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LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley
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LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Dec 14, 2015

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Page 1: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

LAW AND POVERTY

Professor Bill Quigley

Page 2: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Historical Development ofLaw and Poverty

Page 3: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

English Poor Laws

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Map of England

Page 5: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Feudalism

Page 6: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

From Murraystate poor law show

Page 7: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Edward III 1327-1377

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1349-1350 Statutes of LaborersEdward III

• prohibition of begging

• prohibition of almsgiving

• compulsory work for all under 60

• maximum wages

• people restricted to own town

Page 9: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Categorization of poor on ability to work

• Able-bodied?

• Disabled?

Page 10: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.
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1531 - 1536 Poor Relief Statutes

• positive obligations and negative sanctions

Page 12: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

1531 - 1536 Negative Sanctions

• punishment of beggars and vagabonds

• worries about the wandering poor

• only licensed poor were allowed to bet only aged and disabled were given licenses

• begging without a license was a crime

• crime to give $ to non-licensed beggars

• poor begging children (5 to 14) could be taken from families as apprentices

Page 13: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

1531 - 1536 Positive Obligations

• local responsibility for disabled or aged poor

• local financing and administration

• punishment for those who refused to work

• assistance limited to three year residents

Page 14: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

1563 Statute of Artificers

• compulsory work for poor

• could not leave community without written permission

• poor children as young as 1 were apprenticed

Page 15: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Elizabethan Poor Law of 1601

• Local Responsibility (parish)

• Primary Family Responsibility

• Settlement and Removal

Page 16: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.
Page 17: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Elizabethan Poor Law of 1601divided poor people into four

groups:

• needy neighbors who could not work

• needy neighbors who could work

• needy strangers who could not work

• needy strangers who could work

Only help was for first group

Page 18: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Settlement and Removal

• only helped worthy residents who were settled in jurisdiction (parish)

• outsiders, even worthy, were removed

Page 19: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

1822 English poor rate summons from www.workhouses.org.uk

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1747 English poor rate settlement document from www.workhouses.org.uk

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English poor rate removal notice 1836 from www.workhouses.org.uk

Page 22: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Colonial Poor Laws

Page 23: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Colonial Poor Laws

• came from English Poor Laws

• built on Puritan Ideology

• use Public-Private Partnership

Page 24: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Key Elements of Colonial Poor Laws

• Local Responsibility (parish)

• Inter-generational Family Responsibility

• Settlement Laws

• Forced Imprisonment for the Idle

Page 25: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Colonial Settlement

• Followed English Law

• Especially poor arrivals by ship

Page 26: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Ship from Sailing Ships and Their Stories by E. Keble Chatterton

Page 27: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Who Were the Poor in Colonies?

• Apprenticed children (Including those working off parents’ debt)

• Indentured servants

• Slaves

• Widows, orphans, abandoned women and children

• Mentally and physically disabled

Page 28: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

United States of American until Civil War

• followed mostly colonial poor laws

• local responsibility (county or town)

• settlement and removal

• family responsibility

• anti-immigrant poor

Page 29: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

7 year indenture of John Broad to George Washington,December 21, 1773

Page 30: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

April 19, 1809 contract between Thomas Jefferson and James Madison for sale of remainder of the terms of service for indentured servant, John Freeman, likely a indentured free black man, for term of 76 1/2 monts for $400. (Carter Woodson collection)

Page 31: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Slave pen in Alexandria, VA 1862

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Slave auction poster

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Slave pen in Alexandria, VA

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Native Americans homestead in Sandhills

Page 35: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Debtor’s prison in Accomoac, VA made from a picture postcard by Mayrose Co., Linden, NJ

Page 36: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Movement Towards Institutional Relief

• Outdoor relief: assistance in own homes

• Indoor relief: assistance in governmental setting

Page 37: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

1834 Poor Law Reforms in England(and others in USA)

• helping poor people was hurting them• poor people were lazy and immoral• $ was going to drink and wild lives So…• Less Eligibility (make lowest paid worker

better off than best poor person)• Stigmatize poor relief• Consolidate and centralize poor relief

Page 38: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Institutional Poor Relief

• Houses of Correction

• Almshouses

• County Poor Houses

• Poor Farms

• Workhouses

• Asylums

Page 39: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Civil War to New Deal

• Who were the poor?

