Before the Poorhouse
Legislation
Prior to 1784, the Church or Parish was in charge
of distributing money to the poor in New York. While many towns already
had an Overseer of the Poor, it wasn't a mandated position until the
Law of 1784. Each town in Ulster County elected two Overseers of the
Poor annually.
In 1824, New York passed a law requiring that each county construct
a poorhouse. Click
here to read the content of this law. Although Ulster was exempted
from this law, in the winter of 1827 the county began purchasing
property to use as a county poorhouse. By June of 1828 a poorhouse
was established in New Paltz, where it stood for the next 150 years.
In 1827, the County Board of Supervisors and the judges
of the Court of Common Pleas were directed to appoint the Superintendents
of the Poor, except in Ulster County where they were appointed by
the state legislature. By 1847 Superintendent of the Poor became
an elected position. One man in each county was allowed to hold
the position for a term of three-years.
Treatment of Paupers
Prior to the establishment of county poorhouses, paupers were dealt
with in one of the following ways:
- Contract - Friends or family members
signed a contract to take care of a pauper for a set price.
- Binding out - a pauper was contractually
given to a person as an indentured servant. For boys until they
were 21 years old, for girls, until they were 18. See
examples of indentures.
- Public auctioning - paupers were auctioned
off to the lowest bidder. The county was then responsible for
paying an annual fee for the upkeep of this pauper.
- Outdoor relief - a pauper would be
given a certain weekly allowance for their support.
Purchasing the Land
The two plots of land, and buildings thereon,
that made up the site of the County Poorhouse were purchased by
the County of Ulster in 1827 from the Merritt family. Fifty and
one-half acres, including the winter grain, were purchased from
Thomas Merritt for the sum of eighteen hundred dollars. Another
sixty acres, with the exception of the site of the family cemetery,
were purchased from Jeremiah Merritt for the sum of two thousand
dollars.
|