Vicky Holmes
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The lodging exchange
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When a middle-aged man died suddenly at work, neither his employer nor the woman with whom he lodged could provide the coroner’s court with a name. He was a stranger. Yet, this man sits as an anomaly in the coroners’ inquest. Challenging the idea of the lodger as a stranger, Chapter 3 reveals that many lodgers were connected to householders – through work, neighbours, friends, and family. However, finding lodgings was just one part of the lodging exchange. Before crossing the threshold, the matter of what was to be provided and at what cost had to be negotiated. With little surviving documentary evidence of lodging contracts, our understanding of exchanges has been largely limited to the anecdotal. However, as Chapter 3 reveals, accounts of lodging contracts are detailed in the inquest reports. Thus, Chapter 3 presents the first detailed understanding of the range of negotiations, agreements, and payments made between lodgers and householders regarding bed, board, and other services. In doing so, Chapter 3 demonstrates that lodging in someone else’s home was often about much more than a simple exchange of money for bed and board. Indeed, it was not always a monetary exchange, for Chapter 3 also demonstrates the importance of ‘informal currencies’ in the lodging exchange, especially among women. In summary, Chapter 3 argues that the domestic dwelling lodging arrangement was, in many instances, based upon a mutually beneficial relationship that first began beyond the front door.

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Living with lodgers

Everyday life, household economy, and social relations in working-class Victorian England

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