Social Welfare: A History of the American Response to Need, 9th Edition Test Bank
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Chapter 2
The Colonial Period: 1647-1776
CHAPTER SUMMARY
This chapter covers the Colonial period from 1647-1776 as the earliest settlers
of New England came to North American in hopes of establishing the ideal
religious community. They were quickly confronted with many harsh realities
such as different ecology, complex relationships with Native Americans and
different economic and demographic realities. The brought English Poor Laws
with them and attempted to use the core principles that stressed public
responsibility for relief of the poor who could not work and work for those who
can. Townships were where relief was carried out. The core principles of
English Poor Law remained: family responsibility, local responsibility and the
residency requirement of legal settlements. Relief was offered in ways to
encourage farm labor to remain in one area. By 1795, urban centers had
grown and immigration increased, creating the need for the Poor Laws to be
amended to control cost.
LEARNING OUTCOMES
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Compare the Poor Laws to public assistance policies in the United States
since 1996.
Summarize the major population and economic changes of the Colonial
Period.
Explain how the expansion of democratic values during the American
Revolution was accompanied by increasing criticism of the Poor Laws.
Compare social provision for veterans with that for other social groups.
SUGGESTED DISCUSSION PROMPTS
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How successful do you feel those earliest settlers were at establishing the
ideal religious community that became America?
In what ways did Elizabethan Poor Law Principles work to limit relief
expenditures?
Did the government and large farms dictate how relief was provided more
than the principles of the Poor Laws?
Do you feel whipping for not working is an effective behavioral restriction
during Colonial times?
In what ways did the Poor laws ensure public and individual protection?
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Why was it important for community leaders to ensure that sinful behavior
was suppressed, including idleness?
The family was the central force for maintaining economic, social and
political stability. How did family governance being hierarchal support
this?
Explain the Protestant work ethic.
Why were families that could not be financially independent considered
dangerous?
What was the role of colonial children as apprentices?
What was the advantage of indenture or farming out of adults during
colonial times?
Jails and almshouses began to be built in the mid 18th century for the
poor, old, disabled, seriously ill and criminal. This was a reflection of what
factors?
The function and purpose of outdoor versus indoor relief.
Discuss how coercive work features of the Poor Laws served as a
deterrence from seeking aid.
How were the Poor Laws designed to protect those who held legal claim to
settlement in particular locations?
Describe how Poor Laws prioritized protecting society with the needs of
the poor.
Colonization increased the new global economy as European powers
competed for supremacy.
The role of disease such as smallpox and its impact on Colonial
populations.
The differentiation of the North and South and how their population
changed in makeup.
The selectivity of accepting immigrants in New England.
The rise of indentured slaves and then slavery in the South.
How did class differences evolve during the Colonial period?
The impact of scarcity and rapid population growth.
Where was the evidence for greater tolerance of human misfortune?
The desire to maintain a hierarchical, stable social order as purpose of
Poor Laws.
The shift from communal to individualistic cultural perspective.
Response to Poor Laws in the late Colonial Period that reduced their
effectiveness.
SUGGESTED CHAPTER ACTIVITIES AND ASSIGNMENTS
โ Ask students to read the documents at the end of the chapter: An Act of
Supplement to the Acts Referring to the Poor and The Binding of Moses
Love, 1747. Discuss the purpose and merits of these laws and the
contracts for the Colonial period. Students can discuss the perspective of
the one over the person and the persons themselves.
โ Students can watch The Story of US: Rebels from the internet and see
visual images of life for the average person during the Colonial period.
Ask students to engage in discussion about the hardships of this time
period. Discuss what aspects seem positive and what characteristics
pose the greatest challenge.
โ Use questions from discussion prompts or have students develop their
own discussion questions. Ask students to divide into small groups of 3-5
people, discuss 2 questions and present to class. Open class discussion
to feedback from other groups and professor.
