Yes.
Whole families were sent there if they could not keep themselves.
Homeless children were sent to live in a harsh place called a workhouse.
Yes, women were indeed sent to prisons during Victorian times in the 19th century for various crimes. Women prisoners faced harsh conditions and were often housed separately from male prisoners. The prison system for women during the Victorian era aimed at carrying out moral reform and instilling discipline.
As now, that very much depended on the offence and the judge who set the sentence!
Because, it was somewhere for families that were destitute to live , in other words if you had no job or home, it was better than nothing
Education in Victorian times served essentially the same purpose that it serves today; knowledge prepares people for more productive and better paid careers, and for more intellectually rich and rewarding lives. But we can add that due to the lack of child labor laws in Victorian times, children who didn't go to school were in most cases sent to work instead, which made for rather dreary childhoods.
No.
just get a neww one, so so so much eaiser
Yes!it is correct to say homework was sent home.
Most children in Victorian England never went to school. They were taught at home and sent out to work to help support the family. School became mandatory in 1880 and children went to school until they were 10.
They were stolen from and what was still there was sent home after 34 days... In Virginia it was sent back in 21 days...
she got sent home or hitting rima