Image for Working-class Gambling in Britain C. 1906-1960s

Working-class Gambling in Britain C. 1906-1960s : The Stages of the Political Debate

Laybourn, KeithHill, Jeff(Preface by)
See all formats and editions

This work, using new and previously ignored evidence, examines the nature of working-class gambling in Britain in the first half of the twentieth century.

This work should appeal to scholars interested in the recent history of Britain, working-class communities, and gambling.

This book examines the class nature of gambling in Britain which made the off-course ready-money gambling of the working-class illegal while permitting the middle-class off-course credit gambling.

It rejects the views of the National Anti-Gambling League that working-class gambling was an excessive waste of money and suggests that it was, by and large, 'a bit of a flutter' by the working classes.

Using rarely used Home Office and police evidence, it suggests that both the police and the Home Office would have liked the Street Betting Act of 1906, and other restrictive legislation, removed since it was an impediment to good relations with the working classes upon which the police relied for evidence of serious crimes.

Read More
Title Unavailable: Out of Print
Product Details
Edwin Mellen Press Ltd
0773453741 / 9780773453746
Hardback
363.42
01/06/2007
United States
340 pages
Professional & Vocational Learn More