History, asked by andyteach1066, 6 months ago

Describe two features of life in the Whitechapel workhouses

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
10

here is yøur answer

☑️The Workhouse had strict rules and regulations, for example, it dictated what people ate, how they worked and what time the woke up and went to bed.

☑️The Workhouse aimed to help the poorest people in Whitechapel, for example those who couldn't afford basic necessities like food and/or a place to sleep.

Answered by krishnaanandsynergy
0

A workhouse in the United Kingdom was a full-fledged institution that provided housing and employment to persons who were unable to sustain themselves financially.

About Whitechapel workhouses:

  • The Victorian Workhouse was a social institution that provided labor and shelter to persons who were poor and unable to sustain themselves.
  • With the introduction of the Poor Law system, Victorian workhouses, which were intended to address the issue of pauperism, morphed into prisons, keeping society's most vulnerable citizens.
  • The severe workhouse system became synonymous with the Victorian era, an institution notorious for its appalling circumstances, forced child labor, long hours, hunger, beatings, and neglect.
  • It would become a scourge on a generation's social conscience, prompting resistance from the likes of Charles Dickens.

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