The post of yesterday
21st, "Sins Of The Fathers" has the link to the story in The Express
about Jeremy Corbyn's ancestors. It
deals with James Sargeant, Workhouse Master at Farnham in Surrey in the mid
19th Century.
You are led to
imagine that this was the result of skilled journalism researching the past and
to take it on trust. Having a few
minutes to spare between tea breaks I had a look at the Workhouse in question.
This is very
easy. A first class historical website
is Workhouses dot org. which is a treasure house of detailed research and
information.
The Farnham page is here. The
Express story is a direct lift from this, which is not admitted and which does
not need much in the way of added effort to round off. But the text of the Workhouse site has more
information which is omitted and is instructive.
Quote:
Following the establishment in 1856 of the
army camp at Aldershot, the number of syphilitic cases entering the workhouse
increased ten-fold and part of the aged men's block used for their
accommodation. In 1864, the aged men were moved to the front building of the
workhouse, formerly used as a tailor's workshop.
Unquote.
Sixty odd years ago I was in those very
barrack blocks built in the late 1850's, then Cavalry. I still shiver in memory of the winter spent
there. But between those at the
Workhouse in 1861 and those in 1871 there is a radical change both in numbers
and the origins of the paupers.
James Sargeant, the 1861 Master and
Corbyn's ancestor was a former cloth worker who with his wife and some low paid
servants were left to cope with the expansion of numbers and far greater
demands arising. Once a rural backwater
Farnham and Aldershot became a busy mixed community and garrison town.
Jeremy Corbyn is known to be
anti-military. It is ironic that two of
the most disastrous military actions in our warrior and imperial history were
in the 1850's, The Crimean War and The Indian Mutiny.
If the problems in the district arose in part
from these events as well as all the new building it would have put severe
stress on what were the unreformed local authorities at the time.
The past is a different place and it is
useful to check the facts, something, alas, that the Express failed to do.
If I see a story flagged as originating from the Express I don't bother with it. Too unreliable.
ReplyDeleteOne of the Derby workhouse buildings still exists as the Royal Crown Derby factory.