ASSESSMENT FOR IN-CLASS USE
Multiple Choice and True False Questions
1. True or False: Long before the arrival of Europeans, the Southwest and
Midwest once had been the center for cultures that supported large cities
and significant religious institutions.
2. Elizabethan Poor Law Principles involved which 2 of the following
concepts:
a) public responsibility for those that cannot work.
b) relief to the poor that worked.
c) relief to children and widows without the expectation they help support
themselves.
d) work for the able bodied.
e) provisions for veterans.
3. The creation of a large class of mobile labor was a result of what during
the 1600โs?
a) strong ties to a particular area.
b) the supply of labor outstripped demand for workers.
c) the lack of public relief.
d) the overabundance of indoor relief
4. The following is an example of a behavioral restriction on relief recipients:
a) demonstrating efforts to find work.
b) relief is only provided if you are willing to move of not employed within a
set time frame.
c) workers were not eligible for โpassports.โ
d) whipping for not working
5. The largest percentage of the poor, as high as half in some areas, was
made up of:
a) widows and their children.
b) elderly
c) disabled
d) working men
6. Which of the following factors did not give rise to economic need for the
colonists?
a) high childhood mortality
b) smallpox and other diseases
c) reduced manufacturing
d) frequent wars
e) uncontrollable fire
7. True or false: The smallness of their numbers still made it difficult for
public oversight of individual misfortunes during colonial times.
8. The rationale for the adoption of the Poor Laws rested on:
a) persistent unemployment
b) individual and public protection
c) a need for law and order
d) reducing vagrancy
9. The binding of children to apprentices sought to:
a) better educate in honest and profitable trades.
b) avoid the sloath of idleness.
c) require the ability to read and understand the principles of religion.
d) facilitate understanding of capital laws.
e) all of the above.
10.The poor laws in the colonies often used apprenticeship as a reflection of
the desire to merge home, work and spiritual life of the child. They use
apprenticeship for:
a) economy and Godliness
b) economy and control
c) economy and vocational aspiration
d) economy and moral training
11.Almshouses replaced individual homes for all but the following:
a) idle poor
b) disabled
c) elderly
d) seriously ill
12.โIndoor reliefโ during the Colonial period is:
a) relief provided by charities
b) a place to use the restroom
c) tax breaks for the poor
d) care offered in homes other than oneโs own or institutions
13.The stigma of poverty was made public in the early 18 th
a) making the poor live in what we now call public housing
b) spelling out the explicit rules and duties of the poor
c) forcing the poor to find a buyer for their labor
d) forcing the poor to wear a letter on their clothes
14.Poor laws during the Colonial period were not characterized by the
following statement:
a) the stigma of poverty was emphasized
b) eligible poor were deterred from coercive work features
c) relief as provided to anyone where their need was evident
d) poor laws were designed to protect against those who threatened stability
15.True or False: The Poor Laws were most concerned with the care of the
poor, rather than the protection of society.
16.In order to protect colonists who held legal claim to settlement:
a) newly arriving immigrants were immediately indentured
b) residency requirements became stricter under Colonial Poor laws
c) militias were established in each township
d) colonists elected what we today refer to as police chiefs
17.Conquest, expansion and population growth during the Colonial period
included all but which of the following characteristics:
a) work and religion as foci of administrative practice
b) the colonist were English in their political and social heritage
c) colonist were conquerors
d) a lack of desire to enlarge the global economy
18.True or false: Within a century of 1st exposure, 95% of the indigenous
population of eastern North America perished.
