Title: Orwell
1Orwells London
- A Study of Poverty in Early 20th Century Britain
2The Spike
- At A you are allowed to smoke but there are bugs
in the cells at B the beds are comfortable but
the porter is a bully at C they let you out
early in the morning but the tea is undrinkable
at D the officials steal your money if you have
any and so on interminably. (Orwell, 143)
3A lodging house (picture taken in present day)
that housed men like Orwell.
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5- To my eye these Salvation Army shelters, though
clean, are far drearier than the worst of the
common lodging-houses. There is such a
hopelessness about some of the people
theredecent, broken-down types who have pawned
their collars but are still trying for office
jobs. Coming to a Salvation Army shelter, where
it is at least clean, is their last clutch at
respectability. (Orwell, 155-6)
6In the morning after breakfast and the doctors
inspection, the Tramp Major herded us all into
the dining room and locked the door upon us. It
was a lime washed, stone-floored room,
unutterably dreary, with its furniture of deal
boards and benches, we were bored already, though
it was barely eight in the morning. There was
nothing to do, nothing to talk about, not even
room to moveMost of the tramps spent ten
continuous hours in this comfortless, soulless
room. Heaven knows how they put up with it.
(Orwell, 196)
7Finding Work
- We went at five to an alley-way behind some
offices, but there was already a queue of thirty
or forty men waiting, and after two hours we were
told that there was no work for us. (Orwell, 179)
8Booths Poverty Map
9Poverty Demographics
- Most poverty was located in the East End with the
darker colors on the map. - Single men were more widely unemployed than
married men. - Older workers found it harder to find other jobs
after becoming unemployed. - Males 18-24 had the highest risk of becoming
unemployed. - The least risk was for males between the ages of
35-44, in their prime working years. - 14 of the population was unemployed on average
during the interwar years with the number
skyrocketing to 22 at the height of the Great
Depression.
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