[360] Circular of 5th September 1863; in Sixteenth Annual Report, 1863-4, pp. 19, 34.
[361] See the first set, in Twentieth Annual Report, 1867-8, pp. 128-58.
[362] Home Training for Pauper Children, 1866; Children of the State, by Miss F. Hill, 1869; The Advantages of the Boarding-out System, by Col. C. W. Grant, 1869; Pall Mall Gazette, 10th April 1869; debate in House of Commons, 10th May 1869.
[363] Poor Law Board to Evesham Union, 3rd April 1869; House of Commons, No. 176 of 1869; Circular of 30th October 1869; Twenty-first Annual Report, 1868-9, pp. 25-6; House of Commons, No. 176 of 1870, pp. 123-189; Twenty-second Annual Report, 1869-70, pp. lii-lv and 2-8. It was explained to boards of guardians that they were at liberty to board-out children within the area of the union at their own discretion, "no orders or regulations to the contrary having been issued" (Poor Law Board to Newcastle Union, 17th March 1871).
[364] Pauperism, by H. Fawcett, 1871, pp. 79-91.
[365] The Poor Law, by Rev. T. Fowle, 1881, p. 144.
[366] History of the English Poor Law, by T. Mackay, 1899, vol. iii. p. 434.
[367] Official Circular, Nos. 14 and 15, N.S. April and May 1848, p. 228.
[368] Outdoor Relief Regulation Order of 14th December, 1852.
[369] General Order of 1st January 1869, in Twenty-first Annual Report, 1868-9, pp. 28, 79-82.