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An Earnest Appeal for Mercy to the Children of the Poor
Particularly Those Belonging to the Parishes within the Bills of Mortality
Published in 1766, this philanthropic tract exposes the failings of the care system in London and calls for its reform.
Jonas Hanway (Author)
9781108060929, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 22 August 2013
156 pages
25.4 x 17.8 x 0.8 cm, 0.28 kg
In eighteenth-century London, abandoned children were one of the social groups most affected by the harsh living conditions. Several charitable initiatives had endeavoured to alleviate the problem, not least the Foundling Hospital, of which Jonas Hanway (c.1712–86) was a governor. His tireless philanthropy and campaigning resulted in the 1762 Registers Bill, which required parishes to keep records of the poor children they looked after. In this tract, first published in 1766, Hanway uses information collected from these registers to demonstrate the appalling mortality rates of orphans in care in London, calling for radical reform. This work was instrumental in the passage of the 1767 act that resulted in a dramatic fall in the number of infant deaths over the following decade. It is a powerful exposé of the failures of the capital's care system, as well as a testament to the influence of philanthropic activism.
Dedication
1. Observations on the state of the infant parish poor
2. Heads of the Act for the keeping registers
3. Remarks on the Act
4. Observations on the register
5. Particular investigation of the registers
6. Remarks on the registers of particular parishes
7. Further reasons for a parliamentary enquiry
8. Proposal for all children
9. Some observations on the welfare of the poor
10. The advantages of placing out children
11. The benefit of giving apprentice fees
12. The absurdity and danger of placing out children
13. The necessity of a religious education
14. The importance of a true sense of religion
15. Further reasons for giving a pecuniary gratuity
16. A list of the parishes whose numbers of children are worthy of notice.
Subject Areas: Social & cultural history [HBTB]
