- Progressive character of burdens and evils associated with the existing poor law
- Principles of a sound system of Poor Relief
- Effect of the reform of the poor law on wages
- Effect of the reform on the morals of the poor
- The positive results of ending the allowance system
- Benthamism at work: the centralisation of poor relief
- The Book of Murder (1833)
- Book of Murder frontispiece
- The principle of 'less eligibility'
- Instructions for the admittance of paupers to the workhouse
- The policy of separating families in the workhouses (1834)
- The Poor Law Amendment Act (1834)
- Savings on the poor rates made by the 1834 Poor Law Amendment Act
- The New Starvation Law Examined
- The condition of Nottingham in 1837
- Conditions in Nottingham in 1840
- In praise of the old poor law (1837)
- Savings on the poor rates in Northumberland, 1838
- The Andover Workhouse Scandal (1845-6)
- Problems in Huddersfield
- Attempts to establish a Board of Guardians (1837)
- The state of the Huddersfield Union (June 1837)
- The Huddersfield Workhouse scandal (1848)
- Complaint by the Medical Officer for the Huddersfield Union, 1847
- Report from the Leeds Mercury, May 1848
- Report from the Leeds Mercury, 10 June 1848
- Workhouse diets: 'menus' from six workhouses
- Rules of the workhouses
- A typical daily regime in the workhouse
- A Board of Guardians justifies paying outdoor relief to the able-bodied
- "Christmas Day in the Workhouse": poem by George R. Sims (1903)
- Southwell workhouse
- Rotherham workhouse
- The "work plan" to deter poor relief claimants
- The scheme to relocate the rural unemployed
- Joseph Fielden's opposition to the Poor Law Amendment Act, 1836-8
Last modified 16 November 2002