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casual ward การใช้

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  • The workhouse buildings included a 40-bed infirmary, piggeries and casual wards for vagrants.
  • Some houses, the elderly unit and the laundry block at the hospital and a single storey timber built casual ward were destroyed.
  • Conditions in the casual wards were worse than in the relieving rooms and deliberately designed to discourage vagrants, who were considered potential trouble-makers and probably disease-ridden.
  • She, and her sons, were listed as being overnight inmates at the Whitechapel Union workhouse's casual ward at Thomas Street on the census night of 1881.
  • Most provincial Poor Law unions followed London's example, and by the 1870s, of the 643 then in existence, 572 had established casual wards for the reception of vagrants.
  • A typical early 19th-century casual ward was a single large room furnished with some kind of bedding and perhaps a bucket in the middle of the floor for sanitation.
  • Near to the entrance were the casual wards for tramps and vagrants } } and the relieving rooms, where paupers were housed until they had been examined by a medical officer.
  • In 1906 the Guildford Union Workhouse Casuals Ward ( " The Spike " ) was built on the grounds of the Workhouse near the castle; today The Spike is a tourist attraction.
  • A'spike'was a hostel or'reception centre'( originally a casual ward in a workhouse ) for men with no fixed abode or homeless, sometimes used by Irish navvies who could not find or afford lodgings.
  • Orwell gives a historical background of how hospital wards began as casual wards'for lepers and the like to die in'and became places for medical students to learn using the bodies of the poor.
  • Vagrants who presented themselves at the door of a workhouse were at the mercy of the porter, whose decision it was whether or not to allocate them a bed for the night in the casual ward.
  • Eddowes and Kelly split their last sixpence between them; he took fourpence to pay for a bed in the common lodging-house, and she took twopence, just enough for her to stay a night at Mile End Casual Ward in the neighbouring parish.
  • The dark side of Victorian life is shown in the social realism of Hubert von Herkomer's " Hard Times, " a portrait of the rural laboring class, and in Samuel Luke Fildes'Dickensian " Applicants for Admission to a Casual Ward, " a sad tableau of the London poor.
  • The Metropolitan Board of Works was given limited authority to reimburse the unions for the cost of building the necessary casual wards, an arrangement that was made permanent the following year by the passage of the Metropolitan Houseless Poor Act 1865 ( 28 & 29 Vict c . 34 ).
  • In the first edition of " The Graphic " newspaper that appeared in December 1869, Luke Fildes was asked to provide an illustration to accompany an article on the Houseless Poor Act, a new measure that allowed some of those people out of work to shelter for a night in the casual ward of a workhouse.