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1. Social Enterprise Experiments in England: 1660 1908 Matthew MacDonald and Carole HoworthInstitute for Entrepreneurship and Enterprise Development Lancaster University Management School
3. The First Social Enterprises 1660-1700 Some proposals for the employment of the poor, And for the prevention of idleness and the consequence thereof, begging, a practice so dishonourable to the nation and to the Christian religion (Firmin, 1678)
the loss of two pence in the shilling as money well spent (Firmin in Owen, 1965, p18)
4. Effects of the French and Industrial Revolutions The principle legacy of the French Revolution was a paranoid fear of working class insurrection (Hudson 2001)
Distinctions between classes, spiritually sanctioned and inevitable
to be industrious and tractable was, of course, the obligation of the poor
the deference owed by the poor to the rich was the ubiquitous theme (Owen, 1965)
5. Social Attitudes to Poor Relief
little better than savages and barbarians, with whom any familiar intercourse would be degrading (Trimmer, 1814)
6. Late 18th and Early 19th Century correcting the little pilfering habits of the infant poor, the source of so many vices and crimes in society; and of preserving them from idleness and bad example, and training them in virtuous and industrious habits, so as to make them
useful and valuable members of society. (The Reports of the Society for Bettering the Condition and Increasing the Comforts of the Poor. 1798)
7. Housing Provision Mr. Waterlow has the ulterior purpose in view, on which he lays great stress, of convincing others and especially capitalists, that it is a mode of investing money insuring a profitable return. He repudiates every consideration of charity as offensive to the working classes themselves (The Times, March 1863)
8. Late 19th and Early 20th Century They do their little industries in the big hall, and knit trifles for the morrow's sale by which they are to secure their right to their board and lodging here. (account of a visit to the Hanbury Street Womens Shelter, 1891)
9. Impact signally failed either to do the job itself or to stimulate the State to do it adequately
tended to obscure the magnitude of the real problem by a false sense of achievement (Macadam, 1934) They felt that material assistance on its own was worthless unless it was accompanied by a concern for the moral and spiritual needs of the recipient. Indeed it was the spiritual welfare of the needy which was the primary concern (Whelan 1996)
10. Conclusions Social enterprise one of a number of responses to shortcomings in existing relief provision
Malthusian view of the deserving and undeserving poor
A primary concern with moral improvement
Does this view now extend to grant dependant voluntary organisations as well as to individuals?