Outdoor Relief Prohibitory Order
The Outdoor Relief Prohibitory Order was an order from the Poor Law Commission issued on 21 December 1844 which aimed to end the distribution of outdoor relief to the able-bodied poor.[1]
See also
References
- ^ Workhouse.orgs article on the order Archived 2011-06-05 at the Wayback Machine
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Poor laws of the British Isles
- England and Wales
- Scotland
- Ireland
- Isle of Man
Nantwich workhouse
- Vagabonds and Beggars Act 1494
- Tudor poor laws
- Poor Relief Act 1597
- Poor Relief Act 1601
- Poor Relief Act 1662
- Relief of the Poor Act 1696
- Poor Relief Act 1722
- Relief of the Poor Act 1782
- House of correction
- Overseer of the poor
- Poor rate
- Poor relief
- Buttock mail
- Royal commission (1832)
- Poor Law Amendment Act 1834
- Poor Law (Scotland) Act 1845
- Less eligibility
- Workhouse
- Workhouse test
- Board of guardians
- Outdoor Labour Test Order
- Outdoor Relief Prohibitory Order
- Poor law unions
- Opposition
- Book of Murder
- Scottish poorhouse
- Liberal welfare reforms
- Royal Commission (1905–09)
- Majority Report
- Minority Report
- Interwar poverty
- National Assistance Act 1948