The eighteenth-century records of the Boston Overseers of the Poor /

editors, Eric Nellis, Anne Decker Cecere.
Bibliographic Details
Contributors: Nellis, Eric Guest, 1938-
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Summary:The records constitute the earliest and most complete set of records pertaining to poor relief in early America. The Overseers of the Poor was a board of private citizens elected by the town meeting who were responsible for distinguishing between the ?deserving? and ?undeserving? poor. Being mostly wealthy merchants, the Overseers personally advanced the money for the deserving poor during most of the year and were then reimbursed by the town. Undeserving poor were relegated to workhouses. Given the face-to-face quality of this system of welfare, these records provide a wealth of hard to find detail about the nature of poverty in the eighteenth century, including details on both the feminization of poverty (related to waves of widows created by repeated wars) and the callous practice of freeing slaves once age or infirmity reduced their usefulness.
In collection: Stephen Griffin Collection
Format: Book
Language:English
Published / Created: Boston : [Charlottesville] : The Colonial Society of Massachusetts ; 2007.
Distributed by the University of Virginia Press,
Series:Publications of the Colonial Society of Massachusetts ; v. 69.
Subjects:
Notes:Includes bibliographical references and index.

Physical description: 1041 pages : color map ; 26 cm.

Title on jkt. spine: Records of the Boston Overseers of the Poor

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Contained in: Eighteenth-century records of the Boston Overseers of the Poor.
ISBN:9780962073748
0962073741
Call Number View In Collection
GR 8540
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