2012
DOI: 10.1353/jer.2012.0064
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Poor Women and the Boston Almshouse in the Early Republic

Abstract: This essay argues that, during the period 1795–1817, the Boston Almshouse was a female space organized around the lives of poor women. Through quantitative and qualitative analysis of Boston Almshouse records, supplemented with Boston town records, newspapers, and related documents, the author shows the centrality of women to the institution. Even though men had official responsibility for the Almshouse, women’s concerns shaped its structure and rhythms. First, even though more men than women passed through th… Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…In her work (2001 and 2012), Herndon suggests reasons why individuals, especially women, ended up in Almshouses (Herndon 2012). These reasons include an individual's physical and/or mental state as well as the societal desire to control the poor and hide pregnant women who did not have a spouse (as early Puritans did).…”
Section: Black Female and Without Socio-economic Supportmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In her work (2001 and 2012), Herndon suggests reasons why individuals, especially women, ended up in Almshouses (Herndon 2012). These reasons include an individual's physical and/or mental state as well as the societal desire to control the poor and hide pregnant women who did not have a spouse (as early Puritans did).…”
Section: Black Female and Without Socio-economic Supportmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…104 Desde a primeira Almshouse, diversas outras instituições foram surgindo ao longo do século XVIII e, principalmente, no século XIX: em 1723, uma prisão foi construída junto à Almshouse; em 1739, uma Casa de Trabalho foi construída ao lado das duas. Segundo Herndon (2012), "os magistrados de Boston esperavam que a Almshouse, a Casa de Trabalhos e a prisão, juntas, tirassem os pobres destituídos e indesejados das ruas de Boston" (HERNDON, 2012, p. 367). Segundo os registros, em 1800, cerca de 1,5% da população de Boston foi admitida na Almshouse, número que chegou a 2% em 1816.…”
Section: Herndon (2012)unclassified