John Belchem
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‘Housing the poorest poor’
The Irish other in nineteenth-century Liverpool
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Clustered in court housing and cellar dwellings down near the waterfront, the ever-increasing numbers of ‘low Irish’ in Liverpool were viewed with disdain and alarm, embodying the pathologies of violence, unreason, and contagion that obsessed early Victorians. Even before the famine influx of the 1840s, there were calls for drastic interventionist social engineering, justified through ethnic denigration of the Irish ‘other’, a ‘contaminating’ presence within the unreformed and unprotected ‘social body’. Pioneer public health initiatives, followed by compulsory demolition and displacement, soon added to social tensions as Irish nationalist politicians, a growing force in the north end, came to condemn the actions of the Insanitary Property Committee as a form of political gerrymandering. When the Committee was replaced by the Housing Committee, Irish councillors led the way in promoting community-based housing provision, insisting on rehousing within demolition areas and advocating alternatives to ‘workhouse-like’ tenement blocks. Thanks to their input, Liverpool became ‘a mecca for housing experts’ by the beginning of the twentieth century. Harford, the Irish leader, proudly noted that ‘no city in Europe had gone so far as Liverpool in the practical direction of “housing the poorest poor”’.

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