The last true workhouse stopped operating in 1948 but remained open as a “public assistance institution” which was pretty much only a change in name. These continued into the 1960’s
No, one only 'has' land if we pay for it - either in battle
And your conscientious stewardship is appreciated, Broch.it would fall into disrepair
Because I need to insure my land in case someone (illegally) crosses it and hurts themselves.
Yup.
Unsurprisingly, we try to push it to the back of our minds; the fact that we have so easily surrendered our originary right to live and wander where we please. We should be, and probably are, ashamed.
Volenti non fit injuria.
And your conscientious stewardship is appreciated, Broch.
But, fall into disrepair? Left to its own devices it would wild and revert to a natural state
I am definitely sure that it would stand up in court though. It’s extremely clear how the law stands on this. It just has yet to be taken to a court.
I do however think you are still wise to keep the insurance you have, and would recommend others to do the same. - Because it has yet to be taken to a court.
I believe, but would have to search to find it, that it has already been tested. It all hinges on Volenti non fit injuria relying on the claimant being aware they may suffer injury; their claim would be that they expect a path through a wood to be clear or they expect a path through a wood not to have hanging deadwood above it etc.
This is true.That is a popular misconception. And one that, 30 years ago when I started this, I believed as well. Small woodland does not have the room to host the natural herbivores and the necessary prey species to reach anything like a 'natural' state. We have to manage small woodland to provide the best biodiversity. By small, I mean less than hundreds or even thousand of acres.
Speak for yourself, I worked hard and saved my money in order to buy my land.You make an important point Brock.
All land ownership is based in historical acts of violence, displacement and disposession. Romans, Saxons, Jutes and Normans successively invaded and killed and otherwise disrupted the lives of whoever was settled in Britain before them. Under the Tudors and Stuarts (and through subsequent acts of enforced inclosure) different groups have been given land, others have been removed from it.
Patterns of taxation, militarism, fealty and documentation seal those arrangements. In celebration as often as fearfully, we assent to these violences, their ever-present threat and the complicated legal and other arrangements (concepts of nation, race and belonging - even the mortgage etc.) that grow like a callus of order and normalcy over those initial violences.
Those arrangements settle in to our habits and into our cowardice, and, whenever the existing arrangements are challenged they are met again with the violence of organized groups of paid, armed men; game keepers, police, army. Any claim of present or prior ownership, any such claim, rests on a threat of violence. It is unfortunate, but obvious, that all land ownership is eventually grounded in murder.
Unsurprisingly, we try to push it to the back of our minds; the fact that we have so easily surrendered our originary right to live and wander where we please. We should be, and probably are, ashamed.
Nowhere in the UK is in its natural state…nowhere. Whether it is moorland managed by judicious grazing, a lovingly planted garden or woodland/forestry managed by commercial companies it is a managed landscape. Even wilding projects are closely managed.And your conscientious stewardship is appreciated, Broch.
But, fall into disrepair? Left to its own devices it would wild and revert to a natural state
I’ve looked it up, the licence to travel was known as a Pauper’s pass warrant. If you were a travelling to sell your wares you would require a hawkers licence. Being found abroad, sleeping rough, in a tent or abandoned building outside your parish without either would be a punishable offence.When was it illegal to sleep outdoors?
Many pilgrims, itinerant traders and travellers (not the modern sort) slept outdoors for as long as they existed.
When did it become legal to sleep outdoors?
If you are going to rubbish what I say, perhaps you could give real evidence, with the dates of when these laws you claim were enacted.
I have lived and worked and volenteered on dartmoor, and presently live on exmoor, and have many farming friends on the moor know several rangers, and occasionally volunteer on projects have done so for 40 years.
I think that although many landowners have similar problems, with uneducated townies, "enjoying a bit of recreation" unless you live or work on the the moor, it's a different style of management to a normal farm elsewhere. For a start, land is not generally fenced off from the public. So you do get people roaming over the land. Some respect it, some don't. But legislation against those who do respect the land is fundamental wrong, whatever else.
Many landowners pollute their own land and rivers with all sorts of nasties like slurry and pesticides chemicals, killing wildlife. That is more of a problem than a few wildcampers, but they don't get banned from being on the land.
The land he wishes to ban wildcampers on is very wild and boggy with little cover. Not suitable for pheasant shooting anyway. There is a few shoots around here, I can hear the guns almost daily in the season and my neighbour works on the shoots as long as I've known him.
So I'm not totaly ignorant of what is needed for a shoot.
He wants to shoot reared pheasant on open boggy moors with a right of access? Ha ha!
Next thing we know he will be planting cover, and fencing it off for public safety. All access denied, the valuable character of the land changed(improved, well done) and another little bit of our heritage taken away from us.
Money talks. The plebs can go elsewhere, there's plenty left...untill there isn't. Slow encroachment.
It's wrong. Plain and simple.