Monday, 25 May 2026

How Victorian Railways Brought Both Progress And Terrifying New Dangers

How Victorian Railways Brought Both Progress And Terrifying New Dangers

I want to find out a little about the railway, and how it changed Victorian Britain. While trains brought with them excitement, speed, and endless opportunity, they also brought a completely new kind of fear. For many Victorian people, the railways were thrilling and unsettling in equal measure. People could travel faster than ever before, but there were accidents and disasters which were inevitable, because it was completely new.
When the first passenger railways began to expand in the 1820s and 1830s, many people were amazed by them. Journeys that once would have taken days by horse and carriage could now be done in only hours. But not everybody trusted the railways. Some people worried that travelling at such high speeds could damage the body or worse damage the mind. The noise, smoke, sparks, and violent shaking of the earlier carriages must have felt quite worrying to many of the first passengers.

These fears became far more real in 1830 during the opening celebrations of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway. William Huskisson, a politician who was attending the event, stepped onto the tracks and was hit by George Stephenson’s locomotive Rocket. He became one of the world’s first widely reported railway fatalities. Victorians were horrified because it showed them how easily disasters could happen.
Image info:
Artist: A.B. Clayton
Date: 1830

Railway lines spread rapidly across Britain and tragically accidents became all the more frequent. In 1842, the Versailles rail disaster in France shocked people across Europe. A train derailed and caught fire, killing more than fifty people. Stories like this increased the fears people had in Britain as well. Then in 1861 the Clayton Tunnel disaster happened in Sussex. There were signalling errors which caused two trains to collide inside a dark tunnel. Twenty-three people were killed and around 176 were injured. Survivors of the disaster described all of the confusion, the screaming, the darkness, and the wrecked carriages that were piled together underground. It must have been absolutely terrifying for the passengers trapped inside.
Image info:
Benderloch railway station
Date: 1905

Another disaster that really affected Victorian Britain was the Staplehurst rail crash of 1865. Part of a bridge had been removed for repairs when a train carrying the writer Charles Dickens crossed it. Ten people were killed and around forty were injured. Dickens managed to survive and he later wrote about how shaken he was afterwards. His experience reflected the anxieties many Victorians felt whenever they travelled by rail.

Perhaps one of the most infamous tragedies was in 1879 with the collapse of the Tay Bridge in Scotland. During a violent storm, the bridge gave way under a passing train. Around seventy-five people were killed and there were no survivors. The disaster completely shocked the public because the bridge had been celebrated as a triumph of Victorian engineering. Many people started to question whether even the greatest structures could really be trusted. In spite of these tragedies, Victorians continued to travel because railways had transformed work, trade, and family life. Over time, safety systems started to improve but railway disasters still continued to concern the Victorians for many years.

Do you think that Victorians saw the railway as progress, or do you think that many secretly feared them?

Ravens, Magpies, and Black Cats In Tudor Superstitions

Ravens, Magpies, and Black Cats In Tudor Superstitions

Today I want to find out a little bit about the strange superstitions that were in Tudor England. During the era there was a great deal of importance placed on animals. To Tudor people, animals were not just pets or creatures that wandered through the towns or fields. Many believed that they could carry warnings, messages, or even signs from God or even the Devil. In a world that had disease, poor harvests, and sudden death, it is easy to see why so many people looked for meanings in the behaviour of animals.

At the beginning of the Tudor period in the late fifteenth century, most people were still living close to nature. Animals were part of their daily survival. Cats kept the rats away from homes and barns, horses were used for travel and to work fields, dogs were used to guard property, and ravens and crows were regular sights on battlefields, in churches, and at places of execution. Because people saw these animals all the time, stories and beliefs began to grow around them.

Ravens in particular became linked with death and bad fortune. Their black feathers and habit of feeding on carrion made many Tudor people very uneasy. Seeing ravens circling above you was often viewed as a warning of an illness, disaster or of death. At the Tower of London, there are still superstitions that should the ravens leave, the country will fall. Even today the ravens at the Tower have their wings clipped. Better safe than sorry! Although they are a little less restricted in recent years. As they have reduced the amount of clipping so the ravens could fly more naturally rather than only hop or glide.