19.European population growth in the New England colonies was controlled
by which of the following factors:
a) dependent on England to determine who they would accept or reject as
immigrants
b) bound by a common set of religious and ethical motivations
c) had underwritten the expenses of their passage and supplies through the
purchase of shares in a joint enterprise
d) all of the above
e) b and c
20.The colonist interest in expanding schooling as a result of the belief the
population should read the bible brought about the establishment of which
college:
a) Harvard
b) UC Berkeley
c) University of South Carolina
d) Davidson
21.In Virginia, a greater tolerance of human misfortune led to:
a) social welfare programs for Native Americans
b) adoption of Poor Laws and apprenticeship for free men
c) indoor relief for slaves
d) the end of indentured servant contracts
22.The economic and social changes were accompanied by a shift in religion
that emphasized a more:
a) communal perspective
b) allegiance to oneโs parish
c) individualistic cultural perspective
d) strong relationship to their community
23.The Poor Lawโs effectiveness was reduced in the late Colonial period due
to:
a) making the laws less restrictive
b) the premise that helping the poor was counterproductive
c) poverty being viewed as less attractive
d) ample funding
24.Which is consistent with the belief system of Benjamin Franklin regarding
the Poor Laws?
a) we need to embrace and expand relief for the worthy poor
b) social responsibility does not foster further dependency
c) they were a constant reminder of English rule
d) the cause of poverty is of an individualโs own making and the growing
wealth of upper class is justified
25.Veterans received preferential treatment in obtaining pensions for:
a) domiciliary care
b) elderly
c) disabled
d) widows and children
e) all of the above
Essay Questions
1) Elizabethan Poor Laws principles stressed the following principles: local
responsibility, family responsibility and residency requirements of legal
settlement. In what ways are these principles still applied today?
2) In 17th century New England, the modern boundaries between public and
private and church and state would have made little sense. In what ways
did this violate the principles that later became the founding ideology of
the American constitution?
3) The importance of home and family was balanced against a commitment
to worldly engagement that later would be labeled as the โProtestant
work ethic.โ What was the function of the โProtestant work ethicโ in
colonial times and is it still in effect today in America? Explain.
4) As a contemporary observer, describe some features of contemporary
welfare policy that can find their origins in the Colonial Poor Laws? What
are examples of public responsibility acting as a safety net? Do coercive
work features still exist? Are there examples of direct deterrence in
seeking aid today?
5)
During the later Colonial era, economic and social changes were
accompanied by a shift from a communal to an individualistic cultural
perspective, particularly in regards to religion. Talk about what this
means specifically and how it impacts the role of social welfare policy
during this period. What do you feel is the perspective today and how
does this influence social welfare policy today in America?
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
Books
Amenta, E. (1998). Bold relief: Institutional politics and the origins of modern
American social policy. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
Herndon, R. W. & Murray, J. E. (2009). Children bound to labor: The pauper
apprentice system in early America. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
Katz, M. (1986). In the shadow of the poorhouse: A social history of welfare in
America. New York: Basic Books.
Marten, J. (2009). Children and youth in a new nation. New York: University Press.
Morgan, T. (1993). Wilderness at Dawn: The settling of the North American
continent. New York: Simon & Shuster.
Parish, P. (1997). Readerโs Guide to American History. Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn.
Steele, I. K. (1994). Warpaths: Invasions of North America. New York: Oxford
University Press.
Tattner, W. (1994). From Poor Laws to Welfare State: A history of social welfare
in America, 6th ed. New York: Free Press.
Journals
Budros, A. (2004). Social shocks and slave social mobility: Manumissionin
Brunswick County, Virginia, 1782-1862. American Journal of Sociology, 110(3),
539-579.
Dwyer, R. (2010). Poverty, prosperity, and place: The shape of class segregation
in the age of extremes. Social Problems, 57(1), 114-137.
Harris, L. M. (2004). Slavery, emancipation, and class formation in colonial and
early national New York City. Journal of Urban History, 30(3), 339-359.
Midgley, J, (2008). Colonialism and Welfare. Journal of Progressive Human
Services, 9 (2), 31-50.
Jay, Phyllis (2013). Social policy history (Colonial times to 1900). Encyclopedia of
Social Work.
Websites
History place website.
Provides a timeline of early colonial U. S. growth. The timeline not only focuses
on the growth of the colonies but also on laws from England and other European
countries that had an impact on the colonists.
The Quakers website.
Describes the role that Quakers played in social and economic politics in the
colonies.
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