the workhouse by being placed in an orphanage run by a church. The nuns were so cruel. Peggy was in the orphanage from 9 till 18.she could not leave at the usual 16 as all her mother and step father could offer was a mattress in a celler. It affected her for her whole life. Broken families and poverty ruin generations.

  • @Liz-ek3hc
    @Liz-ek3hc Před rokem +870

    My great aunt, born 1903, was terrified to the day she died about ending up in the workhouse. Not that she was ever in it, and she eventually had a good job as a forewoman in a shirt factory in Derry, Northern Ireland, but what she saw happening to others in her lifetime remained with her forever. God rest her and all souls who lived through those terrible times.

  • @nikkitronic80
    @nikkitronic80 Před rokem +479

    When I was growing up, a common phrase I’d hear from my family was “ you don’t want to end up in the poor house!” I never really grasped exactly what that meant. Now I understand how much of a threat, a scary thing that actually could be.

  • @golemsnatch5755
    @golemsnatch5755 Před rokem +101

    My great aunt's husband and his sister were sent to the workhouse circa 1870 when their parents died. While they were there the sister was hit across the head by the matron, with a set of heavy keys. She was one of the poor souls who died in these hell holes. She was ten years old.

  • @monav4062
    @monav4062 Před rokem +323

    I live in America. I came across this video by chance and decided to watch it. I had never even heard of the "Poor House" as being a real place. My siblings and I grew up really poor, but we never were so poor that we went hungry for very long and we always had a roof over our heads. We had to wear clothing that the church would give us and shoes as well. My mom worked at many jobs, ironing, cooking, laundry, etc. My father left us when my sisters and I were small as he was a violent alcoholic, so it's good that he left.

  • @SabbathaBastet

    As an American raised on Dickens and Stevenson, I’ve had an interest in Victorian England and Scotland for decades. I only recently learned that my current city, Louisville, Kentucky, also had a workhouse/poorhouse.

  • @julz3tt3
    @julz3tt3 Před rokem +166

    I love how Brian Cox is so outspoken and he's rightly horrified at the lack of care and treatment for the poor. Opium and Asylums were all the people living in these horrendous conditions and physical pain were offered. The asylums were more like torture chambers with the boiling baths and hysteria machines. Just awful. I'm glad Charlie made it. He gave his Mother a happy last few years as well.

  • @annarushlau9722
    @annarushlau9722 Před 2 lety +210

    Awwww the one where the old man saved enough for his funeral at the age of 91 so as not to be a burden even in death made me cry.

  • @nichegoseberazdvatri
    @nichegoseberazdvatri Před rokem +155

    I found out my grandmother had a twin sister who had died of starvation when they were just toddlers. She only confessed this to us on her deathbed. I still think about this everyday. Tell your family. They deserve to know.

  • @wendygreidanus8391
    @wendygreidanus8391 Před rokem +190

    I'm Canadian, born and raised, yet I can remember my mum and her aunts speaking of the Workhouse. We didn't have such a thing in Canada, but my mum's family were Irish immigrants, and were dirt poor. It's amazing how through the generations, the fear inspired by the Victorian Workhouses, reached Canadian shores. The scars inflicted weren't just on those housed within its walls, but on those who knew the stories of others who had been.

  • @flowersforthedead5182

    The love his mother must have felt to name him Friend. That just stabbed my heart to bits for some reason.

  • @busymama8537
    @busymama8537 Před 2 lety +468

    This video opened a window to my family’s past. Now I understand why the worst thing for them was being “sent to the poor house” . How many times did I hear my grandparents say this! For the lower classes this was a very real reality that had a huge impact on them psychologically even if they never entered the doors. Now my question is whether or not any of my ancestors actually did end up there. I think the answer is most likely yes.

  • @TheCrabbyWitch

    My Nana was born in 1945 in London and was abandoned by her mother and she grew up in an orphanage. Definitely not the same as the workhouse, but she has always had difficulty talking about her time in the orphanage and the few times she has spoken on the subject it makes her very emotional and the conditions she described sound very similar to the condition people would face in the workhouse.

  • @cottoncandy4486
    @cottoncandy4486 Před rokem +65

    My grandfather died in an Irish workhouse.Before that they lived in actual ditches.