Magpies also carried strong superstitions in Tudor England. Many people believed seeing a single magpie brought bad luck or sorrow, while larger groups could predict different fortunes. Their noisy behaviour, black and white colouring, and reputation for stealing shiny objects made them an easy target for superstition. Even today, some people still salute a lone magpie or say ‘good morning’ to it for luck.
Cats had a far more complicated reputation. Many households valued them because they controlled mice and rats that could ruin food supplies. But the poor black cat became associated with witchcraft and the supernatural. During the sixteenth century, fears of witchcraft were increasing across Europe, including in England. Some people believed witches could transform into animals or send spirits in animal form to carry out evil acts. Lonely older women who owned cats were sometimes targeted. Fear could easily turn one neighbour against another.

Other animals also carried meaning. Owls were often linked to death because of their eerie coos at night. Hares were another animal that sometimes got associated with witchcraft. Even ordinary farm animals were not safe, they could become part of a superstition if they happened to behave strangely during a storm, illness, or an eclipse. Without our modern scientific explanations, Tudors interpreted unusual animal behaviour as warnings from unseen forces.

Even if not everyone fully believed the stories they still created an atmosphere of fear and mystery. It may well have given comfort to some, by believing that there were signs they could prepare for the danger.

These beliefs seem to reveal the anxieties of Tudor life. Many people had to live with a constant anxiety, so maybe believing that animals actually carried signs made the world feel a little less unpredictable.

Do you think that these superstitions mainly came from fear? Or do you think that people just wanted reassurance?

The Forgotten “Canary Girls” Who Risked Their Lives On Britain’s Home Front

The Forgotten “Canary Girls” Who Risked Their Lives On Britain’s Home Front


Image info:
Munitions Production 
1914-1918
Artist: Horace Nicholls
Date: July 1917

I have recently been finding out a bit about what life was like on the home front. It would be wrong not to mention the incredible women who worked in the dangerous industries to help the war effort. One group that really stood out to me were the so called “Canary Girls” of the First and Second World Wars. It made me realise just how much ordinary women sacrificed behind the scenes. Their work placed them in constant danger and it permanently affected their health and their appearance.


When the First World War broke out in 1914, Britain needed enormous amounts of shells, explosives, and ammunition. Millions of men had left civilian jobs to fight, so factories desperately needed workers. Women were encouraged to fill in these roles for the first time in huge numbers. Many came from working-class backgrounds and had worked as servants, cleaners, shop assistants, or textile workers. Some probably felt they needed to do their bit but for others they needed the wages to support their families. The wages in munitions factories were usually far better than the jobs they had previously been able to get, so women were drawn to the work.


One of the most dangerous jobs involved handling TNT, which was the chemical used in explosive shells. Women worked long hours filling the munitions by hand inside crowded factories that were often noisy, hot, and very poorly ventilated. Gradually the workers started to notice strange effects on their bodies. TNT exposure turned many women’s skin yellow and sometimes their hair took on a yellowish hue. Because of this, people began to call them the “Canary Girls.”
It is also believed that some Canary Girls may have even intentionally used chemicals from the factories to lighten or brighten their hair further, embracing the unusual “canary” appearance that came with the work.


The reality was frightening. TNT poisoning could cause headaches, dizziness, sickness, chest pains, liver damage, and severe fatigue. Some women became seriously unwell and others died from the exposure. Their yellow skin was a visible sign of the dangers that they faced. Some babies born to munitions workers were reportedly born with a slight yellow tint to their skin because of their mothers’ exposure to TNT during pregnancy. Although the discolouration usually faded over time, thankfully.

Explosives factories could also be catastrophic places. Accidents could sometimes cause devastating explosions and a large number of workers were killed. One of the worst disasters happened at the National Shell Filling Factory at Chilwell in 1918, where an explosion killed over a hundred workers.
Image info:
Salisbury Munitions Factory
Date: 1943

During the Second World War, women were once again asked to return to the munitions factories. Although the safety standards had improved somewhat, the risks were still really high. But in spite of the dangers, many women carried on because they believed that their work was important, and it was. Their work helped keep the military supplied and they contributed enormously to Britain’s ability to continue fighting.
Image info:
Munitions Production
Date: 1940

It is sad how easily these women have been forgotten compared to the soldiers at the front. The Canary Girls risked their lives daily in factories and many were permanently changed by it. I think they deserve to be remembered.
Image info:
Munitons factory in Scarborough
Date: 1943

Do you think the sacrifices made by women working on the home front receive enough recognition today?

