Petty Tyranny and Oppression
Workhouse Lives Under the Long Nineteenth-Century Poor Laws
Paul Carter author Steven King author
Format:Paperback
Publisher:London Publishing Partnership
Published:28th May '26
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

This book focuses on one of the most contentious areas of English and Welsh poor law history: the exercise of petty tyranny by officials on the workhouse poor. The book examines the period from the late-eighteenth-century crisis of the Old Poor Law, through the adoption of the New Poor Law reform in 1834, the loosening of the ‘principles of 1834’ in the 1890s, and on past the early-twentieth-century Liberal reforms, to the eve of World War I. This long chronological sweep thus examines the Old and New Poor Laws together as experienced by generations of pauper inmates.
For the first time the notion of ‘tyranny’ and its various typologies within the historical workhouse estate is set out clearly and tested against archival evidence of neglect, beatings, refusal to supply adequate relief, the denial of medical aid, and much more. While other work has centred on discipline and scandal, we instead examine the everyday experience of tyranny in the round – the potential for which was a central part of workhouse life and fed into the common fear and loathing of ‘the House’ – and the ways that it might have been contained and resisted.
The book draws on a wide archival base including pamphlets; diaries, overseers’ accounts and vestry minutes; the records of the central poor law authority; orders and circulars; punishment books; and local, regional and national newspapers. This collective archive contains many thousands of accounts of tyrannical behaviours throughout the whole of England and Wales and across the whole period.
‘This remarkable study makes a very significant contribution to modern social and welfare history. By systematically uncovering and exploring the myriad petty tyrannies to which welfare recipients were subject and establishing these as the foundation on which workhouse power rested, it transforms our understanding of power and resistance over centuries of welfare history. It will be essential reading for any scholar of welfare history and a staple of modern social history curricula everywhere.’
— Olwen Purdue FRHistS, Professor of Social History, Queen’s University Belfast and Director, Centre for Public History
‘This book – the first to explore petty tyranny and oppression across both the Poor Laws of England and Wales – clearly demonstrates the potential frameworks of oppression and the different landscapes of resistance. It will be an essential volume for anyone interested in the power struggles between state and paupers as each sought to navigate the welfare system.’
— Dr Carol Beardmore, Associate Lecturer, The Open University
‘What was “tyranny” to a pauper in nineteenth-century Wales or England? Cutting dinner portions. Not answering requests. Enforcing rules capriciously. This thoughtful, careful volume finds variations from place to place, and among officials, both local and central. Steeped in words written by or about those in need, Petty Tyranny and Oppression gives a nuanced, richly sourced portrait of how the poor laws felt and functioned.’
— Gabriel Loiacono, Professor of History and Associate School Director of Public Affairs & Global Engagement, University of Wisconsin Oshkosh
ISBN: 9781916749641
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
300 pages