Friday, 15 May 2026

Before Electricity: The Dangerous Reality of Lighting Victorian Homes

Before Electricity: The Dangerous Reality of Lighting Victorian Homes

I have been finding out a little bit about life in the Victorian and Edwardian era.  I started to think about lighting. What was it like inside Victorian and Edwardian homes? It really made me realise how different everyday life was. Today, most of us simply flick a switch without even thinking about it, but for the people of the nineteenth century, lighting was expensive and dangerous. The way your home was lit could reveal a great deal about your wealth and your status.



For centuries, candles were one of the most common forms of lighting. Poorer families relied on cheaper tallow candles that were made from animal fat. They smoked, smelled bad, and burned quickly, but they were affordable. Wealthier households could afford cleaner and brighter beeswax candles, these were expensive to use in large quantities though. In small working-class homes, families often gathered in one room after it got dark to save candlelight. Darkness clearly controlled life in a way that is difficult for us to imagine now.

Candles also carried serious dangers. Candles were lit in houses that were full of flammable items. Wooden furniture, curtains, straw, or paper could easily lead to issues. Victorian and Edwardian towns regularly witnessed devastating house fires caused by candles. In cramped poorer districts, where buildings stood tightly packed together, a single accident could destroy entire streets.

During the early nineteenth century, gas lighting was beginning to transform towns and cities. William Murdoch helped to pioneer practical gas lighting systems, and by the mid-1800s gas lamps were becoming increasingly common in wealthier homes, theatres, factories, and even city streets. Gas lighting produced a brighter and steadier light than candles did.

One major improvement to the gas light came with the invention of the incandescent mantle during the late nineteenth century. Austrian inventor Carl Auer von Welsbach created a fabric-like mantle that glowed intensely when it was heated by a gas flame. This invention made gas lamps even brighter and far more practical than older versions.

Many large upper-class homes started to embrace gas lighting much earlier on because its installation was prohibitively expensive. Prince Albert was well known for his passion for technological progress and modern improvements. Many of which he implemented in the royal residences. He helped to make many of the new innovations fashionable and respectable among the upper classes.

But gas lighting brought with it many fears. Gas leaks could cause explosions or suffocation, and many people were worried about breathing in the fumes. Rooms became hot and stuffy and some families worried about the invisible gas running through pipes inside their walls. In poorer homes, gas remained far out of reach for many years because the costs were still too high.

By the late Victorian and Edwardian period, electricity slowly began to appear. Inventors like Thomas Edison and Joseph Swan helped develop practical electric lighting. Electric light was cleaner, brighter, and safer in many ways than candles or gas. There was no smoke that blackened the ceilings and there was far less fear.

At first, electricity was mainly found in wealthy homes, grand hotels, and public buildings. Working-class districts waited years before electric lighting became common. But, people recognised the benefits.

 

Do you think people realised just how dramatically electricity  would change everyday life forever?

The Great Fire of York and the Fear of Medieval Cities

The Great Fire of York and the Fear of Medieval Cities

We have been finding out about major fires in the medieval period. Over the past few days we have talked about the great fires of London. Today I want to head north and I find out a little more about a forgotten medieval disaster, the Fire of York in 1137. When people think about devastating fires in English history, they usually imagine the Great Fire of London in 1666. But all medieval cities faced the same danger, and York suffered one of the worst urban fires of the 12th century.

In the early 1100s, York was one of the most important cities in England. It was crowded, busy, and built mainly from timber. Many homes had thatched roofs, the streets were narrow, just like most cities of the era. Fires were part of life. They burned constantly for cooking, heating, candle making, and blacksmithing. Blacksmiths were especially important to medieval life because they produced tools, horseshoes, nails, locks, and weapons, but their forges also carried huge risks. Sparks from their furnaces could easily cause fires to the nearby wooden buildings, especially if it was during dry weather or when it was particularly windy.

A fire tragically broke out in 1137 during the reign of King Stephen. Medieval chroniclers sadly did not leave behind a detailed record, which was common for the period, but they did describe a disaster that spread rapidly through the city. Many historians believe that it may have started accidentally in one of the densely packed districts where workshops and homes were side by side.

People who lived in medieval cities had very few ways to fight a large fire. There were no organised fire brigades and no modern pumps. Residents often formed bucket chains from wells or the River Ouse, but with strong fires this would have achieved very little. Panic must have spread quickly. Bells rang out across the city. People would have rushed to save children, animals and whatever possessions they could carry in their arms.

