Licence: In copyright
Credit: Report. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine Library & Archives Service. The original may be consulted at London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine Library & Archives Service.
613/888 page 475
![Medland Hall Shelter Class of men frequenting—Able-bodied Regular Vagrants, 9576, 9577, 9592, 9593. Food Tickets given to people who could not be taken in, 9610, 9611. Free Food and Shelter, 5716, 5840, 5843, 5844, 9574, 9576. Habitual frequenters, 9578-9581. Mendicity Societies see their names—London Mendicity Society, etc. Ttterionethshire Prosecutions for offences under Vagrancy Acts, Number of prosecutions and convictions—Police vigilance, 5540-5542. 'Merxplas Labour Colony Classification of Colonists: Criminals placed among men who have not been convicted, 10184, 10190. Grants paid by Local Authorities, 10283. Lowest grade kept entirely separate, 5291-5295. Cost. Estimate for 1905, App., page 124. Less than £10 per head, 4512. Detention, Benefit of—Highly skilled workmen con- tent, kept away from drink, etc., 10165-10168. Dietary—Meat occasionally, Food good, but more would be required in England, 1022L 10222. Scales in force, ^pp., pages 125, 126. Subdued appearance of Colonists, 8909. Employment for Discharged Colonists : Discharge Machinery, Suggestion for, 6291, 7172, 7454-7456. Work found, but rarely kept, 8956. Moral defects of Men rather than the Merx- plas taint cause of difficulty, 8989-8992. Employment of Colonists, J pp., page 122. Do all their own work, build their own buildings, etc., 10170, 10205. Difficulty likely to arise when the place has reached the limit of development, 8987,8988. Hirmg out Colonists, 8983, 8984. Outside Market, Work done for—Mats sent to England, etc., 6389-6393, 8980-8983, 10225- 10227. Variety of Employment, 8986. Value of Colonists' Labour—Amount and quality excellent, 8899, 8903, 8904. Improvement in Tone and Management since 1890, 8979. Inducements to work. Payment of Colonists, Advantages of System, 956-959, App., page 122. Success of System, no unwillingness to work, 8893-8897. Uniformity, Objections to—no Grading, nothing to-Inspire a Man, 10179, 10190. Industrial Training, Nature of—No real teaching, 6321-6324, 8898-8903, 10206, 10207, 10209- 10211. Medical Arrangements, 8910. 'Objections to—Practically a Prison, 5245-5247. Punishments, App., page 123. (Reformative Influence, Question of—]\Ien not re- formed, 8956, 8992, 10241-10243. Lack of Humanising Influences, 8997, 8998, 9000-9002, 10189, 10240. Inaccessibility—very difficult to bring any out- side religious influence to bear on it, 8995, 8996. JRepokt, par. 233-238, 273, 274. Merxplas Labour Colony—'0^ Sentences on Colonists kept distinct from Judicial System, 10275. Sick Men. Dietary for, App., page 126. Proportion of, 8911. Size—5,000 Men in one place far too many, 9015, 9016, 10173. 1(^13, 10214. Population of Colony, Statistics 1890-1905, App., page 123. Time tables for summer and winter, App., page 123. Metropolitan Asylums Board Authority for control of Vagrants in London— Opinion that they have as much as they can do, 10459. Metropolitan Common Poor Fund Administration of, by the Local Government Board, 9797, 9798. All Casual Ward expenses fall on, 9937, 9938. One Union does not get more from the Fund than another, notwithstanding extra expenditure on Casual Wards, 9799. Metropolitan Houseless Poor Acts, 1864-5. Casual Ward, Provision of. required in every Union in London,10475-10477. Metropolitan Police District Casual Wards in, App., page 90. Report, par. 137-145. Mid-day Meal for Tramps leaving Casual Ward Advisable if it could be made universal, 2118. Amount of Bread given under Way-ticket Systems. Gloucestershire—| lb., originally 1 lb., 516, 1553, 1591, 1602. Insufficient to attract tramps to Casual Ward, 1743, 1744. Sufficient amount, 4409. Wiltshire, 1945-1947. Bakers' Shops, Granting Orders on, 401, 640. Suggestions in Favour of, to the Local Govern- ment Board, 516. Begging and Almsgiving—Mid-day Meal a possible check on indiscriminate Charity, 388-390, 1558, 1559, 1575, 1829, 1849-1853, 2563- 2567, 2654-2660, 2671, 2673, 2968-2975, 3034, 4886, 6291, 10204. Circulars warning people not to give to Beggars, 1575-1578. 1584, 1585, 1592-1597, 1672—Text of Circulars, 4pp., pages 40, 46. Effect of Circular as shown by Proportion of Tramps not using ticket for Mid-day Meal, 1677-1683. Effect limited to Casual Ward tramps, 4673. Bread Ticket Systems : Dorsetshire, 4928-4930, App., page 48. Gloucestershire, App., page 44. Hampshire, 4879. Herefordshire Mendicity Society, Mea) given by, 4191, 4192, 4258-4260, App., page 49. Wiltshire, 1792, 1795. Breakfast, Remains of—Tramps allowed to take away Bread from Cuckfield Workhouse, 2115- 2117. Church Army Way-ticket Experiment—^Informal provision for Mid-day Meal, 8091-8093. Cost of Bread given : Gloucestershire, 1636, 1637. Payment of Bread bill, 1617. Statistics, 1890-1904, App., page 44. Increase in cost in Wiltshire, 1798-1805, 1808- 1813. Every facility for getting Tickets, with Prosecution in case of Misuse of Ticket, suggestion, 4933.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b21359337_0613.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)
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