In Victorian workhouses, people performed various types of work, often depending on their age and physical condition. Common tasks included manual labor such as breaking stones, agricultural work, sewing, and laundry. Workhouses aimed to provide minimal sustenance in exchange for labor, often under harsh conditions, reflecting the era's attitudes toward poverty and welfare. The work was typically monotonous and physically demanding, with little regard for the well-being of the laborers.
In a Victorian work house children, adults and elderly went to work in a workhouse if they were poor or badly ill. If they broke the rules then they would be put in a cage in a dark room, fined of even put into prison!
In the victorian times you hadto work till the ageof 18 years old
they would have to sneak out of work and climb out the windows p.s watched it at school
In Victorian workhouses, children typically did not go home after work, as they lived in the institution full-time. They were often separated from their families and placed in the workhouse for various reasons, including poverty or orphanhood. The workhouses operated as a means of providing food and shelter, but the conditions were harsh, and children were required to perform labor alongside adults. As such, their lives were largely confined within the workhouse system.
A workhouse refers to factory in the Victorian era that is known for its poor working conditions. Those working in the factory were the inspiration behind the movement towards unionization.
work in a workhouse's
In a Victorian work house children, adults and elderly went to work in a workhouse if they were poor or badly ill. If they broke the rules then they would be put in a cage in a dark room, fined of even put into prison!
In the victorian times you hadto work till the ageof 18 years old
they would have to sneak out of work and climb out the windows p.s watched it at school
There were 3 work houses in louth.
the master of the workhouse sorts everything out like the head master for example!
The answer is the children use to wash the floor iron the masters and matrons clothes
In Victorian workhouses, children typically did not go home after work, as they lived in the institution full-time. They were often separated from their families and placed in the workhouse for various reasons, including poverty or orphanhood. The workhouses operated as a means of providing food and shelter, but the conditions were harsh, and children were required to perform labor alongside adults. As such, their lives were largely confined within the workhouse system.
A workhouse refers to factory in the Victorian era that is known for its poor working conditions. Those working in the factory were the inspiration behind the movement towards unionization.
cause im class
i need to know this answer because im doing some history homework .
Workhouses were where poor people who had no job or home lived. They earned their keep by doing jobs in the workhouse. Also in the workhouses were orphaned (children without parents) and abandoned children, the physically and mentally sick, the disabled, the elderly and unmarried mothers.