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Poor Houses, Poor Law information for Ticknall and places above it in the hierarchy

Ticknall

  • Bastardy cases would be heard in the Repton petty session hearings.
     
  • Dame Catherine HARPUR established a charity in 1741 of £100 for the instruction of 6 poor boys and 6 poor girls of Ticknall.
     
  • Charles HARPUR established a charity in 1770. This charity built a hospital of 7 tenements in Ticknall. The residents received £10 each year in the mid 1800s.
     
  • Chris BROWN has a photograph of The Harpur Almshouses on Geo-graph, taken in June, 2017.
     
  • Mike SPENCER provides a list of the "State of some Poor peoples Beding at Ticknall in 1820" in a text file.
     
  • As a result of the 1834 Poorlaw Amendment Act, this parish became a member of the Ashby-de-la-Zouch Poorlaw Union.
     

Derbyshire

  • The local "Workhouse" was often the only hospital close to a parish, so the fact that someone was born or died there doesn't mean that the family was in the workhouse. Use the census to verify that fact.
     
  • Bastardy was not uncommon. Read more about this at our Bastardy Cases page.
     
  • Derbyshire Record Office staff created an index to removal orders 1707-1865. It is available on LDS FHL microfilm: 1702708.
     
  • Board of Guardians 1837-51. Lists of names of those who were examined as being in need of poor relief, transcribed by Michael SPENCER. Covers Poor Law Unions of Bakewell, Belper, Shardlow, Hayfield, Ashbourne and Chesterfield. The records for Derby Union have been lost.
     
  • A site "dedicated to the Workhouse - its buildings, its inmates, its staff and administrators, and even its poets..." - The Workhouse - created by Peter HIGGENBOTHAM.
     
  • The National Archives has several books: "National Archives". Enter "Workhouse" in the search box.
     

England

UK and Ireland

  • Peter Higginbotham's comprehensive The Workhouse website provides a wealth of information about Workhouses, the Poor Law and related issues.catalogue
  • If you are looking for someone who was in a workhouse, it is worth checking if they also appear in the Quarter Sessions records, held in County Record Offices - see the British Library's Discovery catalogue (use Advanced Search and select "Search Other Archives"). 
  • You can search and freely download documents of a number of Poor Law Unions across England and Wales from TNA.
  • Settlement Examinations in England and Wales - a detailed explanation, from LDS Familysearch, based on an article by Anthony Camp.