Life and Labour of the People in London

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search
Part of Booth's poverty map showing Whitechapel 1889. The red areas are "well-to-do" and black areas are the "lowest class...occasional labourers, street sellers, loafers, criminals and semi-criminals".
Colour key for Booth's poverty map.

Life and Labour of the People in London was a multi-volume book by Charles Booth which provided a survey of the lives and occupations of the working classes of late nineteenth century London. The first edition was published in two volumes as Life and Labour of the People, Vol. I (1889) and Labour and Life of the People, Vol II (1891).[1] The second edition was entitled Life and Labour of the People in London, and was produced in 9 volumes 1892-97. A third edition, running to a grand total of seventeen volumes appeared 1902-3.[2]

A noteworthy feature of the study was the production of maps describing poverty (see illustration on the right). Levels of wealth and poverty found by the research's investigators being mapped out on a street by street basis.[3]

The note books used to carry out this investigation are held at the Archives Division of the British Library of Political and Economic Science (London School of Economics).[4]

See also

References

  1. The reversal of the words in the title of the second volume was due to the original title "Life and Labour" being claimed by Samuel Smiles who wrote a similarly titled book in 1887.
  2. Charles Booth's London (1969) edited by Albert Fried and Richard Elman. London, Hutchinson
  3. http://booth.lse.ac.uk/static/a/4.html Charles Booth Online Archive: Poverty maps of London (Accessed March 2011)
  4. Inquiry into the life and labour of the people in London (1886-1903) (Charles Booth Online Archive)

External links