Sunday, 24 May 2026

The Victorian Servant Whose Diaries Revealed The Reality Of Domestic Service

The Victorian Servant Whose Diaries Revealed The Reality Of Domestic Service


I have recently  been writing about Nella Last and Mass Observation during World War Two. This made me want to find out about other diarists through history that give us a greater insight into everyday life. Today I want to talk about a woman whose story completely changed the way many historians understand domestic servants in Victorian Britain.


 Her name was Hannah Cullwick, and through her diaries and personal writings she gave us an unusually honest account of what servant life was like in the Victorian age. What really stuck out to me was how exhausting, lonely, and emotionally complicated it was, even though servants were everywhere in Victorian society.

Hannah Cullwick was born in 1833, into a working-class family. Like many girls from struggling families during the nineteenth century, she had very little choice in her future. Britain during the Victorian period was changing rapidly because of industrialisation, but for many poor women the safest way to earn regular wages was through domestic service. Hannah was only about eight years old when she began working as a servant.



Domestic servants were everywhere in Victorian Britain. Wealthier households relied on maids, cooks, nursemaids, laundry workers, and housekeepers to keep their homes running smoothly. But despite how essential they were, many servants often lived almost invisible lives. They often worked from before dawn until late in the night. They scrubbed floors, blackened stoves, carried heavy water buckets, washed clothes, lit fires, emptied chamber pots, and prepared food. Their work was physically exhausting and they had very little privacy or freedom. Hannah’s diaries show us just how tiring domestic life could be. She often described sore hands, aching bodies, dirt, sweat, and the constant work.

One thing I didn’t realise was how strongly Victorian society judged servants. Employers expected obedience, respectability, and silence. A servant’s behaviour reflected on the household, so many women lived under strict rules and constant supervision. Hannah seemed very aware of the class divide between servants and employers. She understood that many wealthy people viewed servants as socially inferior, even while relying completely on them.

In the 1850s Hannah met Arthur Munby, a wealthy barrister and writer who became fascinated by working-class women and female labourers. Their relationship was unusual and secretive. Munby admired Hannah’s strength and hard work. Hannah sometimes appeared proud of her servant life. But the relationship was unequal because of the enormous class difference between them. They secretly married in 1873, although the marriage was hidden from most people because Munby was worried there would be a  social scandal. Even after they got married, Hannah often continued to work as a servant.

What makes Hannah Cullwick’s story so important is that she left us her own words. So many Victorian servants were never able to record their feelings or experiences, but Hannah did. Through her diaries we can take a small glimpse into  the reality of domestic service. Many women took pride in the hard work, but they were also exhausted. They experienced humiliation, isolation, and frustration. Many servants spent their entire lives caring for other people’s homes but they had very little security or independence of their own.

When I read about Hannah, I cannot help but wonder how many other servants silently carried the same burdens without having their stories told.

 Do you think that Victorian society appreciated the people that kept their households functioning?

The Royal Progresses Of Elizabeth I And The Pressure They Brought To Tudor England

The Royal Progresses Of Elizabeth I And The Pressure They Brought To Tudor England

Yesterday I wrote about what ordinary people may have thought of the Tudor monarchs, and I mentioned the royal progresses of Queen Elizabeth I. Today I want to find out a little more about what these progresses actually involved and how towns and villages prepared for them. They were not simply glamorous journeys of pageantry. For many ordinary people, a royal progress could bring with it excitement, fear, opportunities and a huge amount of pressure.

