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The Workhouse Uniform



The women wore shapeless, waist less dresses reaching their ankles, with a pattern of broad, vertical stripes in a rather washed out blue on an off-white background. Beneath such exterior garments, at least during the 19th Century, the women wore under-draws, a shift and long stockings, with a poke bonnet on their heads. 


The men wore shirts of a similar pattern, and ill-fitting trousers, tied with cord below the knee. The men wore thick vests; woolen draws and socks, with a neckerchief around their throats, and, in cold weather, a coarse jacket. 

The children's outfits have been described as a singularly ugly and disfiguring uniform, too often adopted, that brought real misery to the wearers, besides being hated as a badge of pauperism...The dress of the pauper girl is usually of stout woolen material, good for winter, but generally worn all the year round. They were too often clumsily cut and badly sewn and the long skirts in which the little was attired (to allow for growth) impeded their movements, adding to their awkward gait, which was made worse by hobnailed boots with iron tips.

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13y ago
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13y ago

There wore like dresses with a wool little hat so hair can't get caught

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Q: What was the typical Victorian workhouse uniform?
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