1
Salt Lake City, Utah. 1860. Built or Found? Again, where are the people?
16:25
2
Exquisite Old World Philadelphia. Founded 1682. Why Did They Move The Capital to DC?
31:01
3
Huh? 400-ft. Deep Salt Mine with Carved Balconies Dug During the Middle Ages!
1:35
4
A Look At Reclaiming The Old World by Introducing The Industrial Revolution
30:52
5
The Missing Link Between Hospitals & Asylums During The 1800's.
35:08
6
The Coincidental Improbability of Electric Tram Systems Worldwide
14:36
7
It's Not Buried but 5 Stories Await You in This Intricate 1498 Underground Temple
20:35
8
The Crystal Palace. 1st Photographs. 1851. Glass & Steel. Burnt to The Ground.
10:16
9
What Happened In San Francisco During The 1800's? Official Narrative Dismantled.
7:11
10
Over 100 Miles of Streets Discovered Underneath Detroit, MI. In 1895!
5:33
11
These Look Like Old World Palaces ... They're Telling Us They're Just Caves.
20:19
12
Underground Eureka Springs, Arkansas • Where Basements Have Basements
3:51
13
Do We Know Who Really Built the Parthenon in Nashville, Tennessee?
40:46
14
Visiting American Insane Asylums & Reset Prisons During The 1800's
21:13
15
The Concealed History of The Chattanooga Tennessee Underground
13:21
16
The Last Remaining U.S. Old World City - New Orleans, Louisiana
36:21
17
The Baby Merchants - Mud Flood Baby Cloning Operations
48:38
18
Children of The Mud Flood. Creepy Repopulation Postcards dated 1880 - 1910.
13:06
19
1904 World's Fair Building Dated 1803! 'Construction' Photos...
19:25
20
Empty Cities in The 1860's But...Where Are The People?
38:06
21
Los Angeles, California BEFORE the Mud floods - 1st Photos (1864-1909)
40:57
22
Looking 80 ft. Below The Mud flood in Kansas City, Missouri
8:48
23
Mud Flood. Kansas City. Missouri. 1860's. Receipts.
28:41
24
The Flying Train, An Old World Suspended Rail, Germany, 1902
3:47
25
What Really Happened in America in 1800-1900? (Pt. 2)
40:39
26
Mud Flood History Reeks Around Alexander The Great & Thunder Stone
24:23
The Great Workhouse Reset During the 1800's
28:15
28
OLD WORLD ORDER: Everything's A Lie & History Has Been Fabricated.
1:30:31
29
The Rise of Insane Asylums in the 1800's & their role in The Orphan Trains
39:45
30
Sky Ships of Tartaria & Their Visionary Inventors
17:42
31
Gilded Age, Tartarian 'Summer Home' of The Vanderbilt's. Narrative: 2 Years to Build!
9:18
32
Was The U.S. Civil War A Staged Photo Psyop? [Not Suitable For Everyone]
52:39
33
Is There A Submarine In This 1850s Photo?
37:16
34
Why We Can't Build These Anymore...
1:05
35
Ultimate Tartarian Collection of 500+ Photographs From Across The Globe
1:00:04
36
The Architectural Machines Of Tartaria Hidden In History
59:59
37
Old World Order - What If The Whole Story Has Been Fabricated?
1:39
38
Presenting Real Evidence of Ancient Nuclear Wars
20:08
39
Destructive Great Reset in The Forbidden City During the Ming Dynasty
11:44
40
Where Exactly is Tartaria & Who Were The Tartars?
12:46
41
The Mud Flood Theory 101
11:36
42
Mud Flood Mansions & the Gilded Age Deception
34:34
43
The Orphan Train-a Social Experiment Gone Bad
6:33
44
Old World Cities Existed In The United States! So, WHO (re)wrote our history?
1:11:47
45
Wireless Electric Streetcars In The 1800's All Over The World!
22:16
46
The Tartarian Skyscraper 'Traymore by The Sea' Hotel in Atlantic City
3:35
47
Replenishing The World's Work Force with Orphans
39:29
48
Kiev, Ukraine Old World Tartarian History In Stunning Archival Photos
16:53
49
Tartaria Reset | Life & Times of Frederick Law Olmsted (allegedly built Central Park)
16:19
50
Walk Through This Vast Network of Turkish Underground Cities
10:27
51
The Land of Tartaria Illustrated in 250+ Authentic, Archival Photographs
32:10
52
Argentina Mudflood Oldest Photos, Starfort, Empty streets, Completed buildings & Mud streets
33:29
53
The U.S. Constitution is Tartarian - Discover The Legendary City of Norumbega
11:34
54
Tartarian Mysteries - What is Roman Architectural Engineering Doing in China?
53:45
55
Old World Atlanta, Georgia - Intricate Tartarian City Planning
47:51
56
Unpacking Tartaria, Pt. 1 - The Irish Connection, Plato & The Isles of California
27:19
57
Unpacking Tartaria, Pt. 2 - Unexplained Architecture & Mysterious Technology
58:14
58
Unpacking Tartaria, Pt. 3 - Why The White Giants in America (Instead of Indians)?
40:33
59
Unpacking Tartaria, Pt. 4 - Ancient EMF Technology & The Magnetic Ether
50:36
60
Unpacking Tartaria, Pt. 5 - Blimp Docking Stations, 1887 Electric Vehicle, Oil Oligarchy Coverups
11:56
61
Unpacking Tartaria, Pt. 6 - Subterranean Networks, Underground Railroads & Buried Cities
34:17
62
Unpacking Tartaria, Pt. 7 - Classical Art, Petrifaction, Melted Buildings & The Renaissance Lie
39:58
63
Unpacking Tartaria Pt. 8: Asylums / Prisons / Colleges / Mind Control / Castles in America
31:08
64
Unpacking Tartaria Pt.9: Odd Fellows, Repopulation, Orphans, Ghost Cities
52:37
65
Unpacking Tartaria Pt 10: Waste Management / Poop Fuel, The Gilded Age
33:20
66
The Orphan Train Migration From Tartaria
48:43

