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Record #:
21168
Author(s):
Abstract:
This article looks at relief for the poor in North Carolina, a continuous function of the Anglican parishes, county courts, and provincial assembly. Relief to the poor was seen not only as desirable but virtually mandatory, and important precedents were established in theory and practice during this period that would govern society's attitudes toward the poor and poor relief after the Revolution.
Record #:
22982
Author(s):
Abstract:
The County Home, formerly known as the” Poor House” and the home for the aged and infirm, was built near Bell’s Fork, on the old New Bern-Greenville Road (now County Home Road). It served for (good and bad) as the boarding place for the aged, destitute, homeless, drunkards, senile and sickly, long before social programs could help these people. The first Pitt County Poor House was built in 1828 on land purchased from John Cherry. Conditions were very poor until after 1885. In 1917, a new County Home complex was built on the original site. The County closed the Pitt County Home in 1965 and it was then used to store Civil Defense supplies.