as much as a donkey dances like a potato chip badger
the life for children the Victorian times was cruel brutal and just plain discriminating because all children had to work
Yes they where made in Victorian times
Discusting.In the Victorian times they did the bathroom in a chamberpot then threw it out of the window on the streets it was revolting!
The staff in a workhouse were:-A Master-A Matron-A Medical Officer-A Chaplain-A Porterand-A School TeacherHope this helped! :Da Mastera Matrona Medical Officera Chaplaina portera school-teacher
yes
big
victorian
you couldn't although one boy managed it in 1845
none of your buissness
1974
they had lunch at twelve to one
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 workhouse times the poor people had to wear a uniform so the outside knew they were poor and knew they were from the workhouse.
During Victorian times, workhouses were designed to be harsh institutions intended to deter people from seeking aid. Conditions were often overcrowded and unsanitary, with inmates facing strict discipline, meager rations, and hard labor. Families were typically separated, and the environment was bleak, leading to high levels of disease and despair among the residents. Overall, workhouses were seen as a last resort for the impoverished and reflected the era's punitive approach to poverty.
they woke up when ever they wanted to
The first Victorian workhouse was built in North London in 1823 and there was more children than adults working there
I'm pretty sure that adults and children are separate and they eat gruel:)