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English Counties and
Public Building, 1650-1830
Christopher Chalklin
Before the modern growth of centralised government,
the most important unit of administration was the county. Counties were
run by Justices of the Peace sitting together at Quarter Sessions where,
as well as trying criminal cases, they dealt with all county business.
In the years between 1650 and 1830 a increasing proportion of their time
and resources was taken up in erecting public buildings. Building by counties,
taken together, represents a substantial and previously little noticed
programme of public works. Unlike most other building works in this period,
where the details of planning, building, execution and cost are lost, county
building is well documented, allowing us to follow clearly the stages of
erection.
The county building programme reflected changes
in society and in the economy, apart from being itself an indication of
the growing wealth of the period. A sizeable part of county budgets was
spent on bridges. A series of increasingly elaborate bridewells and gaols
reflected concerns over employment and crime, also reflected in the erection
of judges' lodgings and court houses; the latter being often incorporated
in shire halls. Rising humanitarian alarm about mental illness led to the
building of pauper lunatic asylums after 1800. English Counties and Public
Building, 1650-1830 is an original and important contribution to both administrative
and architectural history.
288 pages 30 black and white illus. 1998
1 85285 153 8 Cased £40.00
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