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Instructing the Young and Comforting the Aged in the Norwich and Norfolk Institution for the Indigent Blind, ca. 1805–55

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 March 2024

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Abstract

This article considers the ways that Enlightenment ideas and practices shaped the founding of the Norwich and Norfolk Institution for the Indigent Blind, and then analyzes the disparate approaches to the aged versus the working-age blind in its first half-century (ca. 1805–55). While we see change over time, we also find distinctive continuity in the ongoing close connections inmates kept with Norwich civic life and family and friends; this was emphatically not a closed asylum. The institution demonstrated consistent commitment to helping its pupils towards self-sufficiency, with optimism about what the blind could (literally) turn their hands to. Nonetheless, the Norwich Institution was disciplinary, actively seeking to produce docile, productive bodies among its blind pupils, both through education and through work habits. Time, labor, and moral discipline increased for pupils over the course of its first half-century, and girls and women were pushed into less economically rewarding work practices. Equally important, while it had an unwavering, humanitarian commitment to providing for the aged blind, its insistent characterization of these inmates as helpless and pitiable limited the potential of the institution to facilitate the well-being of its older residents.

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Original Manuscript
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The North American Conference on British Studies
Figure 0

Figure 1 Chart of pupils and aged inmates in the Norwich Institution during the first 50 years of its operation. Data were gathered from annual counts (during the annual meeting of all subscribers, generally in March) in the Institution's Committee Minute Books (NRO SO 159 1–3). We tabulated additional data for 1806–11 from a list of pupils admitted and discharged from “An Account of the Establishment, Regulations &c. of an Hospital & School for Indigent Blind, Instituted at Norwich in 1805” (Norwich, 1811), 49–50. The pamphlet survives in NRO ACC 2004/78 (with the “turnover” date for each year's count in March). For years with missing data (1843 and 1848), we derived the number of pupils and aged inmates from the count of admissions/departures given in the subsequent year. For years where the Committee's count of admissions, discharges, and deaths did not add up to the number of pupils and inmates listed in their population counts, the population count was used.

Figure 1

Figure 2 NRO SO 159/33. “Cord”, “Cording”, “Winding Cord”, “Making Cord,” and “Winding” were all grouped together under “Cording.” Tasks such as “unpacking stores,” “cleaning house,” “house jobs,” “washing baskets,” “assisting,” and “preparing stuff” were grouped together as “other.” “Sorting osiers,” “sorting rods,” and “sorting stuff” were grouped together as “sorting.” “Learning baskets/knitting/spinning/matts” were grouped under “Baskets,” “Knitting,” “Spinning,” or “Matts” respectively. “Sash line” was grouped under “Making Line”.

Figure 2

Figure 3 Annual report of the School for the Indigent Blind… (1805), Surrey History Centre, 9543/2/1. Reproduced by permission of Surrey History Centre. Nearly identical engravings were used by the Bristol institution in its reports, and on the Norwich Institution's posters related to its music festivals.