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Encyclopedia > Poorhouse

A poorhouse is a publicly maintained facility for the support and housing of dependent or needy persons, typically run by a local government entity such as a county or municipality. In telecommunication, the term facility has the following meanings: 1. ... Originally, in continental Europe, a county was the land under the jurisdiction of a count. ... A municipality or general-purpose district (compare with: special-purpose district) is an administrative local area generally composed of a clearly defined territory and commonly referring to a city, town, or village government. ...

  • In Victorian times (for Britain itself, see Poor Law, but also elsewhere), poverty was seen as a dishononouring, guilty state (lack of the highly praised virtue of industry being the presumed reason), justifying a rather uncharitable treatment, known from the dickensian portrayal of a dehumanized regime resembling a Reformatory (children could also be kept there, with their family or alone), or rather penal labour, as the poor could be put to hard, manual labour and were subject to corporal punishment.

Their lot was often not much better, largely depending on the authorities and the staff, eslewhere either, e.g. in Saratoga County (New York) the 137 'inmates' (mind the term!) of all sexes and ages could be beaten. The Poor Law was the system for the provision of social security in operation in England and the United Kingdom from the 16th century until the establishment of the Welfare State in the 20th century. ... A reformatory is a juvenile prison where legal minors are sent by (juvenile or general) courts to spend a custodial sentence, separate from the bad example of and abuse by adult (often hardened) convicts, usually gender-separated (mainly boys). ... Penal labour is a form of the unfree labour. ...

  • The term is commonly applied to such a facility that houses the desitute elderly; institutions of this nature were widespread in the United States prior to the adoption of the Social Security program in the 1930s. Facilities housing indigents who are not elderly are typically referred to as homeless shelters, or simply "shelters," in current usage.

Often the poorhouse was situated on the grounds of a poor farm on which able-bodied residents were required to work; such farms were common in the United States in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Social Security in the United States is a social insurance program funded through a dedicated payroll tax. ... // Events and trends The 1930s were described as an abrupt shift to more radical lifestyles, as countries were struggling to find a solution to the global depression. ... A homeless American. ...


Perhaps the best example of a "poorhouse" serving the elderly today is the Laguna Honda Hospital & Rehabilitation Center in San Francisco. This page is a candidate for speedy deletion. ...


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
HISTORY (1226 words)
Poorhouses were tax-supported residential institutions to which people were required to go if they could not support themselves.
Those earlier poorhouses often instituted the use of an adjacent farm on which the paupers could work to raise their own food, thus making the houses more self-sufficient (relying less on local tax funds).
By 1875, after the regulation of poorhouses in most states became the responsibility of the State Board of Charities, laws were passed prohibiting children from residing in poorhouses and removing mentally ill patients and others with special needs to more appropriate facilities.
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