The unrecognised visitor, Rules and conditions for admission to workhouses
Rules and conditions for admission to workhouses were tightened in the 1860s. Each Poor Law Union employed one or more relieving officers, whose job it was to visit those applying for assistance and assess what relief, if any, they should be given. Any applicants considered to be in need of immediate assistance could be issued with a note admitting them directly to the workhouse. Alternatively they might be offered any necessary money or goods to tide them over until the next meeting of the guardians, who would decide on the appropriate level of support and whether or not the applicants should be assigned to the workhouse.
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Keywords: archival, archive, conditions, historical, history, house1860rulesadmissionpoor, lawemployedemploymentapplicantsassistanceofficerspovertysocialunemployment, rules, unrecognised, visitor, workhouseenglandpoor