On this day … 2 August 1870

According to Hewitson in his History of Preston, a Mr John Bateman was appointed master of the new Preston Workhouse on Watling Street Road in Fulwood. He was the third to be appointed, and the institution had been open less than two years.

The first master, William Laverty, had been appointed in March 1868 more than eight months before the first inmates were admitted in the December. He left in March 1869 after just over a year in post, to be replaced by a C. Nettlefold, who lasted slightly longer.

One of the difficulties in retaining the masters could have been the pay. Laverty was paid ยฃ100 a year, his successor, Nettlefold, seems to have been paid similar. Bateman, according to Hewitson, started on double at ยฃ200 a year.

According to correspondence in the Preston Chronicle, some members of the workhouseโ€™s board of governors had been pushing to increase Nettlefoldโ€™s salary to ยฃ200, without success.

Advert for Preston workhouse master and matron in 1870
Advert from the Preston Chronicle

When the governors advertised for his replacement, they were looking for a master and a matron, who had to be husband and wife and no older than forty-five. The pay offered was ยฃ100 for the man and ยฃ50 for his wife, โ€˜together with rations, apartments and washingโ€™. Whether Hewitsonโ€™s ยฃ200 was the sum of both salaries and an estimated value of board and lodging is not known.

Running the institution, which had replaced four workhouses around Preston and the townโ€™s own House of Recovery, must have been a taxing responsibility for the master, so a salary of ยฃ100 does seem somewhat miserly. The Protestant chaplain was paid the same (the Catholic chaplain got ยฃ60; there were no Nonconformist chaplains employed).

The masterโ€™s duties involved the running of an enormous and complex institution housing more than a thousand inmates. The part-time chaplain was employed to conduct services at the institution.

How long Bateman lasted and whether he felt his remuneration was sufficiently generous is not known, for he was still in post when Hewitsonโ€™s history was published.

Bateman had to find work for those more than a thousand inmates. Able-bodied men were put to stone-breaking and working on the eighteen acres of garden and meadow that then stretched behind the workhouse. Able-bodied women were employed in the laundry and in general cleaning. The rest, both men and women, described as โ€˜partially-disabledโ€™, were put to oakum picking.

Preston's Fulwood Workhouse and surroundings on 1890s map
1890s map showing layout of workhouse and grounds: https://maps.nls.uk/view/126517556

Source
Hewitson’s History of Preston


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