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A
NEW BOOK ABOUT 19th CENTURY SAFFRON WALDEN
THE
WELL-ORDERED TOWN: A
Story of Saffron Walden, Essex
1792—1862 by Jacqueline Cooper A major new study of Saffron Walden in the
19th century was published in October 2000. Entitled The
Well Ordered Town: A Story of Saffron Walden, Essex, 1792-1862, it
represents the end of a seven-year project for the author, Jacqueline
Cooper, who has previously written the history walks guide, Discover Walden. The new book explores the town's social history - its politics, poor laws, economy, crime, allotments, philanthropy, education and religion - during a particularly turbulent period. As a bonus, there are also extracts from a 'lost' 50,000-word 19th century journal, rediscovered by Mrs. Cooper after it had been missing from the town for 30 years. Many other little-known archives have been used, and there are detailed references, including a surname index of over 200 local names. Starting with the banning of the radical volume,
Tom Paine's Rights of Man, in
1792, the history continues through the many challenges of maintaining
an orderly town at a time of burgeoning population and deepening
poverty. The story ends in 1862 with the completion of the town
missionary's journal, detailing the reality of life among the pauperized
population of Walden's meaner streets and outlying hamlets of Little
Walden and Sewards End. The new volume will interest local and family
historians, researchers and all those fascinated by the town's past.
Local Studies Librarian Martyn Everett describes the new work as a
painstaking reconstruction of the social structure and daily life of
Saffron Walden in the first half of the nineteenth century. He feels
that it 'lays bare the unequal power relations that split the community
into "haves" and "have-nots", and explains how the
often self-serving nature of social philanthropy was used as a means of
reinforcing that division.' This is, says Mr. Everett, 'the real stuff
of local history', which will alter most people's image of the old town. The author has tried to explore the dynamics of the
late Georgian and early Victorian society which laid the foundation for
the town we know today: 'Saffron Walden was built on the backs of such
ordinary folk, who comprise most peoples' ancestors,' she comments, 'and
yet we know so little about them. They were often illiterate, and the
records left by the middle-classes tend to put their own gloss on
events, so we end up with a very one-sided picture of 19th century
society.' Mrs. Cooper, however, has not been content to accept
traditional accounts of Walden's past, but has dug deeper to touch on
the lives of its poorer citizens, rather than just the few better-known
families. Challenging and well-written, this illustrated, 288-page book
fills an important gap in 19th century studies of Saffron Walden.
The
Well-ordered Town is available for purchase direct from the author
at a special price of £12.99, plus £2 pp. Email
Jacqueline direct for more information.
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