bread, cheese, gruel (thin type of oatmeal), soup, and potatoes
they were scared because of the boogie man
Oliver Twist was sent away from the workhouse primarily because he dared to ask for more food, famously requesting, “Please, sir, I want some more.” This act of defiance shocked the workhouse authorities, leading them to view him as a troublemaker. Subsequently, he was sold to a man named Mr. Sowerberry, a local undertaker, effectively removing him from the workhouse environment. His request for more food highlighted the harsh conditions and neglect faced by orphans in the workhouse system.
Because people didn't have any food or money so they decided to go to the workhouse so they could have a home to live in.
Oliver was locked up in a coal cellar by Mr. Bumble as punishment for asking for more food at the workhouse. This was a common form of punishment in the workhouse to discourage any further disobedience from the orphans.
cause im class
More or less exactly where Stewart Close is, Opposite to the closed Hutton School late Fitness Centre off Victoria Road.A History of Workhouse Fold by Kenneth Kenzie is available in the Eccleshill Library. Reference only.
Cleveland Street Workhouse was created in 1778.
Holywell Workhouse Chapel was created in 1884.
loads of archies
NO Styal Mill was not a workhouse it was a Mill for producing cotton There was a workhouse opposite the mill on the other side of Stayal Road. This was a over spill for Manchester.
After Oliver Twist finished his meal at the workhouse, he famously asked for more food, saying, "Please, sir, I want some more." This bold request shocked the workhouse staff and highlighted the dire conditions and neglect faced by the children in the system. His plea for more food symbolizes the desperation and struggles of the impoverished in Victorian England.
they had to stay at the workhouse until they died and there job was to make weapons for the children