Royal progresses became especially important during the Tudor period. Rather than staying permanently in London, Tudor monarchs travelled around the country with large households made up of courtiers, servants, guards, musicians, cooks, and officials. Henry VIII travelled widely, partly because he enjoyed hunting and magnificent displays of royal power, but also because rulers needed to be seen by their subjects. In an age without newspapers, photographs, or television, many people would never see their monarch in person in any other way. A visit from the king or queen could therefore feel almost unbelievable.

By the reign of Elizabeth I, royal progresses had become carefully planned political events. Elizabeth travelled across southern England for many summers, staying at the homes of nobles and wealthy courtiers. This allowed her to display her royal authority but it also reduced some of the financial strain that came with feeding the enormous royal household at court. Noble families would often spend huge amounts of money in order to prepare for her arrival. Hosting the queen could improve status and influence, so they took full advantage. But if you failed to impress her you could be humiliated and it could even be politically damaging.

Preparations for a royal progress usually began weeks or even months ahead of time. Roads might need to be repaired, buildings cleaned, and the decorations prepared. Local officials would have worried about the organisation and the expense. Villages and towns could suddenly find themselves responsible for feeding hundreds of people and providing accommodation for royal servants, horses, carts, and guards. Fresh food, ale, candles, firewood, and bedding all had to be found. For poorer communities this could cause real anxiety because the costs were sometimes so overwhelming.

Despite all of the pressure, many people probably still felt a level of excitement. Church bells would ring out when the monarch was approaching. Crowds gathered along the roads in the hopes of getting a glimpse of the royal procession.
It may well have been a time that children remembered for the rest of their lives. Some towns organised plays, music, speeches and huge elaborate welcomes that were filled with symbolism praising the monarch. One famous progress happened in 1575 when Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, hosted Elizabeth for nearly three weeks at Kenilworth Castle. The entertainment was extraordinary. There were fireworks, bear baiting, hunting, dancing, musicians, masques, and large outdoor performances. Actors that were dressed as characters from classical mythology greeted the queen, and there were dramatic speeches praising her wisdom and beauty. At one point, a performer pretending to be the “Lady of the Lake” appeared on the water to welcome Elizabeth. Dudley spent a fortune on the visit, partly because many people believed he still hoped to marry her. People understood that the queen’s reaction mattered greatly.

Not everyone welcomed progresses as warmly though. While the nobles might compete for royal favour, ordinary labourers most likely resented the extra taxes, additional labour demands or the rising prices they had to pay to fund the visit. Inns became overcrowded and supplies would quickly disappear. Some villagers may have been worried about saying or doing the wrong thing in front of royal officials.

For a short time, the ordinary villages and market towns of England were transformed by the glitzy world of Tudor royalty.

Do you think that you would have felt excitement or would you have been worried about the disruption and expense it would bring?


Image info:
Artist: Attributed to Robert Peake the Elder
Date: 1600
Procession portrait of Elizabeth I

How Tea Became Britain’s Wartime Comfort During The Second World War

How Tea Became Britain’s Wartime Comfort During The Second World War

Today I want to talk about something that may seem completely ordinary, but during the Second World War it became a huge comfort and morale boost for millions of people across Britain. Tea was not just a drink, for many people, it became part of their survival. It seems to have been an emotional support and it became more than just a simple cup of tea it was reassurance.

Before the war even began in 1939, tea was, as it is today, a huge part of British life. Rich and poor alike drank it. It was affordable, warm, and familiar. When war broke out and daily life became full of air raid sirens, blackouts, rationing, and anxiety. So people clung even more tightly to routines that made life feel somewhat normal. Tea became one of those routines.
The British government understood this almost immediately. Food shortages became a serious concern because German U-boats threatened shipping routes that brought supplies into Britain. Many foods were rationed, but tea was treated differently because leaders believed it was vital for morale. Although tea itself was rationed from 1940, the government worked hard to make sure supplies continued arriving in to Britain. People were usually allowed around two ounces per week, and for many families every spoonful was precious.
Tea was especially important during the Blitz. After bombing raids, tired families left the cold shelters. They were frightened, cold, and sometimes shaken up. One of the first things that was offered at rest centres was usually a cup of tea. It warmed them up and was comforting. Volunteers from the Women’s Voluntary Service, known as the WVS, played a major role. Women worked long hours serving tea from mobile canteens near bomb sites, railway stations, and military centres. Firefighters, rescue workers, soldiers, and civilians all relied on these moments, however short, of comfort. In the middle of all the destruction and grief, holding a warm mug may have helped people to calm people down and make them feel less alone.

