I just
finished a great read: Unwelcome
Americans: Living on the Margin in
Early New England, by Ruth Wallis Herndon, 2001. I had no clue about this
part of Colonial history! Here’s what I
learned:
In 18th
century America, there was no Social Security, Medicaid, unemployment insurance
or old age pensions, no welfare of any sort…… “no colony or state created and
maintained a safety net for those unable to support themselves.” Thousands of
our ancestors living on the margins due to injury, health, discrimination, or
poor choices had an extremely rough time just staying alive." Each local government administered “poor
relief” to its own inhabitants and almshouses or poorhouses were
constructed so that needy people could be grouped together and helped.
In New
England, town officials met regularly to raise taxes due to the high cost of
poor relief. This was especially true when the Revolutionary War, with
tremendous expenses, loomed. One method
sought to resolve this tension was the “warning-out” system. This was the way
town authorities sent away from their towns those people who had no legal claim
on the town treasury. Through warnings-out, towns avoided the greater costs of
supporting frail, ill, or injured people long term.
One facet of
this system was that such needy people were shunted back to the town of their
birth; being born in XX town, it was XX town’s responsibility to care for them.
Sometimes this meant dividing up families! If a family of five were all needy
and candidates for being sent elsewhere, they could be sent to five different
towns, regardless of the children’s ages.
The book is
200 pages of carefully researched case studies that really brought this
situation, this problem, to life for me. Cost for the paperback was under $7
via Amazon books. If you have New England ancestry who were not among the
well-off, this might be good history for you.
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