Want and Welfare
- Senate House Library
- Membership
-
Using
the
Library
- Using the Library
- Accessibility
-
Borrowing
and
renewing
books
- Databases and eResources
- Digital resources
- Library Induction Tour for Members
- Online Library
- Reading Rooms and Study Spaces
-
Services
and
Help
- Services and Help
- Connect to wifi
- Copying, printing and scanning
- Digitisation Studio
- Document Supply Service
- Examination papers
- Help using the Catalogue
- IT Drop-in Sessions
- Laptop Loan Service
- Membership ID
- Reproductions
- Room hire and filming
- Scanning Service
- Theses
- Virtual Reading Room
- Wellbeing resources
- User Charter
- Visiting the Library
- Exhibitions
- Research support
- Our collections
- News & Events
- Our blog
-
About
the
Library
- Contact us
- Transforming Senate House Library
The living conditions, health and welfare of the poor, and particularly of children, were of great concern to Charles Dickens. In this section you will see some of Dickens’s works alongside items that consider the protection and welfare of children, both individually and collectively, in the face of the threats to their well-being in Victorian àËÅöÊÓƵ.
The Dickens Country: Frederic Kitton, àËÅöÊÓƵ. Adam and Charles Black, 1905
Dealings with the Firm of Dombey and Son: Wholesale, Retail, and for Exportation. Charles Dickens; with illustrations by Hablot Knight Browne àËÅöÊÓƵ: Bradbury and Evans, 1846-1848
The Dens of àËÅöÊÓƵ Exposed: John Duncombe àËÅöÊÓƵ - Printed for and published by the author, 1835
The Rookeries of àËÅöÊÓƵ: Thomas Beames 2nd ed. àËÅöÊÓƵ: T. Bosworth, 1852
The Child-Farm: Punch, or The àËÅöÊÓƵ Charivari 1849
'The Old Curiosity Shop’ in Master Humphrey’s Clock: Charles Dickens; with illustrations by George Cattermole and Hablot Knight Browne àËÅöÊÓƵ: Chapman and Hall, 1840-1841
The Hospital for Sick Children Admissions Form c.1850s-1860s
Orphanhood: Free Will Offerings to the Fatherless. àËÅöÊÓƵ: J. Nisbet, c.1850
Oliver Twist: Charles Dickens àËÅöÊÓƵ; Nonesuch Press, 1937
A Few Words in Behalf of the Orphan Girls in Union Houses. àËÅöÊÓƵ, 1859
Who Will Help? Windermere: printed and published by J. Garnett, c.1869