Charity
Dublin Core
Title
Charity
Subject
Surviving the city
Description
Alongside state-sponsored relief, the poor of Belfast also turned to multiple charitable and voluntary organisations for support. Street directories for nineteenth-century Belfast list the multiple charitable and voluntary organisations that existed for the care of the poor.
Charitable works and activities were often undertaken in the context of the Christian belief, and for the various churches that operated in Belfast in the 19th and 20th centuries, charity was a means by which they could reach out to the poorest of their congregation, helping them deal with poverty in a practical way, while also practicing the charitable virtues preached about on Sundays.
Unlike the poor law system, voluntary organisations tended to focus their attention on particular sections of the poor, for example, children, unmarried women, the bling, or the elderly. Different religious denominations tended to have charities for the support of their own members, as did organisations such as the Freemasons.
Often charities had expectations of the poor, attempting to provide ‘moral regulation’ and ‘instruction’ to a group often regarded as sinful, lazy and dissolute. The records of the Belfast Voluntary Welfare Society reveal that those with ‘unsatisfactory character’ were refused assistance in times of need.
Charitable works and activities were often undertaken in the context of the Christian belief, and for the various churches that operated in Belfast in the 19th and 20th centuries, charity was a means by which they could reach out to the poorest of their congregation, helping them deal with poverty in a practical way, while also practicing the charitable virtues preached about on Sundays.
Unlike the poor law system, voluntary organisations tended to focus their attention on particular sections of the poor, for example, children, unmarried women, the bling, or the elderly. Different religious denominations tended to have charities for the support of their own members, as did organisations such as the Freemasons.
Often charities had expectations of the poor, attempting to provide ‘moral regulation’ and ‘instruction’ to a group often regarded as sinful, lazy and dissolute. The records of the Belfast Voluntary Welfare Society reveal that those with ‘unsatisfactory character’ were refused assistance in times of need.
Source
Photograph of Cowan’s Court, Belfast, 1912 by Alexander Hogg. [PRONI LA/7/8/HF/3].
Extract from the Belfast and Province of Ulster Directory, 1902. [PRONI]
Photograph of children under the care of the Ulster Children’s Society, c 1910. [D1257/1]
Extract from the Belfast and Province of Ulster Directory, 1902. [PRONI]
Photograph of children under the care of the Ulster Children’s Society, c 1910. [D1257/1]
Date
1902-01-01
1912-01-01
Rights
Reproduction of these materials in any format for any purpose other than personal research and study may constitute a violation of CDPA 1988 and infringement of rights associated with the materials. Queen’s University Belfast does not own copyright in this material. Please contact us for permissions information at specialcollections@qub.ac.uk
Language
English
Type
jpeg
Still Image Item Type Metadata
Original Format
Photo, paper
Files
Citation
“Charity,” Digital Exhibitions at Special Collections & Archives, Queen's University Belfast, accessed November 21, 2024, https://omeka.qub.ac.uk/items/show/147.
Geolocation
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