A Poor Man's Life

Biography & Memoir, Historical
Cover of the book A Poor Man's Life by Ken Ford, Ken Ford
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Ken Ford ISBN: 9781310735646
Publisher: Ken Ford Publication: September 17, 2014
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Ken Ford
ISBN: 9781310735646
Publisher: Ken Ford
Publication: September 17, 2014
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

England has been a land of rich and poor from time immemorial, with a pyramid of privilege that reaches down from the monarch to the lowest individual, each with their own station in life. The great and good always manage to leave their mark, but the poor live and die in anonymity. Throughout England's recorded history there have been many whose labouring existence marks them out as the lowest of the low, insignificant paupers whose were forced to work without due reward. Amongst these inconsequential beings were those who worked on the land - not the landowners or farmers for they have always been well provided, no, the least regarded man in the countryside was the agricultural labourer.
One of those poor men of history was Richard Ford. He lived in the time of Victoria and spent almost all his life in the quiet English village of Warnford along the Meon Valley in southern Hampshire. Like those millions before him in the nineteenth century, and indeed after him, he lived and died in obscurity. No memorial marks his resting place, save a slight depression in a country churchyard. Richard Ford was, however, a poor man of some significance, for he left a tangible legacy of his existence. But by a fortuitous twist of fate, there exists a record of an interview with him taken by government inspectors who were investigating the life of the poor in 1837. My research has found that Richard Ford did not remain completely anonymous to history. He left some small smudge of his existence in an obscure administration document filed in the records of the Houses of Parliament. But to me Richard Ford was a special man, for he was my great-great grandfather. Without his four-score and seven years of poverty in this world, I would not be here

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

England has been a land of rich and poor from time immemorial, with a pyramid of privilege that reaches down from the monarch to the lowest individual, each with their own station in life. The great and good always manage to leave their mark, but the poor live and die in anonymity. Throughout England's recorded history there have been many whose labouring existence marks them out as the lowest of the low, insignificant paupers whose were forced to work without due reward. Amongst these inconsequential beings were those who worked on the land - not the landowners or farmers for they have always been well provided, no, the least regarded man in the countryside was the agricultural labourer.
One of those poor men of history was Richard Ford. He lived in the time of Victoria and spent almost all his life in the quiet English village of Warnford along the Meon Valley in southern Hampshire. Like those millions before him in the nineteenth century, and indeed after him, he lived and died in obscurity. No memorial marks his resting place, save a slight depression in a country churchyard. Richard Ford was, however, a poor man of some significance, for he left a tangible legacy of his existence. But by a fortuitous twist of fate, there exists a record of an interview with him taken by government inspectors who were investigating the life of the poor in 1837. My research has found that Richard Ford did not remain completely anonymous to history. He left some small smudge of his existence in an obscure administration document filed in the records of the Houses of Parliament. But to me Richard Ford was a special man, for he was my great-great grandfather. Without his four-score and seven years of poverty in this world, I would not be here

More books from Historical

Cover of the book Jane Eyre Laid Bare by Ken Ford
Cover of the book Thoreau in His Own Time by Ken Ford
Cover of the book Hoarfrost by Ken Ford
Cover of the book Die Kurtisane des Teufels by Ken Ford
Cover of the book Amethyst by Ken Ford
Cover of the book ZM - streng geheim: Zweiter Roman: Grabraub im Tal der Könige by Ken Ford
Cover of the book The Dacian War (Book 6 of the Veteran of Rome Series) by Ken Ford
Cover of the book Spare Parts: From Campus to Combat by Ken Ford
Cover of the book Sharper and More Fragrant by Ken Ford
Cover of the book The Gentleman's Quest by Ken Ford
Cover of the book A Scandalous Passion by Ken Ford
Cover of the book Chincoteague Summer of 1948 by Ken Ford
Cover of the book The Doctor Takes a Wife by Ken Ford
Cover of the book Follow The Stars Home by Ken Ford
Cover of the book Calling Wren by Ken Ford
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy