orphanage
go to debtors prison
Marshalsea
Prison
he owed the local baker 10 shilling and six pence for the bread they bought. He had lost his job as a clerk and was desperate to feed his family - Following a court hearing he was committed to Debtors Prison
Charles Dickens went back to school after his father paid off his debt and sent him to work at a boot-blacking factory to cover expenses. After his father's release from debtors' prison, Dickens was able to resume his education.
His dad went to one part of a prison that was meant for extremely poor people, so it really isn't a "prison." His life at the prison was probably better than life outside the prison because in the prison, he could actually eat food, and have the basic needs.
child abuse (rape)
because when Charles dad went to prison, Charles mom and Charles started to sell all the things they had, but at a point, they didn't have anything left so the only thing they could do was to go to jail.
Your parents will be in prison. It is a crime to not go to school so that's why the parents go to prison.
Well, honey, Charles Dickens was just a wee lad of 12 when his dear old dad landed himself in the slammer. Daddy dearest got himself into some financial trouble and ended up behind bars, leaving young Charles to fend for himself and start working in a boot-blacking factory. And that, my friend, is the not-so-fairy-tale beginning of one of the greatest literary legends of all time.
No, Mother Teresa was never sent to prison.
After Charles Dickens' father was imprisoned for debt, his mother and siblings went to live with him in debtor's prison. This experience had a profound impact on Dickens and heavily influenced his later writings on poverty and social injustice.