‘No Irish’ policy in Preston’s 19th-century mills

A report by James Phillips Kay, an assistant poor law commissioner, on migration to the cotton districts of Lancashire, published in the first annual report of the Poor Law Commissioners for England and Wales in 1835, contains observations on the employment of Irish migrants in the county’s cotton mills, including two in Preston. Sir James … Continue reading ‘No Irish’ policy in Preston’s 19th-century mills

What killed Victorian Preston’s infants?

In 1850, a group of middle-class women from London published a book, Public Nurseries, setting out their plans for nurseries in the mill towns of northern England to provide day care for the children of working mothers. They were persuaded of the need for these nurseries by evidence presented to a government inquiry by the Preston … Continue reading What killed Victorian Preston’s infants?