There is a great opportunity to get the background to the Old Poor Laws pre 1834 and how they may have impacted your ancestors.
See the details of the talk on our website here https://dev.gsv.org.au/civicrm/event/info?reset=1&id=1014
Presenter: Stephen Hawke.
Before Henry VIII dissolved the monasteries in 1536-9, the monasteries took care of the poor in England and Wales. With the monasteries gone, this responsibilty was shifted to each parish. An entire system of laws and documents grew up around caring for the poor. For the researcher, these documents can be invaluable in tracing migration of families, both poor and not poor, in England and Wales. Poor law documents can also reveal family relationships as well as giving insight into living conditions of ancestors. Poor law records are also known as parish chest records. This is because a chest kept in the church or the priest's house was used to store parish records.