[321] Besides the widows and deserted wives, and the unmarried mothers, the class of able-bodied single women unencumbered by children, in receipt of relief, was not insignificant. In 1859 there were 5173 such in receipt of outdoor relief (Twelfth Annual Report, 1859-60, p. 15; see also corresponding figures in Thirteenth Annual Report, 1860-1, p. 13).
[322] In 1861, indeed, when the guardians asked advice of the Central Authority, the recommendation to offer relief in the workhouse was distinctly limited to able-bodied males (Poor Law Board to St. James's, Westminster, 19th January 1861, in Thirteenth Annual Report, 1860-1, p. 35).
[323] Twenty-second Annual Report, 1869-70, pp. xxviii, 9, 17-22.
[324] Eleventh Annual Report, 1858, p. 166; see the corresponding statistics in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Annual Reports.
[325] Twenty-second Annual Report, 1869-70, p. xxi.
[326] Ibid. pp. xxxii-xxxiii, 9-30.
[327] Twenty-third Annual Report, 1870-1, pp. 32-93.
[328] The Central Authority observed in 1858 that "more than one-third of the paupers are children under sixteen." The numbers at that date were 44,989 indoors, and 263,994 out of doors, or 37·4 per cent of the whole (Eleventh Annual Report, 1858, p. 166). It is not clear to us whether this total of children on outdoor relief includes in all cases the children of men in receipt of medical relief only.
In 1869, in answer to Mr. Goschen's Minute, the Holborn Board of Guardians forced on the attention of the Central Authority the fact that they, like the other Metropolitan guardians, were allowing for each child on outdoor relief 1s. and one loaf of bread. "No one can pretend," they said, "that this amount is of itself adequate support" (Twenty-second Annual Report, 1869-70, p. 20). The Holborn Board of Guardians practically defied the Central Authority to find any other policy. The Central Authority did not reply to this challenge.
[329] Official Circular, 31st January 1844, No. 31, pp. 178-9.