Tea was unifying, Factory workers drank it during their long shifts making weapons and supplies. Soldiers drank it in their barracks and on ships. Families served it up after receiving bad news. It became associated with endurance, community, and support. In so many ways, tea represented the idea that ordinary life would continue in spite of everything that the war was throwing at people.

It is so fascinating that something as simple as tea carried so much weight.

Do you think that these small comforts became even more important because they reminded people of peace time?



Saturday, 23 May 2026

The Harsh Reality Of Victorian Homelessness And The Penny Sit-Ups

The Harsh Reality Of Victorian Homelessness And The Penny Sit-Ups
Today I want to tell you about something that really sums up just how difficult life could be for the poorest people in Victorian Britain. The so called “Penny Sit-Ups” and the shelters that existed for homeless people. Behind the strange name there were men, women, and sometimes even children simply trying to survive another cold night using whatever money they had left.

During the nineteenth century, Britain’s towns and cities grew rapidly because of the Industrial Revolution. Thousands of people moved into cities like London, Manchester, and Liverpool looking for work in factories, docks, and workshops. Some managed to find stable jobs, but many others were forced to live on the edge of destitution. Wages were often low and unreliable, accidents at work were all too common, and an illness could destroy a family’s income. If somebody lost their job or became too sick to work, they could very easily lose their home as well.

By the Victorian period, homelessness had become a major problem in large cities. Workhouses existed for the destitute, but many people were terrified of them. Families were often separated if they entered the workhouse and conditions were harsh and humiliating, with strict rules. Because of this, many homeless people looked for cheaper and less frightening alternatives.

This was where the “Penny Sit-Ups” became known. In some lodging houses and shelters, a person could pay a single penny for the chance to spend the night sitting indoors, often leaning forward over a rope stretched across a room. The rope supported them slightly while they slept sitting upright. In the morning, the rope would be lowered and everyone would have to leave. Can you imagine how uncomfortable and degrading this must have been, especially during winters. But for many people it was better than sleeping outside on dangerous streets.
If somebody had a little more money, perhaps four pennies, they might be able to afford a bed in what became known as a “fourpenny coffin.” These were narrow wooden sleeping boxes stacked beside one another. They offered a tiny amount of privacy and warmth compared to the streets, but conditions were usually overcrowded, dirty, and unhealthy. Disease spread easily in poor lodging houses, and many people struggled with hunger, exhaustion, and possibly even loneliness.
During the later nineteenth century, charities and religious organisations began trying to improve conditions for the homeless. One figure who tried to help was William Booth. He founded The Salvation Army in 1865. They opened shelters, soup kitchens, and workshops. Some reformers genuinely wanted to help the poor to rebuild their lives, but Victorian society often divided the poor into the “deserving” and “undeserving,” and many homeless people were unfairly blamed for their situation. The “deserving poor” were usually seen as the people who had fallen into hardship through no fault of their own. People like widows, orphaned children, the elderly, disabled people, or workers that had been injured in accidents. These people usually received more sympathy and were considered more worthy of charity or help.

The “undeserving poor,” were judged far more harshly. These were people who were unemployed, homeless, struggling with alcohol, or unable to keep steady work. They were accused of being lazy, immoral, and irresponsible. Victorian society could be very judgemental, and many wealthier people believed that poverty was caused by bad choices rather than their difficult living conditions, low wages, illness, or economic problems.
I can’t even begin to imagine the stress of living like this. They must have felt invisible to society. But people still tried to support one another, and to hold onto a little bit of dignity in the incredibly harsh circumstances.

I think stories like this are so important to remember because they remind us that behind all the history books were real people.

Do you think that Victorian society really understood the suffering that people faced by homeless people?

How Victorian Railways Brought Both Progress And Terrifying New Dangers

How Victorian Railways Brought Both Progress And Terrifying New Dangers I want to find out a little about the railway, and how it changed Vi...