The fire is believed to have burned for many hours and possibly longer in some areas as smaller fires continued to spread through debris and timber. Chroniclers claimed that much of York was destroyed. Homes, workshops, storehouses, and churches were all lost. Some accounts suggest that York Minster itself may have suffered terrible damage. Markets and trading areas were devastated, which would have affected livelihoods for a long time after.

The death toll is unknown, which is often the case with medieval disasters. Records were not always kept.

Compared to later fires like the Great Fire of London in 1666, the Fire of York happened at a time when it was far less prepared for disaster. But both fires revealed similar weaknesses, overcrowding, timber buildings, narrow streets, and open flames. Medieval cities across Europe suffered similar catastrophes repeatedly because everyday survival depended upon fire.

Do you think medieval people would have eventually become numb to disasters like these, or would every great fire have felt like the end of the world to them?

Image info: York Minster Modern day

The Courage and Compassion of Australian Wartime Nurse Kathleen Hope Barnes

The Courage and Compassion of Australian Wartime Nurse Kathleen Hope Barnes

Today I  want to continue looking at some of the remarkable nurses who served during the Second World War. I want to tell you about Kathleen Hope Barnes.


Kathleen Hope Barnes was born on the 19th of May 1909 in Cottesloe in Western Australia. Her parents had emigrated from Scotland and Ireland, and her father ran a local shop. She went to  Methodist Ladies’ College in Claremont. Nursing was starting to be seen as  a profession and a public service.

When the Second World War started in 1939, Kathleen joined the Australian Army Nursing Service. In April 1940, she became part of the first group of Western Australian nurses who were sent overseas. She left from Fremantle on board Nevassa. For many of these brave women, it would have been the first time they had travelled so far from home.  

By October 1942, Kathleen was serving in Port Moresby in Papua during the New Guinea campaign. She worked with the 105th Casualty Clearing Station that cared for wounded soldiers in the harsh tropical conditions.  Disease and exhaustion were a huge part of everyday life. In March 1943 she was promoted to lieutenant, and just a few months later she became a captain.

In late 1944 and early 1945, Australian forces moved into Jacquinot Bay on the island of New Britain. Kathleen led some of the first Australian nurses to arrive there. Their arrival meant that injured troops could finally receive medical care closer to the front lines.

Her dedication did not go unnoticed. Kathleen was mentioned in dispatches for her wartime service and became an Associate of the Royal Red Cross. She was also appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE).

After the war, she continued nursing in Australia and helped to expand community healthcare services before her death in 1981 at the age of 72.

 

 

Thursday, 14 May 2026

The Hidden Loneliness Behind Wealth for Victorian and Edwardian Women

The Hidden Loneliness Behind Wealth for Victorian and Edwardian Women

I have been finding out a little bit about what life was like in Victorian and Edwardian Britain. And I started to wonder about what life was like for ordinary upper-class women during this era. I think people sometimes imagine that their lives were comfortable and easy because they lived in large, lavish houses and they wore beautiful clothes. But the more I looked into it, the more complicated it is. Wealth could undeniably provide you with a level of comfort, but it could also bring you enormous restrictions and even loneliness.
Upper-class women were expected to behave in very particular ways. From a young age, many girls were raised to become the “perfect lady.” They were taught music, art, French, embroidery, and social etiquette rather than a practical education for opportunities. Education was designed to make them attractive for marriage rather than prepare them for careers or for public life. Marriage was usually seen as one of the most important goals in a woman’s life. A good marriage could strengthen the families connections, wealth, and even their social status.
Respectability mattered a lot. Women were expected to be calm, refined, and most importantly, they needed to be obedient. Society admired women who were graceful and who were modest, but society criticised those women who were outspoken, ambitious, or unconventional.

 Many upper-class women lived under constant social surveillance. Even small scandals or behaviour that was seen as improper could seriously damage a whole family’s reputation.

Compared to working-class women, upper-class women often escaped the need to do any physical or hard work, but they also had far fewer freedoms than we sometimes realise. Poor women worked in factories, laundries, markets, or as servants because they had very little choice. Their lives were physically exhausting, but work sometimes allowed them a degree of freedom and experience outside of the home. In contrast Upper-class women lived surrounded by luxury, but often felt trapped in the rigid social expectations.

Many women were bored and frustrated. Their lives seemed to revolve around social visits, dinners, hosting guests, and managing the servants. Some women described feeling suffocated by the endless routines and expectations. They had intelligence, curiosity, and ambition, but very few acceptable ways to use them. Careers in politics, medicine, law, or universities were largely closed off to them for much of the nineteenth century. Even after tgey got married, a husband often controlled family finances and all major decisions.

