Hexagonal Workhouse

Sampson Kempthorne

1835

Report of the Poor Law Commissioners

The Poor Law Amendment Act of 1834 was responsible for the erection of 554 new workhouses throughout England and Wales. The Report of the Royal Commission into the administration of the poor laws had recommended the separation of inmates into different groups, which necessitated the building of workhouses that allowed for that to take place. Sampson Kempthorne designed appropriate buildings, of which this plan is one.

The hexagonal building made it possible for able-bodied men and women and elderly and infirm men and women to be kept apart; each group had its own exercise yard that was surrounded by high walls. was built to this plan. The other type of plan was the "cruciform" workhouse which had four wings built round a central hub.