Problems: economic, commercial, personal Introduction Victorian Bournemouth (60) investigates several bankruptcies involving builders during the town’s second period. In some cases, prosecution occurred because of financial overreach combined with market downturns. On the other hand, personal conflict amongst the individuals involved in the developments may have played a role. Victorian Bournemouth (60): smaller enterprises People […]
Month: February 2022
Victorian Bournemouth (59): a rash of bankruptcies
Introduction Victorian Bournemouth (59) explores how, while sixteen residents went bankrupt between 1856 and 1866, in the following three years this happened to forty-one people. In 1869, the new Debtors’ Act reduced the inevitability of prison sentences for convicted bankrupts. While this may have increased a willingness to declare, the bankruptcies’ cause perhaps lay elsewhere. […]
Victorian Bournemouth (58): urban spread 1857-1870
Wider footprint. Planning debate. Social zoning. Introduction Victorian Bournemouth (58) uses census listings to discuss how the resort’s built environment extended during its second period. It also considers such subjects as site layout, planning debates, and social zoning. Victorian Bournemouth (58): footprint Areas Only a part of rural Greater Westover in 1841, by 1851 Bournemouth […]
Victorian Bournemouth (57): babies and civic identity
Economic success. Settled residents. More babies. Introduction Victorian Bournemouth (57) traces the town’s civic identity in part to its growing residential population. A repeated production of children by residents suggested a disinclination to migrate since Bournemouth offered them economic success. This growing portion of the population contributed to the town’s civic identity. Further analysis establishes […]