Some women though refused to accept these limits. One woman who famously went against these restrictions was Florence Nightingale. She shocked quite a few people when she pursued nursing career, a profession that upper-class society initially viewed as unsuitable for a respectable women. Emmeline Pankhurst was another strong woman who openly challenged political inequality and became one of the most famous leaders of the suffrage movement. Millicent Fawcett fought peaceful campaigns for women’s voting rights and greater opportunities. Women like Marie Curie, who although not Brirish, demonstrated that women could succeed intellectually in spite of the social barriers.

The suffrage movement became hugely important because it gave many women a voice they had never been able express before. Campaigns for voting rights were not just about politics. They were also about education, independence, legal rights, and recognition as equal human beings. Some women marched peacefully, while others took more militant action mainly because they felt society simply was not listening.

I think one of the saddest things is that many upper-class women may have appeared privileged from the outside while in private they felt isolated and powerless.

Do you think the expectations placed on upper-class women were more restrictive because they were hidden behind wealth and respectability?

The Australian Nurse Who Survived The Bangka Island Massacre In 1942

The Australian Nurse Who Survived The Bangka Island Massacre In 1942

I want to tell you about a remarkable individual, Vivian Bullwinkel, an Australian nurse who served in World War Two.


She was born on the 18th of December 1915 in Kapunda, in Southern Australia, just north of Adelaide. She trained as both a nurse and a midwife. Those who knew her described her as both determined and compassionate. Before the war broke out, she worked in hospitals in Victoria and Melbourne.

When the Second World War began to spread across the world, Vivian wanted to serve her country. At first she tried to join the Royal Australian Air Force, but was rejected because she had flat feet. Many people may well have given up at that point, but she was determined and refused to give up. Instead, she joined the Royal Australian Army Nursing Corps in 1941. She was sent to Singapore just as the Japanese forces were advancing through Malaya during the Pacific War.

By early 1942, the situation had become desperate. Singapore was collapsing and they began to evacuate . Vivian and dozens of other nurses boarded the SS Vyner Brooke in the hopes of escaping. But on the 14th of February 1942, the ship was attacked and sunk by Japanese aircraft. The survivors managed to reach Bangka Island.

What happened next became one of the darkest moments involving Australian nurses during the war. On the 16th of February 1942, Japanese soldiers arrived at Radji Beach on Bangka Island. The men were separated and killed. Vivian and 21 fellow nurses were then ordered into the sea before being gunned down from behind in what became known as the Bangka Island Massacre. Vivian was hit, but the bullet missed her vital organs. She pretended to be dead and remained still until the soldiers left. You can only imagine the terror and heartbreak she must have felt lying there among her friends.

For days afterwards, she hid with a wounded British soldier named Cecil Kingsley. She  nursed him while she was also suffering from her own injuries. Eventually they were captured, and Vivian spent more than three years as a prisoner of war. Conditions in the prison camps were harsh. Despite this, she continued to take care of others whenever she could.

After the war ended, Vivian returned to Australia and gave evidence at the Tokyo War Crimes Tribunal. She later became Director of Nursing at Fairfield Infectious Diseases Hospital and she devoted a lot of her life to honouring the nurses who had died. She also supported nursing organisations and memorial projects for veterans.

Over her lifetime she received many honours, including the Member of the Order of the British Empire, the Officer of the Order of Australia, the Associate Royal Red Cross, the Florence Nightingale Medal, and the Efficiency Decoration. She also received campaign medals for her wartime service, including the 1939-45 Star, Pacific Star, War Medal 1939-1945, and the Australia Service Medal 1939-45.

Vivian died in Perth on the 3rd of July 2000 at the age of 84, but her story continues to be remembered across Australia. In 2022, she became the first woman honoured with a statue at the Australian War Memorial.

 

Wednesday, 13 May 2026

The Harsh Reality Behind Victorian England’s Powerful Class System

The Harsh Reality Behind Victorian England’s Powerful Class System

I want to take a look at the class system in Victorian England. When we think about the Victorian age, we imagine the grand, elaborate houses, the elegant dresses, and the powerful British Empire. But underneath all of that was a society that was deeply divided. Victorian society had a very clear class system. Where you were born could and did shape almost every part of your life. Everything from the way you spoke and dressed to the opportunities that were available to you right down to the people who you were expected to marry.


