Keywords
charity
- 'Men! Christians! Britons!', by unknown, 10/1/63
- 1861. – God Bless The Year., by Henry Dowson, January 3rd 1861
- 1862, by [Unknown], Dec 27 1862
- A Christmas Carol, by unknown, December 20th, 1862
- A Greeting to the George Griswold, by unknown, 21st February 1863
- A Lancashire Witch’s Appeal to her Irish Sisters., by Margaretta, December 3rd 1862
- A Plea Fra' Lancashur (from Punch), by unknown, August 28th, 1862
- A Plea for the Cotton District, by Unknown, March 21st 1863
- A Plea for the Outcast Children of the Street and of the Abject Poor., by A Ragged School Teacher, March 29th 1862
- A Rhyme for the Time, by Willife Cunliam, 1864-1-30
- A Song for the Poor, by Thomas Lumb, 4th October 1862
- A Song of the Cotton Famine, by unknown, November 8th, 1862
- An Appeal for the Modest Poor, by unknown, July 5th 1862
- Appeal for the Poor, by unknown, February 20th 1864
- Aw've Turned Mi Bit o' Garden O'er, by Samuel Laycock, 1977
- BEATA., by [Unknown], 1862-July-19
- Be Kind, by Spencer T. Hall, Dec 5th 1863
- Blessed to Give, by F. E. Wilson, July 30th 1864
- Can You Help Us a Bit?, by Mr. W. Stitt Jenkins, October 25th 1862
- Charity! A Word to the Rich., by By The Author Of “Proverbial Philosophy”,
- Cheer up Lads, by [Unknown], March 7th 1863
- Coals of Fire, by unknown, Wednesday, January 21, 1863
- Concert and Literary Entertainment in Aid of the Relief Fund (W. A. Abram poem), by W. A. Abram, May 31 1862
- Dialogue Between a Millowner and John Brown, by unknown, 8th November 1862
- Drooping Hearts in Lancashire, by J. Harvey Perry, January 3rd 1863
- Eawr Factory Skoo, by E. Moss, 1977
- Famine, Fever, and Frost, by Anon., Nov 22 1862
- Father Christmas., by W. Billington, December 27th 1862
- Frettin', by Joseph Ramsbottom, 1864
- Give Us Our Daily Bread, by Thomas Hodson, November 30th 1861
- God Help the Poor, by unknown, October 19th 1861
- God Help the Poor!, by Williffe Cunliam, 29th August 1863
- Gooin' t' Schoo, by Joseph Ramsbottom, 1864
- Hoamly Chat, by Williffe Cunliam, 11th July 1863
- How to Live on Three Shillings a Week, or the Poor Surat Weaver's Lament, by [Unknown], 7/3/63
- It's Hard to Ceawr i' th' Chimney Nook, by Samuel Laycock, 1977
- Lancashire Distress, by [Unknown], June 28th 1862
- Neither Work Nor Wages, or, The Cotton Famine, by E. R., 12th July 1862
- New Hartley., by James Taylor, February 1st 1862
- Oh! Rich Man, Hear What A. B. C. Can Say to Thee, by Alcæus, Dec 5 1862
- Prayin' Jemmy, by S. Laycock, July 11th 1863
- Prince Rupert, by unknown, Dec 13 1862
- Relief for Lancashire, by A Lankyshir Lad, February 28th 1863
- Relief for Lancashire, by H., November 22nd, 1862
- Remember the Poor, by Edwin Waugh, 24th January 1863
- SOMETHING GOOD TO DO., by [Unknown], 1862-September-06
- Sewin' Class Song, by Samuel Laycock, 1977
- Sympathy With Lancashire., by Hampden, October 23rd 1862
- Sympathy with Lancashire, by [Unknown], Thursday, October 23, 1862
- THINK ON THE POOR, by [Unknown], 1865-11-18
- Th' Shurat Weaver's Song, by Samuel Laycock, January 10th, 1863
- The Charities of the Poor, by Richard Monckton Milnes, M.P., January 11th 1862
- The Coming of the "Griswold", by Adam Chester, Wednesday, February 18, 1863
- The Cotton Famine – Christmas, 1862, by Samuel Clarkson, 1st March 1863
- The Cry of the Crowd No.II, by W. Billington, May 24th 1862
- The Factory Lass, by Joseph Ramsbottom, 1864
1864
- The Lancashire Famine. A Contrast. Then and Now; Or Past and Present. Then, or Past, by Y. Stonmarket, January 17, 1863
- The Lancashire Operatives' Appeal, by William Eaton, Wednesday, November 26, 1862
- The Mill-Hand's Petition, by [Unknown], 1866
- The Savage Club in Manchester, by Shirley Brooks, September 6th 1862
- The Voice of Want, by David Little, August 16th 1862
- Thenkful Jone, by Williffe Cunliam, 5th September 1863
- These Three, by Isa Craig, January 21st 1865
- Welly Clamming, by [Unknown], Dec 13 1862
- What Are We to Do, by Samuel Laycock, Aug 29th 1863
- Who Is My Neighbour?, by unknown, 6th December 1862
- Workhouse Porters, Or Brothers' Keepers?, by unknown, November 28th, 1863
- [Untitled], by Henry Cook, September 6th 1862
- ‘Lines’, by W. J. Grimshaw, 9/12/65