Hancock History

A Look Back...
Pauperism

  


In 1834, residents of Hancock purchased a run-down farm in the north part of town as a "…house of correction for the keeping, correcting and setting to work of rogues, vagabonds, common beggars, lewd, idle and disorderly persons…" In other words, to house the town poor. There they would be cared for in a way that "…would be calculated to discourage indolence and intemperance, - two fruitful sources of pauperism." The purchase of a town pauper farm was in keeping with the social reform movement then sweeping the nation, which blamed the poor for their own troubles and sought to "reform" them so that they might once again become productive citizens.

Prior to purchasing a town pauper farm, Hancock had relied on a patchwork system of "outdoor relief" for its poor, providing the use of a cow, fuel or foodstuffs for families in need, or auctioning off the annual support of paupers at Town Meeting. The lowest bidder promised to shelter, clothe and feed the individuals at the least expense to the town.

The Hancock Town Farm continued to operate as a working farm and poorhouse for almost twenty years before it was sold in the 1850s. All Hancock paupers were subsequently sent to the County Poorhouse in Hillsborough. The only extant record of the Town Farm is a slim, leather-bound account book that combines everyday farm accounts with brief and poignant references to Hancock's poor.

A page recording the delivery of cattle to pasture in 1845, for example, also notes that the "Kyes family came to Pauper Farm Sept. 18, 1851, seven in number." A child of this family subsequently died; the account book records the visit of the local doctor and the purchase of his coffin. Another page records the 20 days neighbor Elbridge Burtt spent haying on the farm as well as the arrival of a new resident. "Mrs. Abigail Allen came to Pauper Farm Oct. 14 1849 with nothing except her wearing apparel." Lorena Hills, on the other hand, is recorded as having brought with her in 1844 a chest of drawers, a bedstead, an array of bed linens, a feather bed and a straw tick. Near this careful inventory of personal belongings is the undated note, "sow pigd."

The stories of Hancock's paupers and their experiences on the Town Farm are difficult to extricate from the written historical record. The very fact of their poverty renders them invisible as they seldom owned property or paid taxes and tend to lie in unmarked graves. The Town Pauper Farm is also long gone, as is the small neighborhood of farms that surrounded it on Nahor Hill. It is a pleasant walk up to the site of the farm, however, obscured as it is by years of logging and forest regeneration. Take the steep old road that rises on the right at the end of Antrim Road, just where it turns to dirt (appears as a dotted line on the old map of Hancock), and you'll find an interesting network of old roads and cellar-holes to explore. Copies of the old nineteenth-century map of Hancock are available inexpensively at the Town Office or at the Hancock Historical Society; the Pauper Farm was located at #77.


Cindy Amidon, Hancock Happenings, Volume 3, March 2000

 

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