The considerable social concern and statutory provision for the care and welfare of children is a remarkable feature of mid-twentieth century English society. It is not however a unique achievement of the present age -- children certainly loomed large in the paternalistic legislation of the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, and were regarded as an important part of the social structure and valuable assets of the commonwealth.

The present volume represents the first half of a study of the social concern for children in England from the Tudor paternalism of the mid-sixteenth century to the legislation of the Welfare State in the mid-twentieth century. In it, the authors analyse various aspects of Tudor policy concerning children and discuss the ways in which later generations deliberately or unconsciously modified these policies. They show how, as a result of changed social attitudes, the failure to provide adequately for the welfare of children was again by the end of the eighteenth century becoming a matter of increasing concern among thinking people and prompted a renewal of local and voluntary efforts to solve what had become urgent national problems.

The companion volume will deal with the attempts made by nineteenth-century reformers to remedy some of the problems caused by urbanisation and rapid increase in population, and also with twentieth-century social provision for the child. Together, these two volumes will be a significant addition to the literature of historical sociology in which social attitudes to childhood and to children so far been largely neglected.

The present volume represents the first half of a study of the social concern for children in England from the Tudor paternalism of the mid-sixteenth century to the legislation of the Welfare State in the mid-twentieth century.

  • Imprint: University of Toronto Press
  • Published: December 1969
  • Pages: 376

Ivy Pinchbeck was until recently Reader in Social Studies at Bedford College, University of London, and has since been a Governor of the College. In 1961 she was appointed to a Research Fellowship by the Trustees of the Nuffield Foundation to enable her to give her whole time to the completion of research for this book. Dr. Pinchbeck is the author of Women Workers and the Industrial Revolution (reissued Frank Cass, 1969), originally published in 1930 and still the standard work on the subject.

Margaret Hewitt is Senior Lecturer in Sociology at the University of Exeter. She is a Governor of Bedford College, London, and a member of the Council of Church Colleges of Education. Dr. Hewitt's previous book was Wives and Mothers in Victorian Industry (Rockliff, 1958).

Chapters

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PREFACE
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
I Introduction
II Childhood and Family in Pre-Restoration England
III Child Marriage
IV The Royal Wards
V Borough Orphans
VI The Vagrant and Delinquent Child
VII ‘The Succourless Poor Child’
VIII The Illegitimate Child
IX The Twin Disciplines of Work and Worship
X The Schoolchild
XI The Child in a Changing Society
BIBLIOGRAPHY
INDEX

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