Emily WEEKS

simple image of a male child

Emily WEEKS was born in 1837 and was admitted to the pauper farm in Tooting at an unknown age. Additional notes we have for her are "father James William dead, mother Ann m. to Henry MANSELL 01/01/1844 in workhouse".

Her date of death is unknown. The cause of death has not yet been determined, but we are actively searching records for further information.

Please contact us if you have something to share on Emily WEEKS or would like to help find Emily's records in order to help us do more research.

Find out more about helping the Tooting180 project

Fact file on Emily WEEKS

Emily had siblings, who would most likely have been admitted and discharged at the same time:

Her father was called James William and her mother was called Ann.

  • Outcome: Survived the epidemic
    Died: unknown

Workhouses and pauper farms

During the 1840s and 1850s, workhouses were often places of hardship, where children such as Emily were sent due to difficult circumstances including poverty and family bereavements. The workhouse system was known for its strict rules and conditions, offering only the barest of necessities in exchange for hard labour.

The Tooting pauper home was not in itself a workhouse, but a private institution to which numerous London workhouses 'farmed out' children. The condition of many children living and working in the Tooting establishment is known to have been pitiful even before cholera broke out there.

Read more about workhouses and pauper farms