Anglia Ruskin University joins forces with Gressenhall Farm and Workhouse museum
Gressenhall Farm and Workhouse will be the subject of an in-depth research project which aims to develop a better understanding of the day-to-day lives of the inmates who stayed there.
The research will focus on the objects used by people at Gressenhall and what these tell us about individuals' experiences in areas such as food, work, childhood, discipline, health and sleep.
Funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) via the Collaborative Doctoral Partnerships scheme and beginning later this year, a PhD student from Anglia Ruskin University (ARU) will be based at the Norfolk museum as part of the project.
Gressenhall Farm and Workhouse holds a unique and fascinating collection of over 1,000 objects – including textiles, shoes, toys, cutlery and furniture – linked to the lives and institutionalisation of some of society's poorest and most vulnerable people.
Gressenhall was initially established as a House of Industry (1777-1836), before becoming the Mitford and Launditch Union Workhouse (1836-1930), and finally the Gressenhall Public Assistance Institution (1930-1948).
By building a picture of the day-to-day lives of people living there, the project aims to improve our understanding of individual and community identities in the workhouse, and compare this to current thoughts on welfare history.
The project will also involve archival work at Norfolk Record Office as well as studying objects held elsewhere, and is being supervised by Dr Joseph Harley, who specialises in poverty and welfare during the early modern, Georgian and Victorian periods.
Dr Harley, a Senior Lecturer in History at Anglia Ruskin University (ARU), said:
"Gressenhall's collection presents a unique opportunity to explore the materiality of workhouse life, and gain a greater understanding of how inmates, whose voices are often lost to history, would have experienced life on a daily basis and how they might have felt while living in the workhouse."
Rachel Kidd, Curator of Gressenhall Farm and Workhouse, said:
"A material culture approach will help us to further understand what life was like for people who lived and worked in our building – what it looked, felt or even smelled like – and how inmates experienced things like food, health, childhood, and sleep.
"Above all, we hope this new research will help us to continue to challenge persistent narratives about welfare history and workhouses, and explore how this history sheds light on relevant issues today."