Charles Booth
Charles Booth, the son of a wealthy businessman, was born in
Liverpool on 30th March, 1840. Booth's father was a Unitarian and head
of the Lamport & Holt Steamship Company. When Booth was twenty-two his
father died and took over the running of the company. Booth was an
energetic leader and soon added a successful glove manufacturing concern
to his expanding shipping interests.
In the 1860s Booth became interested in the philosophy of Auguste Comte,
the founder of modern sociology. Booth was especially attracted to
Comte's idea that in the future, the scientific industrialist would take
over the social leadership from church ministers. One of the
consequences of reading Comte was that Booth began to lose his religious
faith.
In 1885 Charles Booth became angry about the claim made by H. H.
Hyndman, the leader of the Social Democratic Federation, that 25% of the
population of London lived in abject poverty. Bored with running his
successful business, Booth decided to investigate the incidence of
pauperism in the East End of the city. He recruited a team of
researchers that included his cousin, Beatrice Potter.
The result of Booth's investigations, Labour and Life of the People, was
published in 1889. Booth's book revealed that the situation was even
worse than that suggested by H. H. Hyndman. Booth research suggested
that 35% rather than 25% were living in abject poverty.
Booth expanded his research to cover the rest of London. He continued to
run his business during the day and confined his writing to evenings and
weekends. In an effort to obtain a comprehensive and reliable survey
Booth and his small team of researchers made at least two visits to
every street in the city.
Over a twelve year period (1891 to 1903) Booth published 17 volumes of
Life and Labour of the People of London. In these books Booth argued
that the stare should assume responsibility for those living in poverty.
One of the proposals he made was for the introduction of Old Age
Pensions. A measure that he described as "limited socialism". Booth
believed that if the government failed to take action, Britain was in
danger of experiencing a socialist revolution.
Whereas many of his researchers, including Beatrice Potter, became
socialists as a result of what they discovered while investigating
poverty, Booth became more conservative in his views. Strongly opposed
to trade unions, he was unhappy with the sympathetic treatment they had
received from the the Liberal government that took power after the 1906
General Election. Booth now renounced his early support for the Liberal
Party and joined the Conservative Party. Charles Booth died on 23rd
November, 1916.
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