– Victims of war, widows, orphans

– Disabled

– Freed Slaves

• What were the changes?

– More institutions

– Increase in private philanthropy

– States starting to accept responsibility

– State laws on minimum wage, preventing child labor, etc.

Page 40: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

American Memory/Library of Congress-Historic American Buildings Survey/Historic American Engineering Record Catalog No.: HABS.RI.4-PROV.131-1

Page 41: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

American Memory/Library of Congress-Historic American Buildings Survey/Historic American Engineering Record Catalog No.: HABS.RI.4-PROV.131-2

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American Memory/Library of Congress-Historic American Buildings Survey/Historic American Engineering Record Catalog No.: HABS.RI.4-PROV.131-3

Page 43: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

State lunatic asylum, Buffalo, NY, built 1871Catalog No.: HABS No. NY 0 5606

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Southern Ohio lunatic asylum, Dayton, Ohio. Erected 1855Catalog No.: HABS No. OH-2222-3

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New Orleans female orphan asylum and Margaret Monument, pictaken 1890

Page 46: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Orphan asylum, Charleston, SC

Page 47: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Rendering of St. Elizaeth’s Orphanage, 1314 Napoleon Ave.

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Page 49: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Cook Co. Poor Farm, Oak Forest, IL, east viewLibrary of Congress Call No: Illinois, no. 21Collection: Panoramic photographs

Page 50: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Door to poorhouse

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Old poorhouse, Germantown, c 1807brynmawr.edu

Page 52: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Workhouserules, 1831Aylesburg,England

Page 53: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Poorhouse by Charles Hoffman, c 1865, National Gallery of Art

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Men in workhouse

Page 55: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Mealtime at St. Pancras from www.workhouses.org.uk

Page 56: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Lewis Hine, photographer

Page 57: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Lewis Hine, photographer

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Child workers, factory, Baltimore 6/7/09, Lewis Hine, photographer

Page 59: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

W. A. Rogers cartoon(look for British flag andsmall boat coming out from NYC dynamite)from virginia.edu/~eas5e/sadlier

Page 60: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Causes of New Deal

• 25% of workforce unemployed

• Many displaced, urban and rural

• State and locals unable to shoulder burden of poor

• People could see the poor

Page 61: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Migrant family in auto camp in California, 1936The Library of Congress/American MemoryArchival TIFF versuib

Page 62: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Dispossessed Arkansas farmers in Bakersfield, CA 1935

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Squatter’s Camp, 1936

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1937, Mississippi sharecroppers in Cleveland, MS

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Www.nara.gov: depression; social security poster; children getting working papers, 1908, Lewis Hine ,photographer; 9:00 p.m. in glass factory, Indianapolic, 1908, 1 Hine photo; slave dealer, Alexandria,VA, c 1860

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Breadline on Times Square, December 8, 1930from AP photo file

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Soup kitchen sponsored by Al Capone, ssa.gov

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Responses of New Deal

• Federal effort to address some poverty

• Social security for aged

• Child labor laws

• Unemployment compensation

• Aid to Families Dependent children

Page 69: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Bismarck

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Franklin Roosevelt

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Unemployed workers signing up for unemployment comp

Page 73: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.
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Iowa family, federal relief 1936

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War on Poverty

• Medicare

• Medicaid

• Food Stamps

Page 76: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

First medicare card, 9/1/65 - ssa.gov

Page 77: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

Retrenchment

• Cutbacks in mothers and children in welfare

• Cutbacks on immigrants

Page 78: LAW AND POVERTY Professor Bill Quigley Historical Development of Law and Poverty.

THE END

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GeorgeWashington

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LyndonJohnson