At the beginning of the Victorian period in 1837, England was still hugely influenced by the old order. The aristocracy and landed gentry was at the very top of society.  Families that had titles, estates, and had inherited wealth saw themselves as the natural leaders. Many of them had political influence and social power that had been handed down for generations. Underneath  them was the fast growing middle class. They were made up of businessmen, factory owners, merchants, doctors, and lawyers. Then there was the large working class, they included factory workers, servants, miners, dock workers, and labourers.

Industrialisation had begun to change society extremely fast. Factories, railways, and trade was creating opportunities for people that had not existed for them before. Some people who had been born into poverty were suddenly able to build businesses and to make their own fortunes. Men like George Hudson who was a railway entrepreneur, rose from a modest background to become incredibly wealthy and influential. Self-made industrialists could now earn more money than some of the old aristocracy. This started to slowly blur the traditional boundaries of class.

But money did not bring people acceptance. Victorian society was extremely rigid. Old aristocratic families looked down on “new money,” even more so if it came from trade or industry. A wealthy factory owner might buy a grand country house, but some members of high society still viewed them as their social inferior. Their accent, manners, education, and family connections was clearly different and frowned on. Some people even tried to change the way they spoke or behaved in an attempt to fit in.

Compared with some other countries, Victorian England’s class system was clearly visible. In parts of the United States, wealth could sometimes create faster social acceptance because the country did not have the same deeply rooted aristocracy. In France, the old nobility had lost much of its formal power after the French Revolution, although social divisions still remained. England continued to value inherited status throughout much of the nineteenth century.

Despite this rigidity, change was possible, albeit difficult. Educational reforms, expanding industries, and the growing cities slowly allowed some families to improve their position in society over several generations. A labourer’s son might be able to become a clerk, and his own son might attend university. But for many working-class families, poverty was still a trap. It would have been incredibly hard to escape it. Long working hours, overcrowded housing, illness, and low wages could keep entire generations stuck in poverty.

 

Do you think that todays society still has class divisions?

The Great Fire of London That Changed the City Forever in 1666

The Great Fire of London That Changed the City Forever in 1666

Today I want to try and discover a little bit about the Great Fire of London. When we picture London, we usually see a powerful city, but in 1666 it was, in many areas, overcrowded, dirty, and vulnerable.

The fire started in the early hours of the 2nd of September in 1666. It started in a bakery on Pudding Lane that was owned by Thomas Farriner. Fires happened a lot in London, but this one was different. The summer had been extremely dry, and the buildings were close together. Most of the houses were made of wood with pitch and tar that burned really quickly. The narrow streets allowed the flames to travel from building to building with remarkable speed. There were also strong winds that helped to spread the fire even further. Looking back, it does seem inevitable that this disaster would eventually happen.

Many people were still asleep when the fire began. People woke up to smoke and heat filling their homes. Panic started to spread through the streets. People were rushing about to try and save what they could. Some were loading carts with their furniture and belongings while others decided to just run while they carried their children or a few possessions in their arms. Wealthier citizens were able to escape by boat along the River Thames. But poorer families lost absolutely everything.

One of the most important witnesses was Samuel Pepys. He wrote a diary and in it he described the horror as the fire spread across the city. He buried some of his most valuable possessions, which included his cheese and wine, in his garden to protect them. Pepys also went to Whitehall in order to warn King Charles II about how bad the fire really was. His writings are fascinating, they allow us to understand the fear and confusion of the people that experienced the terror.

The fire burned for four whole days and tragically destroyed around 13,000 houses, churches, businesses, and famous landmarks including old St Paul’s Cathedral. The official death toll was recorded really low, at about six people but many historians believe the number must have been much higher. Poor people were usually not recorded properly, and the intense heat may have completely destroyed any evidence of remains.

When the fire finally ended on the 6th of September, much of medieval London was gone. But from the devastation came change. When the city was rebuilt, they used more brick and stone instead of wood and timber, the streets were widened and they introduced better fire prevention measures. People had learned the hard way just how dangerous overcrowded wooden cities could be. The Monument to the Great Fire was built near Pudding Lane as a reminder of the tragedy and of the city’s survival.

Street names in London still reflect the past. Pudding Lane reflected the food traders who once worked there, while places like Bread Street were connected to baking.

Do you think that the Great Fire of London was inevitable or could it have been prevented?

Image info:
Date: 1675
London Museum

Before Electricity: The Dangerous Reality of Lighting Victorian Homes

Before Electricity: The Dangerous Reality of Lighting Victorian Homes I have been finding out a little bit about life in the Victorian and...