The Great Workhouse Reset During the 1800's

5 months ago
1.43K

The Narrative: Workhouses, or poorhouses as they were sometimes called, were institutions that emerged in the 1800s in Europe and the United States as part of the social safety net for the impoverished. Here's an overview of their history and function:

Origins: The concept of the workhouse dates back to the Statute of Cambridge in 1388, which was an attempt to address labor shortages in England following the Black Death. The statute restricted the movement of laborers and ultimately led to the state becoming responsible for the support of the poor.

19th Century Europe: In the 1800s, especially following the end of the Napoleonic Wars, Europe faced mass unemployment and a series of bad harvests. This led to the establishment of workhouses, which were designed to provide accommodation and employment to those who could not support themselves financially.

The New Poor Law: In 1834, the New Poor Law was introduced in Britain, which aimed to discourage the provision of relief outside of workhouses. The law hoped to make workhouses self-sufficient by utilizing the free labor of inmates for tasks such as breaking stones, crushing bones to produce fertilizer, or picking oakum.

Conditions: Life in workhouses was intentionally harsh to deter people from seeking assistance. Inmates lived in overcrowded and often unsanitary conditions, performing menial and physically demanding tasks. The diet was meager, and the discipline was strict.

Evolution: Over time, workhouses became more of a refuge for the elderly, infirm, and sick rather than the able-bodied poor. By the late 19th and early 20th centuries, many workhouses had evolved into institutions that provided more specialized care for these groups.

Abolition and Legacy: Workhouses were formally abolished in Britain in 1930, but many continued under the new name of Public Assistance Institutions. It wasn't until the introduction of the National Assistance Act in 1948 that the last vestiges of the Poor Law disappeared, marking the end of workhouses in Britain.

In the United States: The workhouse system was also adopted in the U.S., with the first workhouse built in Boston in 1660. The American workhouses were similar to their European counterparts, serving as a means to manage poverty by requiring work in exchange for support.

The workhouse system reflects a time before modern social services, when society's approach to poverty was punitive and stigmatizing. These institutions are a reminder of the historical attitudes towards poverty and the evolution of social welfare systems.

SOURCE
Lucius Aurelian

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