Under the
Poor Relief (Ireland) Act 1838, three Poor Law Commissioners divided Ireland into poor law unions, in which paupers would receive
poor relief paid for by a
poor rate extracted by local poor law
valuations (ratings of rate payers). The name "union" was adopted from the English model although boundaries were unrelated to
civil parishes. A union was named after the town on which it was centred, usually where its
workhouse stood. Unions were defined as groups of
poor law electoral divisions, in turn groups of
townlands. Electoral divisions returned members (guardians) to the board of guardians, to which ratepayers who paid higher rates had
more votes. During and after the
Great Famine, the impoverished west was redrawn to create more unions for easier administration and for computation of where suffering was most endemic. When the Irish
General Register Office was established in 1864, each union became a superintendent registrar's district, thus electoral divisions together formed a
dispensary or registrar's district. The
Local Government (Ireland) Act 1898 divided
administrative counties into
urban and rural districts, with each rural district corresponding to the non-urban portion of a poor law union within the county. In the
Irish Free State, poor law unions and rural districts were abolished in 1925 and the powers of boards of guardians transferred to the county councils' Board of Health. In
Northern Ireland, poor law unions survived until the
Northern Ireland Health and Social Care Service in 1948. ==Scotland==